Leftists like Muslims have always been shameless.

 

One needs honor to have shame.Leftists and Muslims have none.  

 

Scum.

 

B

 

Krugman's Shame

Posted By Rich Trzupek On September 14, 2011 

On Sunday, most Americans took the time to reflect on the tenth anniversary
of the terrorist attacks that shook the nation to the core. Most Americans
honored the victims of that awful day, expressed their gratitude to the
young men and women on the front lines of the fight and prayed for peace.
Most Americans did those things - but not all, because the tenth anniversary
of 9/11 has a much different meaning for those on the Left.

Economist Paul Krugman, whose New York Times blog proclaims that he in some
way exemplifies "The Conscience of a Liberal," used the anniversary to
express all of the sneering contempt
<http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/09/11/the-years-of-shame/>  that the
Left has for the war against terrorism. The post title, "The Years of
Shame," provides the premise for Krugman's disdainful chastisement, but
would better encapsulate the deranged left-wing theatre of the absurd played
out during the post-9/11 decade. The conspiracy theories, the cries of "no
blood for oil," anti-Bush hate parades and admiration for "freedom fighters"
(terrorists), all aspects of the legacy of 9/11 that the Left absolves
itself from and is gradually erasing from the historical record.

What happened after 9/11 - and I think even people on the right know this,
whether they admit it or not - was deeply shameful. The atrocity should have
been a unifying event, but instead it became a wedge issue. Fake heroes like
Bernie Kerik, Rudy Giuliani, and, yes, George W. Bush raced to cash in on
the horror. And then the attack was used to justify an unrelated war the
neocons wanted to fight, for all the wrong reasons. The memory of 9/11 has
been irrevocably poisoned; it has become an occasion for shame.

Could we have at least added Michael Moore to the list? Ironically, the
atrocity was a unifying event, albeit ever so briefly. For a few weeks after
9/11, Americans were about as unified as they have been at any time since
Pearl Harbor. People of all sorts gathered together under the silent skies
that followed that terrible day, reflecting on the nature of good and evil
and pledging that this horrific crime would not go unpunished. For a moment,
political divisions were unimportant, as American pride and determination
flared brightly in the nation's soul. 

It wasn't destined to last. The tragedy of 9/11 did indeed become a wedge
issue, but to blame that on the Right, or on heroes like Giuliani and Bush -
and exclusively, for that matter - is an absurdly ignorant portrayal of
events. The war against terrorists and their supporters had barely begun
before the Left's poisonous propaganda machine kicked into gear.

That the Left was ever interested in unity after 9/11 is likewise ludicrous
- and to hear complaints from a man who refers to Republicans as "vile" and
burned effigies of the Bush administration at his 2008 election night party,
is nothing short of surreal. (Indeed, the very petty partisan discord sown
by Krugman on such an emotionally painful occasion should disabuse us of the
notion that he has any use for "unity.") Depending on the day during the
previous administration, Bush was either a dupe being manipulated by (fill
in the villain of the day) or an evil mastermind. We need no further proof
that the Left's outrage was manufactured than the deafening silence that
fell over much of that side of the political spectrum after Barack Obama
took office. Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan continue. Gitmo is still open. And
it even turns out that civilian trials for terrorists really are a bad idea.
There is no shame in the way that America has taken the war to the enemy,
but there is plenty of shame in the way those efforts were so vigorously
undermined.

Krugman, like most of his like-minded peers, links 9/11 to the Second War in
Iraq, though the two have almost nothing to do with each other. The specter
of a murderous megalomaniac like Hussein in possession of weapons of mass
destruction (which both Democrats and Republicans presumed was the case on
the basis of the same intelligence) hardly required any embellishment to
push the West into action. But Iraq, too, became part of the Left's
all-encompassing 9/11 paranoia. If only the "blood for oil" mantra had been
based on anything but opportunistic demagoguery, the experience at the gas
pump might be marginally more pleasant today. The fact is that America did
in Iraq what it always does - what it did in Japan and Germany and the
Philippines, and so many other places around the world: we came, we saw, we
conquered, and then we worked to turn everything back over to the people who
lived there. The idea that we fight wars to enhance our own prosperity is
especially vexing when one considers all of the home-grown resources,
particularly fossil fuels, we deliberately starve ourselves of.

If there is cause for shame in Paul Krugman's world, he should (but of
course won't) consider the state of his own ideological house before
throwing stones elsewhere. Wild, unsupportable and hateful pronouncements
swirl though the swamp of leftist thought and communication, from beloved
pundits like Keith Olbermann and Ed Schultz, to the day-to-day traffic on
their Web sites. If one were to apply a decent language standard to the
Daily Kos, for example, their comments would dwindle to almost nothing.

The vast majority of Americans are and should be proud of the way that the
nation responded after that terrible day ten years ago. We have honored the
memories of those who died, and our magnificent young men and women have
taken the fight to the enemy. The Left may not be proud of the remarkable
way that America has conducted herself in this war, but that is merely
further proof of how badly out of touch the Left is with the rest of the
nation.

  _____  

Article printed from FrontPage Magazine: http://frontpagemag.com

URL to article: http://frontpagemag.com/2011/09/14/krugman%e2%80%99s-shame/

 



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