-Cavet Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>  -Cui Bono-

          William F. Buckley, Jr. - ON THE RIGHT
                 Friday, January 11, 2000
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                     NEW HAMPSHIRE HEADLIGHTS

The two presidential debates and their immediate aftermaths
were fine, strenuous exercises in democratic practice. It was
smart of C-SPAN and of Chris Matthews to move into the scene
immediately, to question the candidates and to bring in the
intimate, earnest questions of individual spectators, especially
the very young, whose questions tend to be innocently earnest.
They were bracing reminders of the value of television in such
heady exercises as aspirant presidents are going through in
New Hampshire.

On the larger scene, we see in Gore and Bradley two very
skillful debaters. They know keenly the uses of the bell. If
a question is a little decomposing, why, rattle on until the
two minutes are up and accept, with apparent regret, the
constraints of time that kept you from developing your points
more fully.

But two questions, one of them having to do with gun control,
the other with gays in the military, brought out interesting
differences in character and approach. Gore, the Fabian; Bradley,
the Bolshevik.

What is the ideal, in the matter of gun control, as far as
Gore is concerned? It is to get all handguns registered. But --
but -- he is not endorsing legislation to that effect because
great endeavors are done a mile at a time, and what he wants now,
he told the audience, is such lesser measures as outlawing assault
weapons and Saturday Night specials. Not so for Bradley; he wants
the instant realization of his vision.

It is so also in the matter of gays, though with sophisticated
differences. The two players believe that it is as manifestly
correct that gays should move about within the military without
any trace of difficulty, as it was true that American blacks
should have been noiselessly integrated in the armed services.
But now we saw a slighter difference in approach than in the
matter of gun control. Gore would question candidates for
senior positions in the military, a litmus-test, he all but
acknowledged. If General Jones felt as President Gore feels
about the matter, then General Jones would qualify to serve
as a chief of staff. President Gore would question the general
on these matters before deciding whether to promote him.

A waste of time! -- President Bradley would simply say to
General Jones: My position on gays in the military is total,
seamless integration. And since I am the commander in chief,
it is manifest that that will be the policy you implement.

Moreover, Mr. Bradley knows the philosophical implications of
his position. It is up to the leader, he says, to animate the
ideals of the public -- this is what leadership consists in.
Gore's position is one step removed from this. He believes that
acquiescence is more gradually achieved.

Leaving entirely to one side whether it is desirable that all
guns should be registered or that gays belong in the military,
the differences in political approach are relevant to a voter's
decision in which direction -- Gore or Bradley -- to go in the
Democratic contest.

Abraham Lincoln's metamorphosis comes quickly to mind. Lincoln
believed passionately in two propositions. The first was that
slavery should be forbidden. The second, that self-government
requires a consensus. It can be argued that Lincoln failed,
inasmuch as what came wasn't a progressive consensus on the
matter of full liberty for the slaves. Rather, the question
was settled by a civil war.

But Lincoln's philosophy survives the historical narrative.
He truly believed that unless the majority of the citizens of
the republic, expressing themselves through the mediating
devices set up by the Constitution, reached a conclusion on
so grave a question, temporizing was exactly the thing to do.
Fight an extension of slavery in the territories, fight the
Supreme Court's Dred Scott decision, fight the legislation
that called for returning fugitive slaves -- but stop short of
anything like an emancipation declaration.

There are differences, obviously, between categorical behavior
intended to free black Americans serving as slaves -- differences
John Brown did not apprehend -- and insisting on the
registration of all privately owned arms. On the matter of the
gays, the relevant question surely is whether at a level
beneath that of commander in chief, judgments should be
solicited on the question of what is needed to induce high
morale in the military.

The argument that there is no difference in overcoming
conventional sexual discrimination and overcoming conventional
racial discrimination is not self-evident. Something else is at
stake, and the exchanges among the six Republican candidates,
no one of whom wished to go any further on the issue than the
current arrangement, yield a clear national issue. And we have
also some flavor of the political character of the two
Democratic contenders

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