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Peace at any cost is a Prelude to War!


THE FEDERALIST(r) DIGEST
The Conservative e-Journal of Record
* Veritas Vos Liberabit *

01 February 2002
Federalist Edition #02-05
Friday Digest

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CONTENTS:
The Foundation
Federalist Perspective


______----********O********----______
THE FOUNDATION

"It is the object only of war that makes it honorable.  And if there
was ever a just war since the world began, it is this in which America
is now engaged." --Thomas Paine

______----********O********----______
FEDERALIST PERSPECTIVE

Top of the fold...

"As we gather tonight, our nation is at war, our economy is in
recession, and the civilized world faces unprecedented dangers. Yet
the state of our union has never been stronger," President George W.
Bush began in delivering his first State of the Union speech before
Congress Tuesday night.  Mr. Bush's speech emphasized the central
government's constitutional role of providing for the common defense
-- in fighting the war against Jihadistan abroad and protecting the
homeland. Mr. Bush concluded his address by saying, "We choose freedom
and the dignity of every life. Steadfast in our purpose, we now press
on. We have known freedom's price. We have shown freedom's power. And
in this great conflict, we will see freedom's victory."

"It's a pleasure to watch a State of the Union Address largely devoted
to carrying out the federal government's proper function of providing
national defense," noted Cato Institute Executive Vice President David
Boaz. We concur!

The President called for 39 new initiatives in 48 minutes. (This is a
welcome change from our former national embarrassment, who proposed
over 100 new programs in his last long-winded blowhard SOTU.) And
while The Federalist has constitutional objections about Mr. Bush's
calls for such programs as a patients' bill of rights and a
"productive farm policy," we were delighted at the attention the
President paid to rebuilding our national security after years of
not-so-benign neglect. And we were nearly ecstatic when Mr. Bush
identified as a new "axis of evil" the terror-sponsoring,
weapons-collecting countries of North Korea, Iran and Iraq. (The next
"evil empire" to bring down....)

Asked Wednesday for clarification on the "axis of evil," Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld replied, "I think if I were in Iran or North
Korea or Iraq and I heard the president of the United States say what
he said last night about weapons of mass destruction and about
terrorism and about terrorist networks and about nations that harbor
terrorists, I don't think there'd be a lot of ambiguity as to the view
he holds of those problems and their behavior. Now, what will they do
about that is something we'll find out. But it ought to be very clear
to them that he is -- he is calling attention to the risks to the
world that that relationship poses."

Speaking before the National Defense University Thursday, Mr. Rumsfeld
detailed the need for simultaneous defense transformation and
anti-terror preparations to meet national vulnerabilities to ballistic
missile attacks, weaknesses in space assets, possible cyberattacks and
attacks on foreign bases for U.S. military personnel: "Our job is to
close off as many of those avenues of potential attack as is possible.
These attacks could grow vastly more deadly than those we suffered [on
Sept. 11]."

And Mr. Rumsfeld further discussed the need for increased defense
spending -- to fund the war on Jihadistan and speed recovery from the
"procurement holiday" that has eroded levels of readiness: "For 2003,
the president will seek what he characterized as the largest increase
in defense spending since the 1980s. It's a great deal of money [$48
billion]. It's the taxpayers' money. It is not the government's money,
it is the taxes that are paid by people who work in Chicago and Dallas
and Portland and Seattle. They're hard-earned dollars. But compared
with the costs in dollars, if one thinks about the cost in dollars and
lives of a conflict, there's no question but that investment before
the fact is much cheaper. Seeing that our country has the capability
to contribute to peace and stability in the world is the wise and
prudent and, in the last analysis, the cheapest way both in dollars
and in human treasure."

And not a moment too soon, we might add! As Mr. Bush remarked in his
Tuesday address, our warriors in Afghanistan have discovered several
caches of plans to carry out further attacks against the U.S.,
including diagrams of U.S. nuclear power plants and rough design plans
for a nuclear weapon. U.S. intelligence agencies this week issued an
internal alert that Islamic terrorists are planning additional major
attacks rivaling those of 9-11. Analysts estimate, among known
targets, a bombing or airline attack on a nuclear power plant or other
U.S. nuclear facility, such as a weapons storage depot, would cause
mass casualties and widespread radiological debris.

