The anti-war crowd c…

The anti-war crowd c…
The anti-war crowd complained that we were planning on going to war with Iraq unilaterally, without consulting our allies or acting through the UN. “Hussein’s a madman, to be sure”, went the argument, “but we shouldn’t go in like a cowboy with guns blazing.” So Bush gave them what they wanted; a UN resolution, unanimously approved, that said Iraq should disarm and allow inspections with no conditions. Today, Hussein accepted the resolution with “no conditions”.

Now given his track record, it’s simply a matter of time before Hussein starts adding conditions or roadblocks to inspections. He has done it every single time. The only question remaining is how will the anti-war crowd respond when this happens. The safe bet is that they too will do what they’ve done every single time for the past decade; become apologists for a madman.

If Saddam’s parents had treated him like the anti-war crowd does–excusing his disobedience regardless of how often it happened, giving him more and more chances without any real consequences–he’d have turned into a spoiled brat, expecting everyone to give him his own way.

Wait a minute….

As I type this, Pres…

As I type this, Pres…
As I type this, President Bush is announcing that the UN has unanimously passed a resolution telling Iraq to disarm or face the “serious consequences”. It is nice to know that the UN, after 10 or so years, has decided that perhaps their words actually have meaning. Of course, if/when Iraq goes against this new resolution (and given their track record, “when” is quite likely), then we’ll see exactly how much meaning. But until then, the crowd that said we should only go to war if we get UN backing should pipe down and watch things unfold. (I imagine, though, that they’ll pipe right back up should Hussein limit the inspections. They’re his best allies.)

Some have asked why we’re going after Hussein, when other countries have weapons of mass destruction, like North Korea’s nukes. The answer is simple, and should be obvious, especially to the aforementioned UN-backing crowd: Hussein had been officially given notice after our coalition pushed him back inside his borders that he had to disarm. Part of the terms of surrender was disarmament, and he hasn’t followed through. When terrorism ties were found, it gave us even more reason to want to insure he didn’t get into the WMD-export biz. Those who suggest that George Jr. is getting revenge for his dad are conveniently ignoring the agreement Saddam signed, which is why their whole position on the war question can and should be dismissed; they hand-wave the important facts and replace them with glib catch-phrases. Intellectual dishonesty has no place in a debate about so serious a subject.

A great night for Re…

A great night for Re…
A great night for Republicans. Many Democrats framed this election in a number of different ways; referendum on Bush, revenge for Florida 2000, yadda yadda yadda. However, some, like the DNC’s Terry McAulliffe, don’t even have the good sense or courtesy to eat their words. Quoted by Drudge, Terry said on Larry King last night, “Tonight was a good night for Democrats.” Yeah, right. If you can’t be truthful with yourself, you can’t fix the problem.

I wonder if the Nobel organization, who gave the 2002 Peace Prize to Jimmy Carter as a political message to Bush, were paying any attention. Hey fellas; Carter’s no longer president (and imagine the interest rates we’d have if he still were). And don’t forget how well his olive branch to North Korea went over (i.e. it didn’t, they still built nukes). Yup, those Nobel guys really showed us, didn’t they?

For my take on some of the races and issues, let me start in my home state of Georgia.

Democrat Governor Roy Barnes, the incumbent, outspent Republican Sonny Perdue by at least 6-to-1 (and some reports said up to 10-to-1) and yet he lost. Consider that statistic when you hear the Democrat pundits saying that the boatloads of special interest group money in the Republicans’ pockets were why they won. In some places, yes, the Republicans had more money, but in Georgia that was certainly not the case, and yet the Georgia got its first Republican governor in 130 years. You can’t hand-wave that away by citing war chests. To be sure, I can’t find a single soul who actually thought Perdue had a snowball’s chance in Havana of winning, but when you look at the 1994 race for governor, the Republicans had their best showing to date then, so perhaps there was a trend in the making at least as far back as that.

War veterans were jumping ship and voting Republican as well, against Vietnam vet Senator Max Cleland (who lost 3 limbs in that conflict). Instead, they voted based on ideas, not affiliation, and put Republican Saxby Chambliss in his spot. Again, this was another race few thought Max could lose.

