By Shawn Macomber on 9.30.04 @ 12:07AM
Who knew that Ted Kennedy would be the next Ted Agnew?
If a Republican had given the same sort of speech about a
Democrat that Ted Kennedy gave on Monday at George Washington
University thrashing George W. Bush, John Edwards would likely have
labeled it "un-American" and Howard Dean would have come out of his
undisclosed location to begin shouting again about the flag not
belonging to Jerry Falwell. As luck would have it, Kennedy is a
Democrat, and as such the "lion of liberalism" is not held to the
same standards as the rest of us.
Gone was the terrorism-is-not-a-Republican-or-Democratic-issue
rhetoric so popular with liberals anytime someone suggests
President Bush may be on the right track with the War on Terror.
Kennedy had no qualms about describing the Bush administration's
foreign policy as, "a toxic mix of ignorance, arrogance, and
stubborn ideology," and accusing Bush himself of being responsible
for a "steady downward spiral in our national security."
"I thank God that President Bush was not our President at the
time of the Cuban Missile Crisis," Kennedy said, expressing a
sentiment many likely harbor towards him as well.
MAINSTREAM MEDIA COVERAGE of Kennedy's speech treated it as a
reasonable treatise. In an interview on CNN hours later with Judy
Woodruff, Kennedy was allowed to repeat all the major points of his
speech with only minor challenge. He was not questioned about his
angry tone or any of the more absurdist, fanatical rhetoric, which
at any rate was conveniently left out of the evening newscasts.
Contrast that with the firestorm that erupted when Dick Cheney
suggested that "if we make the wrong choice" on November 2 "then
the danger is that we'll get hit again and we'll be hit in a way
that will be devastating from the standpoint of the United
States."
"This statement by the vice president of the United States was
intended to divide us," John Edwards wailed. "It was calculated to
divide us on an issue of safety and security for the American
people. It's wrong and it's un-American."
But Cheney's comments seem downright tame when compared to the
accusatory, personal broadsides in Kennedy's speech:
"We could have been, and we should have been, much safer than we
are today," Kennedy said. "We cannot afford to stay this very
dangerous course. This election cannot come too soon. As I've said
before, the only thing America has to fear is four more years of
George Bush."
Scant weeks after Cheney's much-maligned speech, House Speaker
Dennis Hastert said it was his opinion that al Qaeda would prefer
Kerry to win the upcoming election. Democratic Senator Jay
Rockefeller quickly came out to explain that there wasn't "a shred
of evidence to indicate that a terrorist attack is more likely
under a Bush or Kerry administration." Likewise, Democratic
National Committee Chairman Terry McAuliffe called Hastert's
comments "disgraceful," and declared that there was "no room for
this in our political discourse."
There was no sign of either Rockefeller or McAuliffe on
television Monday condemning Kennedy's diatribe. Apparently, when
Democrats claim an upper hand in the War on Terror, it is simply a
calm interpretation of the facts. But when a Republican dares to
suggest that President Bush's aggressive policies might be more
effective than the "more sensitive" war Kerry promises to wage,
well, that is unacceptable. Democrats reserve the right to
patriotically dissent any way they like to Bush's foreign policy,
but any talk of terrorism by Republicans is exploiting national
security for political gain.
BUT KENNEDY WASN'T CONTENT merely to criticize the war in Iraq on
the merits and be done with it. He could not stick to policy. The
draw of the now-obligatory Bush-the-dolt name calling is too strong
for Democrats to resist these days.
"Saddam Hussein may be behind bars, and that's a significant
plus for America and the world, as President Bush says," Kennedy
said. "But the war in Iraq has clearly distracted us from putting
Osama bin Laden behind bars -- and that's a huge minus. The
President likes to talk about school reform, so let's try a little
third grade math. If you add a significant plus and a huge minus,
you don't wind up with a plus."
The senior senator from Massachusetts clearly felt compelled to
intertwine a critique of American capitalism with his critique of
the war, illustrating the fact that for the far-left the War on
Terror is just another obstacle to their globalist/socialist one
world government aspirations.
"The Bush Administration tried to carry out the reconstruction
with its ideology, instead of an honest strategy," Kennedy said.
"Instead of trying seriously to create jobs for Iraqis, they tried
to carry out a plan to privatize virtually every part of the Iraqi
economy. It's Republican ideology run amuck. It's bad enough that
they're trying to do that to the American economy. It's
preposterous to try and do it in Iraq."
SO, WHAT EXACTLY WOULD Kennedy like to see in Iraq? The sort of
prosperity and individual freedom that a liberalized economy
provides, or the tyranny and poverty of a centralized planned
economy? His speech Monday suggests the latter:
"For two years, terrorist cells have been spreading like cancer
cells," Kennedy said, treading through the now-dreary "root causes"
argument one more time. "Any doctor who let that happen would be
guilty of malpractice. Is it only coincidence that one of the
principal domestic priorities of the Bush Administration is to
protect doctors from malpractice lawsuits?"
Huh? Is Kennedy angry about terrorism or tort reform? It's an
odd and, frankly, base pairing of issues. It would be like
President Bush pushing tax cuts at an event commemorating the
events of September 11. There are some issues bigger than arguments
over legal policy. One might expect Kennedy, who declared Monday
that the fundamental issue of the 2004 election could be summed up
as "It's Iraq, stupid," to understand the difference.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Mainstream Media, Television, Law, Iraq, NATO