While air piracy on a U.S. domestic flight would be nearly impossible,
and while excessive security measures at U.S. airports does pose a
minor obstacle for suicidal terrorists willing to detonate a bomb on
an aircraft, there is still plenty of room for air piracy over the
U.S. considering that Air Pakistan, Air India and a host of other
foreign carriers continue to fly into our airspace! Some nuclear
plants in urban areas -- those where radiological contamination would
be most disastrous -- are located in close proximity to airports,
effectively negating the ten mile fight restriction dome imposed after
9-11. Hawk missiles can't remove that threat -- or the myriad of
others now pending. Engaging Jihadistan on every front possible can.

In other news, reflecting on the State of the Union, it is interesting
to consider where Mr. Bush was one year ago, Leftists deriding him on
most counts and lukewarm support from some conservative circles. Since
then, he has gained the confidence of the American people and for a
major reason we identified a year ago -- character -- he has it and in
stark contrast to the former White House occupant. The war against
Jihadistan allowed the nation to see that George W. Bush was, indeed,
a leader.

We noted three weeks prior to Mr. Bush's inauguration: "It is the
opinion of the majority of The Federalist Editorial Board
that...Leftists and conservatives alike are significantly
underestimating Mr. Bush's ability to breathe new life into the
conservative agenda. ... Mr. Bush will be doing much more than
installing new administration faces after January 20th. He will be
restoring a few things that have been painfully absent from the
presidency for eight long years -- most notably, honor and common
decency."

We added, "However, rest assured our editors intend to review Mr.
Bush's performance -- and that of his cabinet -- with the same
conservative scrutiny applied to Clinton-Gore for their tenure in the
White House...." And we will certainly keep standing watch on the
conservative ramparts!

One objection The Federalist lodged early on with the new president
was his "house divided" strategy of tapping cabinet members like
Left-leaning Colin Powell as Secretary of State against the solid
right-thinkers like Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. And to that
end, a dustup this week about Bush administration internal
disagreements about the status of the al Qaeda and Taliban detainees
illustrated these pitfalls.

A memo from White House Counsel Al Gonzales informed Mr. Bush that
Powell disagreed with the President's earlier decision denying the
detainees prisoner of war status under Geneva Convention definitions:
"The Secretary of State has requested that you reconsider that
decision." After a visit to the detainees at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba,
Donald Rumsfeld rebutted, "They are not POWs. They will not be
determined to be POWs." Mr. Bush cleared up the squabble, rejecting
Powell's request: "These are killers; these are terrorists," the
President said. "They're illegal combatants."

But regarding President Bush's conservative credentials, as Chairman
of the American Conservative Union David Keene said at the opening of
the group's 29th annual Conservative Political Action Conference
Thursday, "Most people believe that George W. Bush is a conservative.
Most people support him in large part for that reason and the largest
group of Americans that identify themselves politically and
ideologically refer to themselves as conservatives, too."

Quote of the week...

"To be sure, Mr. Bush's own personality, as seen on Sept. 11, is one
factor unifying people. He is a president with authority and a
transparently decent man around whom people now naturally rally. But
as the nation enters into the dark room of a continued war on
terrorism against the background of a continuing recession, he may
need to think more carefully about how to shape a permanently united
America from our present multicultural flux." --John O'Sullivan

On cross-examination...

"Can you imagine Bill Clinton making evil the centerpiece of a State
of the Union? I doubt it, especially since he had to devote so much of
his presidency to a kind of post-modernist relativism in which nothing
is ever quite what it seems (not words, not sex, not promises)."
--Rich Lowry

Open Query...

"'United We Stand,' proclaimed the post-Sept. 11 signs. What unites a
people more than a common tongue? We can yak all we want about unity,
but there are powerful forces working to fragment us in the name of
equality and inclusion." --Don Feder

The BIG lie...

"Even in this time of crisis, the Republicans are back to
politics-as-usual, as we can see from the 'economic stimulus bill'
they are trying to pass and which gives huge tax-breaks to
corporations. It shows us that Republican legislators are still the
representatives of big business, leaving the Democrats to defend
working people...." --Barbra Streisand

News from the Swamp...

