<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=652> The Dream Ticket


by
<http://amazon.com/gp/product/1928653111?ie=UTF8&tag=therockfordinsti&link_c
ode=em1&camp=212341&creative=384049&creativeASIN=1928653111&adid=7b446286-6c
9f-402a-b339-0f9a1be42a0c> Srdja Trifkovic

 <http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/wp-content/uploads/strifkovic1.JPG>
McCain and Soros: The Most Dangerous Man in America, Bankrolled By the Most
Evil Man in the World

 <http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=652#more-652>
http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=652#more-652

"While the natural instincts of democracy lead the people to banish
distinguished men from power," Tocqueville wrote in Democracy in America,
"an instinct no less powerful leads distinguished men to shun careers in
politics, in which it is so very difficult to remain entirely true to
oneself or to advance without self-abasement."

Some 170 years and 36 presidents later, the choice presented to the American
people at this year's presidential election does not merely confirm the
correctness of the Frenchman's assessment; it amplifies his verdict in an
absurd, almost surreal manner.

Among America's presidents—many of them impressive and some great,
especially in the early years—there have been a few warmongers, neurotics,
ignoramuses, and dullards. No single chief executive has been marked by all
of those traits, however.

Jackson was famously feisty and a true American hero. Polk waged a war of
aggression, but at least that war could not be lost, and it increased the
power of the country. Tyler, Fillmore, Buchanan, and Pierce have been
maligned ex post facto after 1865 by the winners.
<http://amazon.com/gp/product/0516254847?ie=UTF8&tag=therockfordinsti&link_c
ode=em1&camp=212341&creative=384049&creativeASIN=0516254847&adid=24925604-77
d8-4071-a668-d71912ddf6b5> Andrew Johnson, Grant, and Harding were
personally flawed, rather than systemically destructive. Theodore Roosevelt
was a trigger-happy imperialist, yet he was also intelligent, rational, and
understood the uses and limits of American power in a multipolar world.
George W. Bush has no such understanding, of course, but to his credit, he
advocated a "humbler" foreign policy in 2000. His subsequent transmutation
was mainly because of his malleability coupled with his delusional belief in
divine guidance, rather than a preexistent pernicious design.

 
<http://amazon.com/gp/product/068486794X?ie=UTF8&tag=therockfordinsti&link_c
ode=em1&camp=212341&creative=384049&creativeASIN=068486794X&adid=cda2148e-37
b2-4623-b177-9267bc13ee75> John McCain is the most dangerous man in today's
America because this likely next occupant of the White House combines a
muddled world outlook with an imbalanced personality, limited intelligence,
and low character. Like Vladimir Ilich Lenin or Ted Kaczynski, he needs
dehumanized adversaries and loves to hate, never mind the ideology. He pours
scorn on powerful countries such as Russia or China, or weak ones such as
Serbia, not because it makes any sense from the point of view of this
country's security interests, but because they resist—or may resist—what his
archneoconservative advisor Robert Kagan terms America's Benevolent Global
Hegemony. He screams at his subordinates, red in the face and foaming at the
mouth, and calls them names. He graduated 894th of 899 from the
<http://amazon.com/gp/product/080783047X?ie=UTF8&tag=therockfordinsti&link_c
ode=em1&camp=212341&creative=384049&creativeASIN=080783047X&adid=9be5cb2b-5a
0a-43ae-a05d-e5ad1a26c9d3> Naval Academy in Annapolis and famously lost five
jets over Vietnam before finally being taken prisoner. He has taken money
from his party's declared enemies while simultaneously seeking that same
party's presidential nomination.

In brief, it is unsurprising that John McCain has attracted the attention
of, and found a benefactor in, one of the most evil men in the world,
<http://amazon.com/gp/product/1586481258?ie=UTF8&tag=therockfordinsti&link_c
ode=em1&camp=212341&creative=384049&creativeASIN=1586481258&adid=25702481-cf
38-4af1-9cd3-e7f08465420b> George Soros.