There was even an upset in the State House. The man who’s been Speaker of the House in Georgia for 28 years, Tom Murphy was defeated for re-election. Murphy was a fixture in Georgia politics having first been elected to public office in 1960. It does sound to me as if the trend I referred to is far more real than hoped for.

Moving to Florida, a race I didn’t hear much about last night was a House of Representatives seat in Florida that went to Katherine Harris. Yes, that Katherine Harris; the one demonized so unfairly by Democrats in the Florida 2000 election nuttiness. Just as she did in that situation, I’m betting she’ll be one to abide by the law, and not make it up as she goes along (as opposed to the Florida and New Jersey Supreme Court justices, to name just a few).

A 30-year-old bilingual education program in Massachusetts was eliminated in favor of English immersion. This has proven a boon to education in California, completely contrary to claims by multiculturism theorists. Once it works in Massachusetts, hopefully it’ll be the last nail in that segragationist “seperate but equal” coffin.

Liberal ideas were shot down all over. Nevada and Arizona both rejected measure that would decriminalize possesion of small amounts of marijuana, and Nevada rejected ‘gay’ marriages. Oregon, at the same time, soundly turned back universal health care for the state. Seems to me that when it’s issues being debated, and not spin and image, conservatives generally win. Wish more folks would realize what their real political leanings are.

An exception to that, but only a minor one, was in Florida where constitutional protection was given to pregnant pigs. Yes folks, pigs are people, too. Actually, the special interest groups involved in this chose Florida as a testing ground because they have such a tiny hog raising industry. (In fact, just a couple of farms will be affected.) The idea was that since most folks in Florida wouldn’t care much about this, since it didn’t impact the state much, the (liberal) special interests could get an easy win and use it as a precedent in other states. (And remember, Democrats complained about conservative special interests holding sway in the election.)

Overall, a great night for America, a great night for Republicans, and, most importantly, for policies that will give more power back to people and removed from government. At least that’s my hope. I’ll be watching, and I hope you will, too.

Whoops…stop the pr…

Whoops…stop the pr…
Whoops…stop the presses! Saudi foreign minister, Prince Saud al-Faisal, has lost his spine again. Apparently, there’s some confusion over what the word “no” means. The New York Times is reporting that he’s gone back to saying that if Iraq doesn’t comply with the UN resolutions, “Saudi Arabia would be obliged to ‘cooperate’ with the United Nations.”

With friends like these, who need Yemenis?

I pointed out earlie…

I pointed out earlie…
I pointed out earlier that the Saudis, who’d originally said we couldn’t use their bases in an attack on Iraq, changed their tune and said that if the UN passed a resolution authorizing the use of force then they’d be “obliged to follow through” and allow the use of their bases. I noted the utter lack of spine in taking that position (i.e. hiding behind a UN resolution instead of standing up for your prinicples), but it appears that spine has reappeared. Prince Saud al-Faisal now says that, while they are with us against Al-Qaeda, they won’t participate in any action against Iraq.

While it’s nice to see folks stand up for what they believe in (even if waffling at one point), one has to wonder how long the memories of the Saudis are. They very willingly let us in to their country to defend it when it looked like Iraq was poised to go after them after Kuwait was overrun. But for the US military, and forces under a US-led coalition, the Saudis were convinced they were next.

Our “allies” the Saudis still need a spine. But they really need to know who their friends (and their enemies) are.

Another clear indica…

Another clear indica…
Another clear indication of how Democrats run their campaigns based on the here-and-now, hoping their constituents forget the past, is this article in USA Today. Most Democrats around the country are either not using that “D” word, aligning themselves with Bush, keeping Clinton and Daschle away from the state, or some combination of the above. Democrats can trust their core voter base to ignore their legislative records and vote on emotion and imagery come Election Day. Hopefully, those who have voted Democrat in the past and who consider the issues (sadly, a shrinking population) will see through this.

I think Ann Coulter said it best when she responded to the New Jersey switcharoo, “If Democrats could get away with it, they’d claim to be running ‘Ronald Reagan’ in all elections and then fill the seats with the equivalent of James Carville.” And apparently the New Jersey Supreme Court would find nothing wrong with that.

It’s been a busy mon…

It’s been a busy mon…
It’s been a busy month here at Payton Place (the house, not the web site). Hence the dearth of updates. But here’s one for ya’.