In the Executive Branch, the General Accounting Office, for the first
time in its history, this week filed suit to obtain information on
behalf of Congress from the executive branch, in this case suing Vice
President Dick Cheney for information used in his formulations of
national energy policy. The Federalist has previously argued, on
pragmatic political grounds, for release of this information to remove
fodder from Leftist cannons. (We don't think Team Bush has anything
seriously embarrassing to hide about their "financial relations with
that donor, Enron Corporation.") But we believe the GAO case has
constitutional merit, in that Congress is a coequal branch of
government to the executive and has a legitimate oversight role in the
development of public policy, as the energy policy in question
undoubtedly is.

That having been said, here is the scoop on the Enron Demo-ruse.
Leftists complain that Enron's lobby (headed by a Democrat) asked the
Bush administration to not impose energy price controls. Ostensibly,
the "smoking gun" in this matter is a memo between Enron and the Vice
President which noted Enron's objection to government imposed energy
price caps. But at the time of the energy crunch in California, every
free-market advocate in the nation, including the President and
Vice-President, had already indicated their lifelong opposition to
central government meddling in commodity markets.

As The Federalist noted a year ago (#01-04), "The fiasco in the
People's Republic of California began four years prior to President
Bush's inauguration, when that state 'deregulated' energy by freeing
prices at the wholesale level while freezing them at the retail level
and providing consumers no lasting choice or competition (among what
had previously been monopoly energy retailers)."  Free enterprise
Socialism -- California Style! (We noted our strong opposition to
price controls, even though we received no memos from Enron
executives.)

As quoted from the Wall Street Journal in that same edition: "Gov.
Gray Davis...didn't get it last summer when the trouble began. He
didn't get it last month when the problems multiplied, and he still
doesn't get it. Not only did Mr. Davis accuse out-of-state power
suppliers of being 'pirates' and 'marauders,' but he has proposed
making the withholding of power a criminal act and suggested
committing public lands to power-plant construction 'on the condition
that energy be distributed only in California'."

Six months into his presidency, Mr. Bush, our vigorous objections
noted, did endorse an electricity-price-cap plan ordered by the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. "They're not talking about firm
price controls...," he said. "They're talking about a mechanism to
mitigate any severe price spike that may occur, which is completely
different from price controls." A "rose by any other name" we
rebutted.

In the final analysis, the Left's smoking gun subterfuge is all smoke
and no gun. But the rule is that if a partisan issue is too
complicated for most consumers to grasp, and can be spun with
Leftmedia complicity in such a way as to undermine support for
conservative initiatives, spin away.

Elsewhere in the Executive Branch, Health and Human Services Secretary
Tommy Thompson announced Thursday that the term "fetuses" may be
replaced with the phrase "unborn children." The reclassification was
intended to give low-income women access to prenatal care, but the
language change is excellent news for pro-life advocates in contending
that preborn children should be recognized as having the same rights
as they possess once on the delivery table.

And on the silly side of the swamp, some wags have suggested modesty
-- even prudery -- as the motivation behind new blue curtains for
background to Justice Department briefings.  Seems that the podium
from which Attorney General John Ashcroft keeps the public abreast of
news developments is directly in front of two partly unclothed figures
representing justice that will now be covered up. (If that's the only
cover-up at DOJ now, we can live with that.)

In the House of Commons, Demo Leader Richard Gephardt, who provided
the Democrat response to Mr. Bush's speech, has been making early
presidential bid noises. To wit: "I would ask anybody: A year ago, if
you had the choice of investing in your Nasdaq account or investing in
Social Security, which of those two accounts would be better today?
.. Which would be stronger? There is no doubt in our mind that a
Social Security account over the last year would have been far
stronger." Yes, but since Social Security is generally a benefit
maturing over a long period of time -- about 30-40 years -- retirees
today can rightly ask what their money would be worth had it been
invested in equities rather than left on deposit in the nonexistent
Social Security trust fund.

>From the Left...

>From the "Je$$e Ja�k$on" Files, the good reverend, "working" with
former Enron employees this week, had to respond to questions about
donations to Rainbow/PUSH by -- you guessed it! -- Enron. His first
reply: "To my knowledge, no, I have not and neither have any of our
entities." His later acknowledgment: "Whatever it was, it was
minuscule."  Ja�k$on met with former Enron CEO Kenneth Lay for prayer
and support, comparing Lay to the biblical figure Job. But that
comparison will not fit until Lay is scraping his boils with
potsherds!