As our readers may recall ("George Soros, Postmodern Villain," Views,
February 2004), there is hardly a bad cause that the Philanthropist From
Hell does not sponsor. From open borders and one-world government to gun
control and Kosovo's independence, Soros is there, in person or through his
Open Society Institute and a myriad of fellow-traveling outfits. In his
"American" guise (he has a few others), he supports the Democratic Party
because he sees it as the primary vehicle for the promotion of his agenda.
Being an astute speculator, he is not limiting his options. In McCain he has
discovered a nominal Republican who is willing to pursue key points of that
agenda, to get the GOP to accept them as its mainstream position,
and—potentially—to impose them on the country as official U.S. policy.

The point of contact was campaign-finance reform, and the channel of support
was the Reform Institute, founded in 2001 and headed by the Arizona senator
until 2005, when he resigned in order to prepare for another presidential
bid. The RI was initially funded by Soros's Open Society Institute and by
Teresa Heinz-Kerry's Tides Foundation. They were excited by the
McCain-Feingold bill because it had the capacity to limit private groups'
ability to challenge the institutionalized leftist bias of the mainstream
electronic media with "issue ads"—such as those Swift Boat ads that
inflicted so much damage on John Kerry in his subsequent presidential bid.

The rapport between McCain and Soros was cemented during the 2000
presidential campaign. On July 30, McCain delivered the keynote speech at
Arianna Huffington's "Shadow Convention" in Philadelphia, an event
bankrolled by Soros. That ultraliberal political forum was set up as a
counterevent to the
<http://amazon.com/gp/product/B000F5EI0S?ie=UTF8&tag=therockfordinsti&link_c
ode=em1&camp=212341&creative=384049&creativeASIN=B000F5EI0S&adid=5c875c5a-a6
81-4374-b477-ccbc1a946618> Republican National Convention, which was held in
the same city two days later. Senator McCain was the only person to speak at
both events. It was like a pretender for the presidency of the John Randolph
Club giving the keynote speech to the Southern Poverty Law Center, in the
same city, two days before the JRC's annual meeting.

When the Reform Institute opened shop under McCain's chairmanship in July
2001, Mrs. Huffington—a close associate and confidante of Soros—was on its
advisory committee. The Institute was a pseudo-think tank designed to keep
McCain's staff assembled and gainfully employed in anticipation of another
presidential bid. Its offices were in the same building in Alexandria as his
election committee, his PAC, and the lobbying firm of his 2000 campaign
manager, Rick Davis. The Institute hired three other key campaign staffers:
legal counsel Trevor Potter as legal counsel, finance director Carla Eudy as
finance director, and press secretary Crystal Benton as . . . communications
director.

The Constitutions and Legal Policy Program of Soros's Open Society Institute
donated "above $50,000" to the RI while McCain was at its helm. In addition,
the OSI distributed $300,000 in grants to different groups that defended
McCain-Feingold from threatened legal challenges during its passage through
Congress in 2002.

Last April, McCain tried to distance himself from his benefactor, with his
old/new campaign manager Davis describing Soros as a "liberal mega-donor"
who wants to "buy this election." The performance was as convincing as
George H.W. Bush decrying the influence of "those Washington insiders." What
matters is that McCain has not given back any money to Soros. He has not
returned the $200,000 that the Reform Institute received in donations from
Cablevision in 2002 and 2003 either, when McCain was on the Senate Committee
on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. It was undoubtedly coincidental
that, in a letter to the FCC written at that time, McCain supported
Cablevision's proposal for the introduction of a more profitable cable
pricing scheme.

The Reform Institute has promoted another important pillar of Soros's
agenda: open and unlimited Third World immigration. According to an
Investor's Business Daily editorial (September 27, 2007), vast pro-illegal
immigration rallies across the country in 2006 were anything but a
spontaneous uprising of hundreds of thousands of angry Mexicans. Soros's OSI
had money-muscle there, too, through its $17-million Justice Fund, which
included involvement in the immigration rallies and funding of
illegal-immigrant activist groups for subsequent court cases: "So what
looked like a wildfire grassroots movement really was a manipulation from
OSI's glassy Manhattan offices. The public had no way of knowing until the
release of OSI's 2006 annual report."

