November 26, 2007
Ideology Was Bush's Undoing
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
Over lunch, a liberal friend
expressed puzzlement. Citing the title of Tom
Oliphant's new book about the Bush administration, "Utter Incomptents
,"
he
wondered aloud.
Like him or not, he said, Bush is
not an unintelligent man, and he is a principled and
energetic executive. As for
Dick Cheney,
Donald Rumsfeld and the others, almost all had long
resumes of accomplishment in politics, government and
business. Why, then, do they seem to have failed so
dismally?
In my new book, Day of Reckoning
,
published
this week, I offer an answer. If there is a one root
cause to the Bush failures, it has been his fatal
embrace of ideology.
Ideology is substitute religion, a
belief system based on ideas that are often contradicted
by history and common sense. Yet men will adhere to
ideologies with a zealotry that borders on fanaticism.
Marxism, fascism and socialism were
ideologies,
gods that failed. So, too, is
democratism, the Gospel of George W. Bush.
Democratism is a belief that all
men are equally endowed with a desire for freedom and an
aptitude for democracy. All can be uplifted, and all
brought to see that democracy is the one true path to
peace in our world. In democracy lies our salvation.
This conviction lay behind the
invasion of Iraq, Bush's crusade to
democratize the Middle East and his "global
democratic revolution" to
"end tyranny in our world."
And, as Woodrow Wilson's crusade
"to make the world safe for democracy"
gave us Lenin, Stalin and Hitler, Bush's
crusade for democracy is leaving us with ashes in our
mouths.
Yet, Wilson's heart was pure, and
he
ever exhibited the serenity of the True Believer,
the unmistakable mark of the ideologue. One imagines
Bush will be preaching the dogma of free trade long
after the last U.S. factory has closed and the
dollar has reached parity with the Mexican peso.
Bush's "compassionate
conservative" appears grounded in the ideological
conviction that all children are endowed with the
capacity to learn through the high school level.
No Child Left Behind was going to raise the test
scores of
all our children above the national average, as in
Lake Wobegon.
Why was it fated to fail? Because
reality is otherwise. All children are
not equal in their innate ability to learn English
or math, as they are not equal in their ability to play
sports,
music or
chess. A second-grader knows that, but our elites
reject it as bigotry and blasphemy against the
egalitarian dogmas that define who they are.
So we invest trillions, empower
bureaucrats and enrich the education industry, demanding
it produce what it has shown for 40 years it cannot
produce. Today's SAT scores are far below where they
were in 1964. Like socialists striving to make their
system work in Cuba, China and Russia, we have been
banging our heads against a brick wall of human nature.
Consider Katrina. Bush was indeed
disengaged. But Katrina was a
failure of government, not of Bush. The
city of New Orleans, the state of Louisiana and FEMA
all failed at the simple rescue of 30,000 people
stranded by a few feet of stagnant water, while TV
anchors boated back and forth bellowing for government
to come save them.
Where were the men of New Orleans?
Why did the men of New Orleans,
after getting their families out, not come back in boats
to rescue the black women and children? Why did so many
cops
defect and
start looting? And why did the National Guard and
82nd Airborne
succeed and end the hysteria in hours?
In New Orleans, society collapsed
because its basic building block, the family, has
collapsed, for all the reasons we know too well.
Yet while civil government is
failing, institutions like the 82nd,
Microsoft and the
New England Patriots succeed -- because they operate
on other than ideological principles.
You don't vote for the head of
Microsoft or choose the coach of the Patriots or
commanding officer of the 82nd by elections.
These institutions reject
egalitarianism. They put excellence before equality.
They do not believe in a "level playing field"
for opponents, but, with Vince Lombardi, that
"winning isn't everything, winning is the only thing."
They demand our best. You fall short, you are gone. They
are intolerant of excuses and self-pity.
All who labor there know if they do
not perform, the penalties are real: loss of jobs,
income, prestige. In the 82nd, incompetence can mean
dead comrades or your own death. They are one-for-all
and all-for-one people. They are exclusive, not
inclusive. They reject
racial, ethnic and
gender quotas and affirmative action. To the 82nd
and the Patriots, there are places women simply do not
belong.
Thomas Jefferson believed that in a
republic a
"natural aristocracy" of virtue and talent
should rule. Those who run these institutions believe
the same. That is why they succeed, and why government,
when we ceased to be a republic and degenerated into an
egalitarian democracy, so often fails.
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.