Let me add this.  The only place where I have spoken in the last 3 months with any 
people who both have a postgraduate degree and are still supporting Bush is...

 

... here on Brin-l...

 
http://www.amconmag.com/2004_11_08/cover1.html# 

Kerry�s the One


By Scott McConnell

There is little in John Kerry�s persona or platform that appeals to conservatives. The 
flip-flopper charge�the centerpiece of the Republican campaign against Kerry�seems 
overdone, as Kerry�s contrasting votes are the sort of baggage any senator of long 
service is likely to pick up. (Bob Dole could tell you all about it.) But Kerry is 
plainly a conventional liberal and no candidate for a future edition of Profiles in 
Courage. In my view, he will always deserve censure for his vote in favor of the Iraq 
War in 2002. 
But this election is not about John Kerry. If he were to win, his dearth of charisma 
would likely ensure him a single term. He would face challenges from within his own 
party and a thwarting of his most expensive initiatives by a Republican Congress. Much 
of his presidency would be absorbed by trying to clean up the mess left to him in 
Iraq. He would be constrained by the swollen deficits and a ripe target for the next 
Republican nominee. 
It is, instead, an election about the presidency of George W. Bush. To the surprise of 
virtually everyone, Bush has turned into an important president, and in many ways the 
most radical America has had since the 19th century. Because he is the leader of 
America�s conservative party, he has become the Left�s perfect foil�its dream 
candidate. The libertarian writer Lew Rockwell has mischievously noted parallels 
between Bush and Russia�s last tsar, Nicholas II: both gained office as a result of 
family connections, both initiated an unnecessary war that shattered their countries� 
budgets. Lenin needed the calamitous reign of Nicholas II to create an opening for the 
Bolsheviks. 
Bush has behaved like a caricature of what a right-wing president is supposed to be, 
and his continuation in office will discredit any sort of conservatism for 
generations. The launching of an invasion against a country that posed no threat to 
the U.S., the doling out of war profits and concessions to politically favored 
corporations, the financing of the war by ballooning the deficit to be passed on to 
the nation�s children, the ceaseless drive to cut taxes for those outside the middle 
class and working poor: it is as if Bush sought to resurrect every false 1960s-era 
left-wing clich� about predatory imperialism and turn it into administration policy. 
Add to this his nation-breaking immigration proposal�Bush has laid out a mad scheme to 
import immigrants to fill any job where the wage is so low that an American can�t be 
found to do it�and you have a presidency that combines imperialist Right and 
open-borders Left in a uniquely noxious cocktail. 
During the campaign, few have paid attention to how much the Bush presidency has 
degraded the image of the United States in the world. Of course there has always been 
�anti-Americanism.� After the Second World War many European intellectuals argued for 
a �Third Way� between American-style capitalism and Soviet communism, and a generation 
later Europe�s radicals embraced every ragged �anti-imperialist� cause that came 
along. In South America, defiance of �the Yanqui� always draws a crowd. But Bush has 
somehow managed to take all these sentiments and turbo-charge them. In Europe and 
indeed all over the world, he has made the United States despised by people who used 
to be its friends, by businessmen and the middle classes, by moderate and sensible 
liberals. Never before have democratic foreign governments needed to demonstrate 
disdain for Washington to their own electorates in order to survive in office. The 
poll numbers are shocking. In countries like Norway, Germany, France, 
 and
 Spain, Bush is liked by about seven percent of the populace. In Egypt, recipient of 
huge piles of American aid in the past two decades, some 98 percent have an 
unfavorable view of the United States. It�s the same throughout the Middle East. 
Bush has accomplished this by giving the U.S. a novel foreign-policy doctrine under 
which it arrogates to itself the right to invade any country it wants if it feels 
threatened. It is an American version of the Brezhnev Doctrine, but the latter was at 
least confined to Eastern Europe. If the analogy seems extreme, what is an appropriate 
comparison when a country manufactures falsehoods about a foreign government, 
disseminates them widely, and invades the country on the basis of those falsehoods? It 
is not an action that any American president has ever taken before. It is not 
something that �good� countries do. It is the main reason that people all over the 