After the tragic death of Sen. Paul Wellstone, Minnesota Democrats were all over Republicans because of polling the Republicans were doing. Complaining that Wellstone wasn’t even buried yet, Democrats accused Republicans of bad taste, at least, and heartlessness, at worst. How could Republicans be concerned with politics when the state was mourning? How inconsiderate to the Wellstone family!

The next day came the Wellstone memorial service, which became just another political rally, with politicking coming from the very Wellstone family that (supposedly) was offended at it 24 hours before, and from Democrat leaders that were tsk-tsk-ing that sort of behavior on the previous day’s evening news.

Surprised? Not me. As I’ve said before, it appears the the die-hard Democrat voter base consists mostly of folks with extremely short attention spans. They don’t remember, or care, what you said yesterday. They only care about what you’re saying today (and never mind what you’re doing; only intentions really matter). These folks are easy prey for Democrats who change their tune as soon as the wind blows a different way (compare Clinton’s governing via poll vs. Reagan’s governing based on his pre-existing principles).

Was September 11th A…

Was September 11th A…
Was September 11th America’s fault? Well if you believe that, then was the recent bombing of a Bali nightclub Austrailia’s fault? As of now, 30 Austrailian citizens died in that bombing and 160 are missing. 190 compared to the Austrailian population (19.5 million) is roughly proportionate to the 3,000 who died on 9/11 compared to America’s population. (And the 9/11 deaths were not all U.S. citizens.) So the Bali bombing could be considered Austrailia’s 9/11.

Prior to this, as Clive James notes in the Guardian, Austrailia pundits blamed America for the 9/11 attacks, because of our behavior in the rest of the world. Now, (not so) amazingly, they’re starting to change their tune.

It’s so easy to pontificate from the outside, isn’t it? And from the inside, I wonder if the ‘blame America first’ crowd is ready to blame Austrailia now. (Answer: Hold not thy breath.)

In the Sore Loser de…

In the Sore Loser de…
In the Sore Loser department, supporters of Cynthia McKinney (D-Saudi Arabia) are filing suit in federal court to have the Democratic primary that she lost voided, and have her declared the winner. Given that, consider this:

  • Where do you think McKinney stood on the Supreme Court ruling that halted the Florida recounts in 2000? Those recounts that were, you may recall, taking place contrary to Florida law, which is what the Supremes were reacting to. Dollars-to-doughnuts she considered that ruling flawed. And now here are her supporters trying to do something similar, except they’re trying to have a legal act (voting in whatever primary you want) declared unconstitutional. as opposed to having an illegal ruling overturned. (And I wonder what her position is on the Toricelli/Lautenberg switcheroo, another judicial ruling that defies the law.)
  • The folks bringing the lawsuit claim that the crossover voting denied African-American voters their right to elect the candidate of their choice. This is, of course, given the false assumption that the 48% of the vote that went to Denise Majette was lilly white. It also comes with the suggestion that only the votes of African-Americans should count in Georgia’s 4th district.
  • McKinney’s supporters claim that 37,500 Republicans (legally) crossed over and voted against her. That would be over half of the votes cast for Majette (68,612). However, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution could find no more that 3,118 votes where the voters clearly identified themselves as registered Republicans. (And remember, in Georgia the term “registered” is meaningless, since we don’t register for a party. Hence the legality of “crossover” voting.) Are they making these numbers up? (Answer: Most likely.)

Yes, these are just her supporters, not Cynthia herself, but the silence as to whether or not she supports this endeavor is deafening. (Cybercast News Service could raise neither McKinney herself nor the Congressional Black Caucus on this issue.) And playing the blame game is nothing new to the McKinneys anyway, who have blamed the Democratic Party, Georgia Governor Roy Barnes, and of course J-E-W-S.

Speaking of “mob rul…

Speaking of “mob rul…
Speaking of “mob rule”, Neal Boortz has a great column on how that relates to the New Jersey switcharoo. The NJ Supreme Court has decided, and the NY Times agrees, that the wishes of the mob (voters (read: Democrat party members) who want a “genuine election”) is more important than the law (the “51 day” rule). We’re not a democracy, we’re a republic. And that makes all the difference. Boortz notes that not a single founding father ever uttered the word “democracy”, and for good reason.

We don’t have mob rule. Well, we’re not supposed to have it.

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