This is not to say that McCain's support of illegal immigration correlates
exclusively with the money he is getting from Soros. By all accounts he is
an "honest" amnesty enthusiast. His man in charge of immigration reform at
the RI was, until two years ago, one Juan Fernandez, who holds dual U.S. and
Mexican citizenship and is a former member of Vicente Fox's cabinet in
charge of Mexicans abroad. This man believes that anyone of Mexican
ancestry, even after going through the motions of becoming an American
citizen (as he has done), remains a Mexican forever and should "think
Mexican first." Such a one should never contemplate—let alone
accept—assimilation as an option. Dr. Fernandez now serves as John McCain's
Hispanic Outreach Director and is seen as a potential Cabinet-level
appointee in a McCain administration.
McCain's additional overlap with Soros is in Eastern Europe. The Arizona
senator broke ranks with his party in March 1999 and voted for Clinton's war
against Serbia, which Soros enthusiastically supported directly and through
generous donations to the International Crisis Group. The war was illegal,
since the House refused to authorize it under the War Powers Act, but McCain
was its enthusiastic advocate then and remains a supporter of Kosovo's
self-proclaimed independence now.

When it comes to other disputed regions, McCain is firmly in the
sovereignist camp—provided that it is anti-Russian. Any post-Soviet frozen
conflict area's nominal title-holder—Moldova vis-à-vis Transdnistria, or
Georgia under the Sorosite Mikheil Saakashvili vis-à-vis Abkhazia or South
Ossetia—is in the
<http://amazon.com/gp/product/1563680912?ie=UTF8&tag=therockfordinsti&link_c
ode=em1&camp=212341&creative=384049&creativeASIN=1563680912&adid=e10427fb-14
fb-4e95-aaaa-92b1f1358337> right, he asserts, and should be supported by the
United States in reasserting sovereignty over the rebel provinces,
regardless of the wishes of the inhabitants. He condemned a large poster in
the South Ossetian capital of Tskhinvali hailing Putin as "our President":
"I do not believe that Vladimir Putin is now, or ever should be, the
president of sovereign Georgian soil."

No such scruples apply to sovereign Russian soil, however. In December 1999,
McCain accused the Clinton administration of turning a blind eye to Russian
"crimes" in Chechnya, attacking Russia's "brutal to the extreme" military
campaign and announcing that if he were president, he would move to cut off
IMF loans to Moscow. "McCain was the first senior American politician to say
that what the Russians are doing is genocide," cooed the Washingtonian
Russophobe in Chief Zbigniew Brzezinski. "It was a gutsy call, and he called
it just right." In the same "gutsy" vein, McCain boasted earlier this year
of staring into Putin's eyes and seeing the letters KGB. The difference from
1999 is that, today, Russia is better poised to offer much needed loans to
America than the other way round.

China fares hardly better. In 1999, the country's leaders were, in McCain's
view, "ruthless defenders" of an "inhumane regime." A decade and a couple
trillion dollars in trade deficits later, he is still committed to "keeping
pressure" on China "to improve its human rights record."

Elsewhere around the world, mere readiness to talk is a sign of inexcusable
weakness to McCain. Last May, he accused Barack Obama of "inexperience and
reckless judgment" for saying that, if elected, he would be willing to talk
with Iranian leader
<http://amazon.com/gp/product/0520256638?ie=UTF8&tag=therockfordinsti&link_c
ode=em1&camp=212341&creative=384049&creativeASIN=0520256638&adid=a7640b0d-5c
20-4e73-a9f3-b3f95c42624f> Mahmoud Ahmadinejad without preconditions during
his first year as president. According to McCain, such talks would only
embolden "an implacable foe of the United States."

He is equally critical of Obama's readiness to talk to Raúl Castro of Cuba
and Hugo Chávez of Venezuela.
A man that would be seen in a normal country as a dangerous charlatan—at
best a dilettante in need of tutoring—has made it so far because the bedlam
known as the U.S. foreign-policy community approves of "engagement" abroad
and wide-open doors at home. The "community's" impulse is neurotic; its
justification, gnostic. It reflects the collective loss of nerve, faith, and
identity of a diseased society, producing a self-destructive malaise that is
literally unprecedented in history. The intoxication is the arrogant belief,
in general, that our reason and our science and our technology can resolve
all the dilemmas and challenges of our existence and, in particular, that
enlightened abstractions—democracy, human rights, free markets—can be spread
across the world and are capable of transforming it into one big Wal-Mart.
Both the madness and the intoxication have a "left," Sorosite narrative, and
a "right," McCainite one.

