WASHINGTON — Sex remains the surest prop for all that is funny…
and sad. In the first instance we often call the result ribaldry.
In the second instance it is always called tragedy.
General David Petraeus has, in war, been a hero. In public
service too he was a national asset. But toward the end of
his soldiering his life is now cast in doubt, and as the head of
CIA the doubt has increased. Almost certainly as director of
central intelligence he was no Dick Helms or Bill Casey. Those
names from a better era illuminate the drear of this tawdry
episode, and I hope it is merely tawdry, not anything more than
that. Certainly it could not be the national betrayal spoken
of by Ben Stein
this week at Spectator.org, could it?
For now, at least in the case of General Petraeus, this leggy
scandal is a tragedy, particularly when it comes to his children,
his wife, and his, as the news accounts term it, “storied career.”
In the case of Paula Broadwell, the general’s inamorata, it was a
disaster waiting to happen. All that running, performing push-ups
(partial), the graduate work in a fictive study at Harvard State
University, the stylish dress (usually out of place), the
“competitiveness” — egads! I could have put General Petraeus in
touch with a seasoned international playboy who would take one look
at this perfumed stalker and counsel caution. Get out, general,
while you can. This woman is trouble and, not to betray my sources,
she has been trouble for years.
We live in an era awash in sex or what another generation called
sexual hygiene. There is sex education at an early age. Continuing
sex education goes on through adolescence. When life begins for
young adults, Americans have more information about sex than almost
any other discipline, and most of it is useless. They still get
pregnant in vast numbers out of wedlock, have abortions, and suffer
all the other calamities associated with sex. Who doubts that
General Petraeus, when he is asked to reveal the details of his
sexual adventures in public, will get the shouted question,
“General, did you practice safe sex?” The question has been asked
before.
Frankly I relish the American educator or health professional —
usually female — who serves as the know-it-all advisor to society
on sex. Remember Dr. Joycelyn Elders, Bill Clinton’s surgeon
general? She was agog on the topic of sex. One of her
forward-looking specialties was masturbation. She thought it should
be taught in schools as an alternative to, I am not sure what,
group sex, sex with a household pet, his and her sex? At any rate,
her pontifications on masturbation got her fired from her job as
surgeon general but not before she had held forth on contraception
too.
She was for it, and made as much a pest of herself on
contraception as the delusional women in the recent election. They
seemed to see themselves as irresistible to the male of the
species, and thus it was a matter of national security that they
receive all manner of free birth control from intrauterine devices
to extra-uterine devices to ad-hoc ergo-propter-hoc uterine
devises. Dr. Elders doubtless agreed. For sheer hilaritas give me
sex any day.
Now Mrs. Broadwell’s father has stepped from his home in
Bismarck, North Dakota, and informed the New York Daily
News that his daughter is the target of “character
assassination.” This I cannot conceive, but I agree with him as he
went on to say, “This is about something else entirely, and the
truth will come out.” He added, “There’s a lot more here than meets
the eye.” Ben Stein says the eye should be on Attorney General Eric
Holder. Yes, perhaps, but I would keep an eye on Benghazi, and
forget not Mrs. Broadwell’s revelations about Libyans being held
prisoner in Benghazi by our CIA.