3.15.02 @ 2:39PM
They got rid of Pickering. Now they've set their sights on Tennessee. But a friend rides to the rescue.
We all have our favorite moments in the Charles Pickering
lynching. There was Sen. John Edwards destroying
his presidential chances by cracking his horse whip a little too
gleefully. There was Sen. Patrick Leahy declaring
his love for Sen. Orrin Hatch, but worrying out loud that his
intentions might be understood in joint union Vermont, his home
state. There was Leahy again, complaining Pickering injected his
personality into his opinions -- clearly envious he no personality
to inject into his own bloodstream. There was the ever
front-running Al Hunt, insisting that race had
nothing to do with opposition to Pickering -- this after every
red-necked liberal threw a white sheet over Pickering's head and
went away from the tall oak they left him hanging from with rope
burns on their hands.
There are many other of the lynch mobsters we could name; heaven
knows, Richard Cohen has been begging for
inclusion. The New York Times editorial crew and
its intolerance for anyone outside its "modern mainstream" craves
an honorable mention. Some even think that the White House should
be tarred and feathered for only taking a month or two before it
decided to defends its man; others denounce the hapless Trent Lott
for having no real way to defend his friend. But that's missing the
point. There's no competing with a crowd that takes its moral
signals from the likes of Ted Kennedy, who after
Pickering was declared dead, came up for air from waters at
Chappaquiddick, where he continues to conduct a search and rescue
operations, to denounce Pickering as a threat to the
Constitution.
But an early spring always picks up our mood. How not to have
hop in one's step on news that Mrs. Al Gore is
being talked of as a possible Senate candidate from the wide-hipped
state of Tennessee? Who needs Paris if romance comes to the
Chattanooga station in the person of a husband who plants long,
long farewell kisses on his missus as she boards the last campaign
train to Nashville? There'll be reunions to look ahead to, too.
Hillary is already rejiggering her schedule to make room for many
Senate lunches with her dear friend Tipper. They're our Democratic
ticket for 2004, 2008, 20012, 20016. Some friendships are here to
stay.
Incidentally, the Drudge Report clinched honors for headline of
the year when it announced: "Tipper Weighs Senate Run." Though that
wasn't as good as its earlier headline, "Blumenthal Arrested for
Child Porn." For the record, we've never heard of the guy.
In the there-he-goes-again category, Mr. Al
Gore took time from kiss training to announce he remains
"damn proud" of the Clinton administration he ran from in 2000.
Just to remind us Who's in charge -- and that the wheels of Divine
justice move faster than light -- the profane Al was quickly forced
to swallow his pride as news came that Bill Clinton had encouraged
his little brother to sign up as many clients as possible for easy
-to-purchase presidential pardons. Just one more of the countless
jobs Bill created. In the Clinton boom, everyone got home free for
a price.
In an outburst of neo-McCarthyism, the Hon. Mikhail
Gorbachev told a Columbia University audience last Monday
that Communism was "pure propaganda." The truth may have set him
free, but that's the last time he gets invited to an American
campus. And he can forget about the next Democrat convention too.
But we look forward to honest Mike's joining hands with Lee
Greenwood at the next GOP confab to sing, "I'm Proud to Be an
American..." Maybe the whole Red Army Chorus will join in.
But let's make sure none of these patriotic demonstrations are
attempted in Arlington, Virginia, where the country board is making
it well-nigh impossible for patriots to recite the Pledge of
Allegiance at its public meetings. It's no accident, as Mr.
Gorbachev might have once said, that Arlington is the home town of
one Tipper Gore.
As we've discovered yet again, it's so easy to find enemies in
our midst. So this week we grant equal status to all of them:
they're enemies of the week because they're enemies of the weak.
Besides, we've discovered a delightful Friend of the Week, Mike
Gorbachev, honorary American and delightful anecdotalist. At
Columbia, e.g., he described dire conditions our own CIA and its
counterparts at NOW knew nothing about. In late Communism, it's now
known, Gorbachev's colleagues were left "discussing the problem of
toothpaste, the problem of detergent, and they had to create a
commission of the Politburo to make sure that women have
pantyhose." Thanks to Crisis magazine, we also know Gorbo has no
use for a former president who isn't Jimmy Carter. Recently in
Madrid, comments from Bill Clinton caused the teetotaling Mr. G. to
spill his chai. The subject was global poverty, and there was
Clinton copping a plea: "It wasn't really me who caused the growth
of poverty," as if begging to be treated by Soviet psychiatry. One
more such encounter and Mikhail will be back to drinking good
old-fashioned Stoli.
Send your Enemy nominations to Enemy Central c/o Reader Mail
below.
topics:
Bill Clinton, Constitution, Communism, Unions