December 27, 2007
Annus Horribilis Ahead?
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
With the New Hampshire
primary on Jan. 8, and the Iowa caucuses dead ahead, the
nominees of both parties may be known in two weeks.
Surely, after Feb. 5, when a slew of primaries are held,
both races will be all but over.
Then, from Feb. 5 to Nov.
4, nine months, those nominees will be made to run an
Iroquois gauntlet.
To define them, before
either defines himself or herself for the voters, both
parties will engage in sustained barrage attacks. Their
opposition research arms are stocked with ammunition.
There will be attack ads
by the "527s,"
independent committees set up by
rich folks and interest groups to do for political
enemies what the
Swift Boat ads did for
John Kerry.
Around-the-clock
bombing will commence on cable TV from the ubiquitous
Democratic and Republican "strategists" trotted
out to parrot talking points provided by opposition
research.
Investigative reporters
will begin digging for dirt, or waiting for the choice
moment to dump it, or seek out in the hidden past of the
candidate the unearthed scandal that can sink a ticket,
as McGovern's ticket in 1972 was
devastated by the revelation that its
vice-presidential candidate,
Tom Eagleton, had
shock treatment, and
George W. Bush was derailed by the revelation of a
DWI 24 years before.
After nine months of this
pounding, even fresh candidates—an Obama, a Huckabee, a
Romney—will boast negatives in the 40s. Hillary's
negatives are already there.
Three weeks out from Iowa,
Clinton operatives have
already suggested the young Obama may not only have
used drugs, but sold them, that cocaine was probably his
favorite, that we should not forget his middle name is
Hussein and that
his daddy was a devout Muslim.
Gov. Huckabee helpfully
implied to Evangelical Christians that Mormonism, Mitt's
faith, is akin to a cult, and don't those folks believe
Jesus and Satan are brothers?
"Haven't presidential
campaigns always been like this?"
comes the
reply. Well, not exactly.
What is different now is
not only the duration of the campaign. This one began a
year ago. It is the money available to parties and their
pit bulls, the 527s. It is the existence of 24-hour
cable—Fox News, CNN, MSNBC—that relishes charges and
conflict, for that is what draws the audience upon which
we live or die. It is the population explosion of
screeds on the Internet with its vast array of websites
able to bring gaffes and scandal to the mainstream in an
instant. It is the telephone videocam there to record
every moment, every move of a candidate, and YouTube
there to receive it.
By November, when America
chooses her new head of state, the country will have
already been polarized over the choice.
And what will that new
president inherit?
The Iraq war
entering its sixth year as the U.S. troops that have
brought some stability to Anbar and Baghdad start home.
An Afghan war in its seventh year, where the NATO allies
balk at combat, the Taliban and al Qaeda have found
sanctuary in a Pakistan whose leading figure was
assassinated yesterday, the poppy traffickers are
back, and Kabul's writ does not extend beyond city
limits.
At home, with housing
prices sinking, foreclosures soaring and the Fed pumping
out money to prevent the economy from seizing up, the
nation could be entering a recession. Yet, with the
dollar sinking abroad, we could also be facing a
recurrence of inflation.
We are bitterly divided
over
immigration, legal and illegal, and the issue grips
every state. As the world is not going to stop
coming here, this is not going away, ever.
Meanwhile, the
culture war, rooted
as it is in conflicting concepts of morality and
patriotism, rages on. Even the staid old
Episcopal Church cannot remain united.
Though we boast about our
diversity, it appears that the more diverse we become as
a nation, the less united we are as a people.
Imus,
Jena and the
Duke rape case testify to it. As one wag puts it,
the only thing melting now is the pot. Two-thirds of the
nation think America is headed in the wrong direction.
The America the next
president will lead is no longer able to win or end her
wars, defend her borders, enforce her immigration laws,
balance her budget, eliminate a chronic trade deficit
that now runs to 6 percent of GDP, or maintain the value
of the dollar. We save nothing.
Though addicted to oil, we
refuse to drill off our coast or in our own territory.
Meanwhile, Arabs and Asians, choking on dollars, are
buying up our corporate and strategic assets and taking
over our toll roads.
There is a great deal of
ruin in a nation, said
Adam Smith. Looks like we are going to find out.
Happy New Year.
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 new book
is
Day of Reckoning: How
Hubris, Ideology, and Greed Are Tearing America Apart.