August 27, 2004
View From Lodi, CA: Joe Says Phooey To Both Candidates
(And Raises A Frightening Specter For VDARE.COM Readers)
By Joe Guzzardi
I’ve heard enough, seen enough and
read enough.
My mind is made up. In November,
I’ll vote for someone whose name is
not George W. Bush or John Kerry.
Over four years, I’ve learned all I
need to know about Bush. And I hold Kerry in equally low
regard. Kerry has done nothing but make promises neither
he—nor anyone else—can possibly keep.
Where is their backbone? Each daily
movement is poll-driven; each statement carefully
couched.
On August 24, the New York Times
published an Op-ed by
David Brooks about Kerry titled
“The Vietnam Passion.” Brooks observed that
Kerry has lost whatever
fire he may have had in the 1970s
post-Vietnam War era.
“The passion is gone,” wrote
Brooks. What remains is
“the
pompous prevaricator….a man so cautiously calculating
not to put a foot wrong that he envelopes himself in a
fog of caveats and equivocations. You see a man losing
his ability to think like a normal human being…”
Voters are pleading with the
candidates to show some gumption. But every day is like
the one before it. We’re in danger of being bored to
death by the identical, predictable hackneyed speeches.
Pollsters tell us that the “undecided”
voter will be the key to the election’s outcome. One
would assume then that Bush and Kerry would be pulling
out all the stops to convince the undecided that he is
the most worthy candidate.
Here are two very simple things
that would quickly grab the undecided voter’s attention.
Bush could issue an unqualified
statement saying something like this:
“I was
wrong about the reasons for going to Iraq. But I have
learned from my mistakes. I think I can be a wiser,
better president in my next term. Please listen to me
with an open mind.”
Kerry (and Edwards), for their
part, could show mettle by
resigning from the Senate. They could say,
“We
cannot represent the people of Massachusetts (and North
Carolina) while we are
campaigning. Accordingly, we resign our Senate
positions effective immediately.”
Bush has nothing to lose by stating
the obvious about Iraq. And it would put the president
in a much more favorable light among those (like me) who
see him as afflicted with tunnel vision.
As for Kerry and Edwards, what’s
the worst that can happen to them? They’re
multimillionaires who certainly don’t need their Senate
job.
But in politics circa 2004, even
going such a small distance onto the ledge is too risky.
On their next puddle-hop, Bush and
Kerry should read a small volume first published in 1956
titled
Profiles in Courage by then U.S. Senator John
.F. Kennedy.
The book is a collection of essays
about eight U. S. Senators who had the courage to go
against the grain of popular opinion even though they
knew it spelled political doom. But to them principle
was more important than career.
Some of Kennedy’s subjects are
well-known:
John Quincy Adams,
Daniel Webster and
Sam Houston. Others are mere historical footnotes:
Edmund G. Ross,
George Norris and
Thomas Hart Benton.
Their compelling stories are a
marked contrast from the well-traveled path chosen by
Bush and Kerry.
I realize that, every four years,
Americans grouse about our
presidential candidates.
But this year is different. We have
immediate pressing problems that demand attention. In
addition to the war on terror, we have
job loss,
economic stagnation, a
disappearing middle class, depleted natural
resources and crippling deficits.
Yet the Bush-Kerry debate, to use
the word loosely, is about incidents that occurred 35
years ago. The candidates should be talking about the
future. Instead they are helplessly stuck in the past.
Where, Kennedy might have wondered,
is Bush and Kerry’s courage? Kennedy’s final paragraph
of Profiles in Courage could have been written
about the two spineless ones: Bush and Kerry:
“To be
courageous requires no special qualifications, no magic
formula, no special combination of time, place and
circumstance…. Each man must decide for himself the
course he will follow. The stories of past courage can
define that ingredient---they can teach, they can offer
hope, they can provide inspiration. But they cannot
supply courage itself. For this each man must look into
his own soul.”
While it is not too late for Bush
or Kerry to rise to the occasion, it seems unlikely that
either will do so.
JOE'S FRIGHTENING SPECTER FOR
VDARE.COM READERS
When
the subject turns to immigration, I defy anyone to name
two more cowardly politicians than Bush and Kerry.
Kerry had the audacity to promise
amnesty within the first 100 days of his
administration. He cannot deliver on that promise.
And
as for Bush, despite all warnings from conservatives
that it is an ill-conceived idea, the Republican
platform committee is pressing ahead with his
amnesty plan.
According to the
New York Times, Richard Lessner, executive director
of the American Conservative Union
blasted Bush for his so-called temporary worker
program.
Lessner said,
“This unfortunate initiative
allows those who enter the US illegally to become legal
residents and apply for citizenship. The idea was D.O.A.
among conservatives when the president first broached it
and it is still offensive.”
In
an e-mail circulated among other conservatives, Lessner
continued to heap criticism on Bush. He wrote:
“…President Bush has no
broad vision---and certainly no conservative
vision---for the United States. All he has is a random
assortment of policy prescriptions, many of which
contradict one another.”
[Conservatives
Grumble on Planks Reflecting Bush Agenda by
David D. Kirkpatrick, NYT, August 26, 2004]
What
worries me is that Bush is stubborn and vindictive. I
believe it is possible that if he loses in November, he
may issue an
Executive Order granting amnesty.
A
few months ago, I bounced my idea off Capitol Hill
insiders. They disagreed with me, saying that Republican
leadership would plead with Bush not to do it.
But
Bush
doesn’t care about the Republican Party or the
American people.
I
put the odds of an amnesty via Executive Order at 50-50.
Joe Guzzardi [email
him], an instructor in English
at the Lodi Adult School, has been writing a weekly
column since 1988. It currently appears in the
Lodi News-Sentinel.