By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 10.28.04 @ 12:06AM
The point is to hex Jean-François' opponent and wave the bloody shirt at him.
WASHINGTON -- The stupendously unedifying display of an American
presidential election is now coming down to its last whoop-whoop,
its last gross deceit, its last idiotic accusation. Naturally, once
again a Black Cat News Story has, of a sudden, leaped across the
path of the Republican candidate, hexing his chances at the polls
and sending him into eternal ignominy. That, at least, is the hope
of the Democrats and their loyal secretarial staff in the media,
both of whom gin up these Black Cat News Stories. The stories
themselves are always highly exaggerated scandals heavily larded
with the irrational and intended to stir up the moron vote. This
story claims that vast amounts of explosives were left unguarded
after being discovered by the Bush Administration in Iraq and they
are now under the control of hostile forces that only Senator
Jean-François Kerry can thwart.
Similar last-minute Black Cat News Stories hexed President
George H. W. Bush at the end of Campaign '92, when Iran-Contra
Counsel Lawrence Walsh, on October 30, re-indicted former Secretary
of Defense Caspar Weinberger. The story contained a treacherous
leak that President Bush lied when he claimed to have been "out of
the loop" on Iran-Contra. Another famous last-minute Black Cat News
Story leaped across Governor George W. Bush's path to the White
House in the last days of Campaign 2000. It claimed that the
Republican candidate faced a DUI charge back in his hell-raising
days. That supposedly put the hex on him with the evangelical vote,
and maybe it did.
The present Black Cat News Story comes from CBS (of doctored
documents fame) and the New York Times (of Jayson Blair
fame). It claims that the invading American army's 101st Airborne
failed to secure 380 tons of explosives that it came across at the
Qaqaa munitions depot en route to laying siege to Baghdad.
Supposedly the deadly stuff is now in enemy hands. "This is one of
the great blunders, one of the great blunders of this
Administration," now shouts Senator Kerry at the beginning of every
speech on the campaign trail. He shouts this despite the fact that
other reporters embedded with the American soldiers who first
arrived at the Qaqaa munitions depot did not see the "380 tons" and
the Pentagon denies the materials were there.
Nonetheless the candidate, who promises to the American people
that on "the good days and the bad days" "I will always be straight
with you," continues to spread this disputed story as though it
were unassailable fact. But then this is the same candidate who has
just been exposed as a liar for claiming repeatedly that he met
with the "entire" United Nations Security Council in October 2002
before the U.N. authorized force in Iraq. The Washington Times
exposed that falsehood, noting that in his second debate with
President Bush Kerry crooned, "I went to meet with the members of
the Security Council in the week before we voted. I went to New
York. I talked to all of them." The statement is as demonstrably
false as his claim in the final presidential debate that he passed
56 bills during his Senate career. He was responding to the
President's claim that he had only passed five bills. The correct
figure is 11, including two declaring "world population awareness
week" and something about saving the dolphins, or was it the
Dauphin?
One wonders how long the Massachusetts Braggart will lead off
his campaign speeches with this bogus story. For that matter how
long will he claim that Republican poll watchers are "suppressing"
the black vote?
THIS BRINGS US TO the really disturbing aspect of this election,
the possibility of widespread voter fraud and the Democrats'
efforts to institutionalize voter fraud. As John Fund has written
in Stealing Elections: How Voter Fraud Threatens Our
Democracy -- the most important political book of this
campaign -- voter fraud expanded from being a local problem to
being a national threat to democratic governance with the 1993
passage of the "Motor Voter Law." With it anyone anywhere in
America was offered voter registration upon applying for welfare,
unemployment compensation, or renewal of a driver's license. Proof
of citizenship or identifications was not necessary. Also permitted
was mail-in voter registration, and states were barred from pruning
from voter rolls the deceased, the convicted, and those who had
moved from their districts. If you ever wondered how voting
machines and the other instruments of voting became such vexed
matters, this is it. Never, before the "Motor Voter Law," did such
vast numbers of Americans supposedly come to ruin in a voting
booth. But then never before were so many ineligible to vote.
Now we face a national embarrassment. The greatest democracy on
earth will, as the election booths close, be duly likened to a
banana republic with district after district convulsed in charges
of electoral fraud. That should be the news story of the hour. But
no, it is rather this bogus story about, about what? Was it that
Caspar Weinberger was found in the Qaqaa munitions depot
inebriated? If CBS and the Times reported it, you can bet
that Jean François would repeat it…and with
feeling.
topics:
Law, Iraq, Iran, United Nations, NATO