McCain's global outlook is virtually identical to that of George Soros. He
supports NATO's further expansion into Russia's backyard, not because it
would enhance American security but because it would bring us a step closer
to a neoliberal globalized world. Addressing the Hoover Institution last
year, he called for a "global League of Democracies—one that would have NATO
members at its core—dedicated to the defense and advancement of global
democratic principles," and he repeated the call in May in his "vision for
2013."

McCain could have copied his one-world idea word for word from the mission
statement of the Democracy Coalition Project (www.demcoalition.org), a
Soros-funded NGO led by two former Clinton White House officials. More
remarkably still, there is little if any difference between McCain's "League
of Democracies" and the "Concert of Democracies" suggested by Obama's
advisors. The League/Concert would be Washington's standing mechanism to
circumvent the U.N. Security Council, which throughout the Cold War was the
closest approximation of the 19th-century "Concert of Powers" that helped
avoid a major European war from Napoleon to 1914.

The identity of the two mind-sets became obvious when Obama's advisor Ivo
Daalder and McCain's advisor Robert Kagan coauthored an article in the
Washington Post supporting the concept. As a former long-serving GOP Senate
staffer who knows McCain warns, those who expect that the post-Bush era will
mean a return to some kind of normalcy from the current neoconservative
fever are sadly mistaken: "Think of the League/Concert as a permanent Iraq
'Coalition of the Willing' on steroids. The conscious goal of such a
mechanism would include institutionalized hostility to Russia and China."
Come 2013, Iraq really might seem to have been a cakewalk.

A former top Clinton official, Strobe Talbott, praised both McCain and Obama
as "moderate pragmatists" in foreign affairs, "with the demonstrated ability
to reach across party lines." This is "good news," according to Dr.
Talbott—the man who believes that the United States may not last until the
end of this century because the very concept of nationhood will have been
rendered obsolete, and all states will recognize a single, global authority.
The ideological foundation for George Soros's global vision is the same:
Nations are social arrangements, artificial, temporary, and dangerous. In
John McCain, they both recognize a man who can be manipulated by themselves,
or people like themselves, in the service of global goals and political
objectives that are contrary to American interests and detrimental to peace
in the world.

In 1999, the Economist wrote that the United States bestrides the globe like
a colossus: "It dominates business, commerce and communications; its economy
is the world's most successful, its military might second to none." Less
than a decade later, the U.S. economy is structurally weak, and its
once-powerful manufacturing base moribund. The financial system is on the
verge of collapse, no longer sustainable by dwindling infusions of foreign
cash and ever-rising domestic borrowing. Eight years of George W. Bush have
taken us further away from the Republic of yore and into a postmodern empire
devoid of cohesiveness at home or a credible narrative abroad. Iraq is a
disaster that indicates the limits of American power as clearly as the rise
of
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ode=em1&camp=212341&creative=384049&creativeASIN=1423547608&adid=9ed810cd-28
9d-4fc9-a2b2-55d7d7c4dc30> the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and the
demise of the dollar. The military is still second to none, yet barely able
to deal with the insurgency in two small faraway lands.

This country's problems are huge, but they are not insoluble. It is as
possible and necessary to control the borders at home and to spend no more
than is earned as it is possible and necessary to disengage from foreign
entanglements that do not contribute to the well-being and security of the
United States. It is possible and necessary to establish a realistic balance
between ends and means in American foreign and security policy on the basis
of the Golden Rule.

John McCain does not understand this because he is obtuse. He will refuse to
consider its merits because he is deluded and bellicose. He will not accept
any responsibility for the consequences of that refusal because he is
morally challenged. Like Napoleon III in 1870, Franz Josef in 1914, or
Leonid Brzehnev in 1979, he will try to prop up an ailing empire with
reckless diplomatic gambles and military adventures. The results will be
similar, or worse.

May God help us all.

*************************************

Srdja Trifkovic is Chronicles' foreign-affairs editor.

This article first appeared in the July 2008 issue of Chronicles: A Magazine
of
<http://amazon.com/gp/product/B000HHMKC2?ie=UTF8&tag=therockfordinsti&link_c
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c6-474a-91c9-168f2618db48> American Culture. New subscribers can call (800)
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