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"There are only two men in America who can fill Yankee
Stadium on three weeks' notice,"
a friend instructed me years ago.
"Billy Graham
and
Louis Farrakhan."
Indeed, a decade ago,
Black Muslim
Minister Farrakhan's
"Million Man March"
brought a throng of hundreds of thousands to the
Capitol.
But,
last Saturday, Glenn Beck packed the Mall with a crowd
that could have filled Yankee Stadium to overflowing
five times over. As it stretched from the Lincoln
Memorial to the Washington Monument, the estimates of
its size ran to half a million.
This
was twice the size of the
crowd that heard Martin Luther King Jr. 47 years ago
and matched the antiwar demonstrations of
1969.
Wisely, Beck dropped partisanship to convert his
gathering into a God, country and Constitution rally,
with speakers honoring the
courage and sacrifice of America's military.
Said
Sarah Palin,
a rally star,
"Say what you want to say about me, but I raised a
combat vet, and you can't take that away from me."
Al
Sharpton, who organized a counter-rally that turned out
a few hundred folks at
Dunbar High,
was his usual gracious self. Speaking of the half a
million Americans on the Mall, the Rev. Al volunteered,
"They want to disgrace this day."
President Obama, seeing that crowd on the Mall
as
large as the one that came to celebrate his inaugural,
must understand what it portends. His moment may have
passed.
For
that enthusiastic and energetic assembly is the spear
point of an army of millions headed for the polls to
throw out the party he leads.
Nevertheless, as Obama raised hopes only to be perceived
as having fallen short, so, too, Beck's believers and
the tea party folks are raising hopes and expectations.
But
can they succeed?
"We
must not fundamentally transform America, as
some
would want,"
said Palin, in one of the
direct challenges
to Obama. "We
must restore America."
But
can we restore America—or is the old America gone
forever?
Consider the issue that unites all on the Mall on
Saturday—the need for the U.S. government to cut
spending, to balance its budget and not to shove an
immense burden of debt on our children.
Like
last year, we are running a deficit of $1.4 trillion,
almost 10 percent of the entire economy. With housing
starts and housing sales plunging, jobless claims
rising, the stock market sinking and economic growth
slowing to a crawl, we will face a new deficit equally
large in the fiscal year beginning in October.
Where are the victorious tea party Republicans going to
cut?
According to
USA Today, 50
million Americans are on Medicaid, and perhaps an equal
number on Medicare and Social Security. Which of these
three will tea party Republicans cut, when Republicans
are already denying Democratic charges that they plan to
raise the retirement age for Social Security?
Rep.
Paul Ryan, R-Wis., has a 600-page plan to reform Social
Security, Medicare, Medicaid and the tax code, the work
of a conscientious conservative. But only one in 16
House Republicans has signed on as co-sponsor.
Are
Republicans going to go after other
entitlements—veterans benefits,
earned income tax credits,
food
stamps—which
now go to 41 million Americans, or unemployment benefits
that run for 99 weeks?
With
the
racial achievement gap
on test scores
returning,
will the GOP abolish No Child Left Behind or slash
federal aid to education?
The
big remaining items in the budget are interest on the
debt, which must be paid, and war and defense. But
Republicans are more likely to be supportive of Obama's
rebuilding
a
military ravaged by war,
and staying the course in Iraq and Afghanistan, than are
Democrats.
Obama's budget commission will surely come in with tax
increases on personal incomes, perhaps also for Social
Security and Medicare. But the GOP cannot sign on to
these and go home again.
Indeed, how can Republicans cooperate with a president
who has spent the campaign blaming them for the Great
Recession and telling voters the GOP intends to drag us
back to the dark past of Bush II?
And why would a
"Party of No" that picks up 40 or 50 House seats by
its
Alamo
defiance become a Kumbaya,
"Yes-we-can!"
party and work in happy harness with Barack Obama?
Can we really
"restore America"
as she once was?
According to The
New York Times,
Orange County, CA—birthplace of Richard Nixon,
Goldwater
Country, bastion of the John Birch Society, land of the
"little old ladies in tennis shoes"—is
today a place where less than half the population is
Anglo and almost half speak a language other than
English in the home.
Orange County Is No Longer Nixon Country,
by Adam Nagourney, August 29, 2010.
Where Ronald Reagan beat Jimmy Carter three to one in
Orange County, Obama ran a near dead heat with McCain.
And
as Orange County goes, so goes California and so goes
America.
Republicans and tea partiers are going to have a
glorious fall.
But
is this one of the last hurrahs?
COPYRIGHT CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Patrick J. Buchanan
needs
no introduction to
VDARE.COM readers; his book State
of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America, can
be ordered from Amazon.com. His latest book
is Churchill,
Hitler, and "The Unnecessary War": How
Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost
the World,
reviewed
here by
Paul Craig Roberts.