By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 11.17.05 @ 12:08AM
Liberals have yet to accept that conservatives, including Samuel Alito, are here to stay.
WASHINGTON -- Zounds, the liberals have found another of their
"smoking guns." That is what they are calling a job application
submitted 20 years ago by a young lawyer seeking promotion in the
Reagan Administration. His name is Samuel A. Alito, Jr. and as
close observers of national politics will note he is President
George W. Bush's latest nominee for the Supreme Court. In this
chilling job application Alito declares: "I am and always have been
a conservative." He outlines his shocking disagreements with the
judicial activism of the Warren court and he scruples over such
matters as affirmative action.
Alito was, at the time, an assistant to the solicitor general,
applying for an opening in the office of Attorney Edwin Meese III.
Yes, that Attorney General Meese! The one who worked for
Ronald Reagan, the country's first cowboy president, the one who
brought the country to the brink of nuclear warfare with the USSR,
back when there was a USSR. President Mikhail Gorbachev calmed
things down and saved us all. Then America rejoined the civilized
countries of the world under another of America's great playboy
presidents -- this one even more of a playboy than John F. Kennedy
-- our 42nd president, Bill Clinton, who never lied to the American
people or, for that matter, to his staff. President Clinton kept us
out of war and recognized that one cannot attack a foreign dictator
simply because the West's intelligence agencies say he has weapons
of mass destruction. What if he does not? What if his thwarting of
United Nations resolutions and his tauntings are simply empty macho
boasts? Mr. Clinton's policy was to wait and see what the French
do.
But back to this "smoking gun" -- in it Alito claims membership
in the mysterious Federalist Society, identified today by
Democratic leaders as another "far right" group. Alito avers that
he was a member also of a group at Princeton University that in the
early 1970s opposed coeducation, Concerned Alumni of Princeton,
which published a magazine, Prospect. The magazine
published a lot of articles that Democratic leaders now recognize
as "far right." What is more, Alito, in his 1985 application,
claimed that he had recently submitted articles to National
Review and The American Spectator, two more "far
right" organizations, the latter being the magazine that was caught
organizing a coup d'etat against our last playboy
president, the one with the unlit cigar. The cigar has come to be
recognized as Clinton's own Churchillian trademark, albeit less
malodorous and injurious.
The other day journalists from mainstream media began calling
our offices at The American Spectator asking us what Alito
wrote about in his articles. Our publisher, the far-right Al
Regnery, fielded the calls. I wish they had called me. I would have
told them about the young lawyer's beautifully worded essay
demonstrating that the earth is flat. I would have mentioned his
short piece on the need to drop the big one on Hanoi and Berkeley,
California. I wonder if the journalists would have recognized that
I was pulling their legs.
The "far-right" that the liberals now inveigh against has been
politically ascendant since 1980. Sixteen years before that, when
it captured the Republican Party, one might have sympathized with
the liberals' characterization of it, though it was an exaggeration
even then. To keep grinding this ax for forty years is to
demonstrate precisely how intellectually jejune the liberals and
the Democrats are. They have become museum pieces and will soon be
mortuary pieces if they do not come up with something positive to
say.
Now they advocate cutting and running from Iraq, just as the
Iraqis are moving into a position to defend themselves and to elect
a constitutional government. They are saying the invasion of Iraq
was all a "big mistake." Those are the words of our last playboy
president, uttered at the American University of Dubai the other
day. America under this cowboy president was reckless in invading
Iraq and attempting to spread democracy there.
Well allow me to quote an earlier president speaking to a joint
session of Congress on March 12, 1947: "I believe that it must be
the policy of the United States to support free peoples who are
resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside
pressure." That was President Harry Truman enunciating what came to
be called the Truman Doctrine. He was summoning Congress to the
defense of Greece and Turkey. The critics urged restraint, saying
Greece was corrupt and Turkey undemocratic. Truman proceeded
despite them and both countries have done rather well thanks to
Americans who thought they could spread democracy. May I suggest
that President Bush dust off the Truman Doctrine? That might make
the smug Democrats squirm.
topics:
Education, Trade, Bill Clinton, Mainstream Media, Constitution, Law, Supreme Court, Iraq, United Nations