world who used to consider the United States a reliable and necessary bulwark of world 
stability now see us as a menace to their own peace and security. 
These sentiments mean that as long as Bush is president, we have no real allies in the 
world, no friends to help us dig out from the Iraq quagmire. More tragically, they 
mean that if terrorists succeed in striking at the United States in another 9/11-type 
attack, many in the world will not only think of the American victims but also of the 
thousands and thousands of Iraqi civilians killed and maimed by American armed forces. 
The hatred Bush has generated has helped immeasurably those trying to recruit 
anti-American terrorists�indeed his policies are the gift to terrorism that keeps on 
giving, as the sons and brothers of slain Iraqis think how they may eventually take 
their own revenge. Only the seriously deluded could fail to see that a policy so 
central to America�s survival as a free country as getting hold of loose nuclear 
materials and controlling nuclear proliferation requires the willingness of foreign 
countries to provide full, 100 percent co-operation. Making yourself
  into
 the world�s most hated country is not an obvious way to secure that help. 
I�ve heard people who have known George W. Bush for decades and served prominently in 
his father�s administration say that he could not possibly have conceived of the 
doctrine of pre-emptive war by himself, that he was essentially taken for a ride by 
people with a pre-existing agenda to overturn Saddam Hussein. Bush�s public 
performances plainly show him to be a man who has never read or thought much about 
foreign policy. So the inevitable questions are: who makes the key foreign-policy 
decisions in the Bush presidency, who controls the information flow to the president, 
how are various options are presented? 
The record, from published administration memoirs and in-depth reporting, is one of an 
administration with a very small group of six or eight real decision-makers, who were 
set on war from the beginning and who took great pains to shut out arguments from 
professionals in the CIA and State Department and the U.S. armed forces that 
contradicted their rosy scenarios about easy victory. Much has been written about the 
neoconservative hand guiding the Bush presidency�and it is peculiar that one who was 
fired from the National Security Council in the Reagan administration for suspicion of 
passing classified material to the Israeli embassy and another who has written 
position papers for an Israeli Likud Party leader have become key players in the 
making of American foreign policy. 
But neoconservatism now encompasses much more than Israel-obsessed intellectuals and 
policy insiders. The Bush foreign policy also surfs on deep currents within the 
Christian Right, some of which see unqualified support of Israel as part of a godly 
plan to bring about Armageddon and the future kingdom of Christ. These two strands of 
Jewish and Christian extremism build on one another in the Bush presidency�and 
President Bush has given not the slightest indication he would restrain either in a 
second term. With Colin Powell�s departure from the State Department looming, Bush is 
more than ever the �neoconian candidate.� The only way Americans will have a 
presidency in which neoconservatives and the Christian Armageddon set are not holding 
the reins of power is if Kerry is elected. 
If Kerry wins, this magazine will be in opposition from Inauguration Day forward. But 
the most important battles will take place within the Republican Party and the 
conservative movement. A Bush defeat will ignite a huge soul-searching within the 
rank-and-file of Republicandom: a quest to find out how and where the Bush presidency 
went wrong. And it is then that more traditional conservatives will have an audience 
to argue for a conservatism informed by the lessons of history, based in prudence and 
a sense of continuity with the American past�and to make that case without a powerful 
White House pulling in the opposite direction. 
George W. Bush has come to embody a politics that is antithetical to almost any kind 
of thoughtful conservatism. His international policies have been based on the 
hopelessly na�ve belief that foreign peoples are eager to be liberated by American 
armies�a notion more grounded in Leon Trotsky�s concept of global revolution than any 
sort of conservative statecraft. His immigration policies�temporarily put on hold 
while he runs for re-election�are just as extreme. A re-elected President Bush would 
be committed to bringing in millions of low-wage immigrants to do jobs Americans 
�won�t do.� This election is all about George W. Bush, and those issues are enough to 
render him unworthy of any conservative support.  

November 8, 2004 issue




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