Hey, you know the Leftspin machine is in trouble when the only guys
Daschle-Gephardt, et al., could round up to lead the charge are Je$$e
Ja�k$on and $hyster $harpton! And with all their effort to spin Enron
toward the White House, you would think someone would have the common
decency to shine some light on this tidbit regarding the massive
bankruptcy of fiber-optic cable company Global Crossing. It seems that
Democrat National Committee Chairman Terry McAuliffe's buddy at
Global, Gary Winnick, gave McAuliffe an early in for $100,000. It
seems McAuliffe also got an early out -- cashing out with a cool
$17,900,000 profit before the company bellied up, leaving the
remaining stockholders with, well, nothing.

(Apparently McAuliffe took some lessons from Sen. Ms. Hillary
Rodham-Clinton, who, you may recall, turned a $1,000 commodities
investment into $100,000 -- with a little help from her friends at
Tyson Chicken. That would be the same Tyson Chicken served up with new
indictments by U.S. Attorneys two weeks ago.)

Judicial Benchmarks...

In the halls of justice on the right, the Georgia Court of Appeals
upheld preeminence of the Georgia Defense of Marriage Act, limiting
marriage to one man and one woman, and ruling that a Vermont civil
union is not the equivalent of a traditional marriage regardless of
other states' interpretation. The decision arose from the divorce of
Darian and Susan Burns, in which Darian currently has custody of their
three children, and visitation agreements barred the children from
exposure to unmarried cohabitation. Susan Burns had obtained a Vermont
"civil union" with her lesbian cohabitant and asked the court to
recognize this and allow visits with the children. The Georgia court
ruled unanimously, saying, "even if Vermont had purported to legalize
same-sex marriages, such would not be recognized in Georgia. ...[T]he
Defense of Marriage Act] clearly states that it is the public policy
of the state of Georgia to recognize the union only of a man and a
woman. Marriages between persons of the same sex are prohibited in
this state."

In the halls of injustice on the left, a U.S. District judge tossed
out student-led nondenominational prayers of grace at the Virginia
Military Institute, ending a 50-year-old tradition at the academy.
Family Research Council's Jan LaRue objected, "We have absolutely no
evidence that the intent of the framers of the First Amendment or any
other part of the Constitution was to prohibit or obliterate these
practices.... I don't think the ACLU's got a prayer [of succeeding on
appeal]." We second that objection!

The Commissars...

>From the "Bureaucrati Ignoramus" Files: Newly issued Department of
Transportation guidelines for airport security screeners in the "FAA
Guidance for Screeners and Other Security Personnel" prohibit security
measures focusing on passengers most likely to be terrorists:
"Selection [for closer examination] must not be based solely because a
person speaks Arabic, Farsi, or another foreign language, or solely
because they speak with an accent that may lead one to believe they
are Arab, Middle Eastern, South Asian, and/or Muslim." If that isn't
the first-cut criterion for "closer examination," what is? Fuses
extending out of sneakers?

Regarding the redistribution of your income...

Do you believe it's done by taxation only? Recent investigations
examining the impact of regulation and taxation on the American
economy have concluded it's more detrimental than previously thought.
A new study by W. Mark Crain and Joseph M. Johnson calculated that
U.S. manufacturing firms spent $2.2 million each, roughly $1,700 per
employee, complying with federal workplace regulations in 2000. This
places the total cost to the U.S. manufacturing sector at $32 billion
in 2000. (Earlier studies appear to have underestimated regulatory
costs by about 75%.)

>From the department of military readiness...

Guess what's right on track! The Federalist's recommended path for
rapid emplacement of effective, flexible ballistic missile defenses!
Last Friday, a Navy cruiser equipped with the Aegis defense system
engaged in a successful test of Navy Theater Wide interception by
shooting down a rocket off Hawaii. Broadening the capabilities of
these existing sea-based platforms is the best way to get quick
deployment of such protections for our countrymen and our allies.

>From the states...

Private detective and security guard Donald G. Arnold is a Vietnam
veteran, president of his neighborhood association, and was Maryland's
2000 "citizen of the year" for work with police in southeast Baltimore
to make the city safer. Arnold's recent application for renewal of his
permit to carry a gun was turned down, however, under state guidelines
for enforcing federal law barring firearms possession to anyone
convicted of even certain minor crimes. Arnold's disqualifying
offense? In 1969 he was convicted for participation in a barroom melee
after a man eying his Army jacket called him a "baby killer."

