October 24, 2006
Blabbermouth Media, Blabbermouth Dems
By
Michelle Malkin
Two short weeks to
Election Day. As one of those post-9/11
security moms, it all comes down to a simple
question for me: Who will keep this country—and my
children—safer from harm?
I have many heated
differences with the
Bush administration over its refusal to fully
enforce immigration laws;
soft-headed pandering to
jihadist lobbying groups; profligate spending on
illusory transportation security; failure to confront
the spread of sharia law; and kowtowing to Saudi princes
eager to send over more young students to learn aviation
in our universities.
For all the White House's
faults, however, there is no doubt in my mind that
Republicans as a group are better informed, better
equipped and better able to lead this country in a time
of war than the Democrats. The
donkey party is led by thumb-sucking demagogues in
prominent positions who equate Bush with Hitler and
Jim Crow, call him a liar in front of high school
students and the world, fantasize about impeachment and
fetishize the human rights of terrorists who want to
kill me.
Put simply: There are no
grown-ups in the Democrat Party.
Maybe this is what a
prematurely giddy Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., meant
when she told the Los Angeles Times this week:
"The gavel of the speaker of the House is in the hands
of special interests, and now it will be in the hands of
America's children."
Yep. Put the gavel in the
hands of Pelosi and the Democrats, and you will put the
gavel in the hands of children. Couldn't put it better
myself.
Another clarifying moment
that underscores the fundamental difference between
Republicans and Democrats on matters of national
security, seriousness and secrecy took place on June 29,
2006.
That was the day the U.S.
House of Representatives voted to condemn the decision
by several newspapers—led by the
newspaper of wreckage, The New York Times—to
publish details of the Bush administration's classified
program to track terrorist financing. Known as SWIFT,
the program had led to the capture of a key Bali bombing
suspect and identification of a convicted al Qaeda
helper based in New York City, as well as helping
investigators probing domestic terrorist cells and
suspected Islamic charities fronting for jihad. Under
specious claims by anonymous accusers that the program's
legality and oversight were in doubt, the Times
splashed details of the program all over its front
pages. Democrats dutifully piled on to condemn the White
House for its "illegal" abuses of power."
But House Republicans
refused to roll over for the blabbermouth media and the
blabbermouth Democrats. They put Washington on record
with a vote on a nonbinding resolution stating the
obvious— that news organizations may have "placed the
lives of Americans in danger" by disclosing SWIFT
and that Congress "expects the cooperation of all
news media organizations" in keeping classified
programs secret.
The resolution passed
227-183, with only 17 Democrats joining nearly all House
Republicans in condemning the leak-dependent news media
and supporting the surveillance program.
"This measure attempts
to intimidate the press and strengthen the hands of this
despotic administration,"
railed New York Democrat Rep.
Maurice Hinchey. "It is a campaign document,"
pouted Rep. Pelosi in attacking the resolution.
Republicans "have adopted a shoot-the-messenger
strategy by attacking the newspaper that revealed the
existence of the secret bank surveillance program rather
than answering the disturbing questions that those
reports raise about possible violations of the U.S.
Constitution and U.S. privacy laws," wheedled Rep.
Edward J. Markey, D-Mass. [
House
GOP Chastises Media By Charles Babington,
Washington Post, June 30, 2006; Page A25]
Why do I remind you of
this vote and the Dems' kindergarten reaction? Because
the Times' own ombudsman
admitted this week that the story should never have
run. Public editor Byron Calame 'fessed up: "I don't
think the article should have been published. . . . I
haven't found any evidence in the intervening months
that the surveillance program was illegal. . . . The
lack of appropriate oversight—to catch any abuses in the
absence of media attention—was a key reason I originally
supported publication. I think, however, that I gave it
too much weight." [
Banking
Data: A Mea Culpa October 22, 2006]
Not a single one of the
Democrats who lambasted Bush and Republicans for
protesting the reckless story has stepped forward to
apologize to the president and the American people or
acknowledge the harm caused to counterterrorism efforts.
Do you need to know any
more to judge which party will keep this country safer?
I don't.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
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