And the New Jersey Board of Education has unveiled new history
curriculum standards, but these pass right over any inclusion of the
American founders -- no requirements for covering George Washington,
Thomas Jefferson, or the Pilgrims and the Mayflower. State officials
defending the new standards claimed that teachers would, of course,
make sure students "recognize the names of some major figures in
American history." Perhaps the "Garden State" ought to change that
nickname -- more fertilizer than flowers there, we'd say!

In economic news...

The 32nd annual World Economic Forum meetings kicked off in New York
City Thursday behind concrete barriers and amid expectations of rowdy
street protests. Chairman Hamid Karzai, interim leader of Afghanistan
addressed the confab at its opening, as poverty, redevelopment amid
recession, and combating terrorism are the organization's policy goals
this session.  And they mean to fight all three with only
materialistic tools!

In business news...

Amazon.com recently announced it has finally survived an accounting
quarter in the black! We knew some Internet enterprise could
eventually operate in the black...especially if Andersen was doing the
accounting.  Now that you have all done your part with Amazon.com,
please turn your attention to Federalist.com, where we also desire a
small margin of net revenues over expenses.

The "Dumb and Dumber" Department...

You may recall Dr. Karen Davis, president of United Poultry Concerns,
who equates people and chickens. (The Federalist #02-02 reported that
Davis said, "While I would not dream of using arguments to diminish
the horror of the September 11th attack for thousands of people, I
would also suggest that the people who died in the attack did not
suffer more terrible deaths than animals in slaughterhouses suffer
every day.") This week she's back -- protesting the hilarious Carl's
Jr. commercials in which a group of men, one snapping off a latex
glove, surround a chicken looking for its "nuggets." Davis likened the
portrayal to a gang rape on a woman. Hey, we like those ads -- we've
not only wondered where to find the "nuggets" on the chicken, but also
the "fingers"! Maybe right next to the "lips"? But we are even more
perplexed that the Carl's Jr. ads tout their offering of "Chicken
Strips." Sounds like weird bestial voyeurism to us, but then some
people may like plucking chickens....

Culture comment...

Isn't the New Hampshire state motto, "Live Free Or Die"? A favorite
target around our editorial shop, Princeton "bioethicist" Peter
Singer, told advocates for the disabled at the New Hampshire
Governor's Commission on Disability he considers murder of severely
disabled newborns morally acceptable. "I do think that it is sometimes
appropriate to kill a human infant. For me, the relevant question is,
what makes it so seriously wrong to take a life? Those of you who are
not vegetarians are responsible for taking a life every time you eat.
Species is no more relevant than race in making these judgments." No
nuggets for him, then!

Faith Matters...

Announcement this week of a revised NIV Bible has raised up a stir.
While The Federalist has not yet reviewed the evangelical-translated
language, rather than being a stiff bow to political correctness, we
suspect the new terminology has more to do with changes in modern
English definitions and usage -- for example, with the word "men" less
often than before construed as meaning "all humans" but today usually
taken as meaning only "all males." In other words, we don't think the
TNIV rewrite of The Lord's Prayer begins, "Our Somebody Out There
Somewhere, Yo...." Being keepers of "original intent," we'll be on the
case, and we'll let you know of any real violations of original
meaning that might be discovered!

Around the world...

Terrorists in Pakistan continue to hold captive Wall Street Journal
reporter Danny Pearl. Back home, we join his young expectant wife and
his colleagues in prayer for his safe return. But spilling innocent
blood is sport to his captors, and our military colleagues on the
front with Jihadistan assure us that sufficient notice has been given
that should Danny's life be taken, the cost will be swift -- and a
hundred-fold.

And speaking of terrorists abroad and the media, the London Evening
Standard noted the Bush administration has muted European criticism of
the treatment of al Qaeda detainees at Gitmo (including three Brits):
"America is threatening to return up to 40 alleged al Qaeda fighters
to Britain, presenting the government with a security, legal and
diplomatic nightmare." Nothing concentrates the clarity of Leftist
minds better than the prospect of having to harbor a terrorist!

And last...

We know beauty is only skin -- and there are only so many beautiful
heads -- so political entrepreneur Arnie Rubin may be onto something
in proposing a new political action committee called HAIRPAC to
support follicularly challenged candidates for elective office. Rubin
said, "We figure we get discriminated against because we haven't got
enough hair." Perhaps a couple of their slogans could be: "The Bald
Truth And Nothing But," or "No Secrets Under Our Hats."

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