http://www.suntimes.com/news/steyn/123615,CST-EDT-steyn05.article

 

Election season is bad time for slip of the quip 

November 5, 2006

BY MARK STEYN Sun-Times Columnist

My face time with John Kerry has been brief but choice. In 2003, I was at a
campaign event in New Hampshire chatting with two old coots in plaid. The
senator approached and stopped in front of us. The etiquette in primary
season is that the candidate defers to the cranky Granite Stater's churlish
indifference to status and initiates the conversation: "Hi, I'm John Kerry.
Good to see ya. Cold enough for ya? How 'bout them Sox?" Etc. Instead, Kerry
just stood there nose to nose, staring at us with an inscrutable semi-glare
on his face. After an eternity, an aide stepped out from behind him and
said, "The senator needs you to move." 

"Well, why couldn't he have said that?" muttered one of the old coots. Why
indeed? 

Right now the Democratic Party needs the senator to move. Preferably to the
South Sandwich Islands, until Tuesday evening, or better still, early 2009. 

He won't, of course. A vain thin-skinned condescending blueblood with no
sense of his own ridiculousness, Senator Nuancy Boy is secure in little else
except his belief in his indispensability. We've all heard the famous "joke"
now: "You know, education, if you make the most of it, you study hard, you
do your homework and you make an effort to be smart, you can do well. And if
you don't, you get stuck in Iraq." (Rimshot!) Yet, tempting as it is to
enjoy his we-support-our-dumb-troops moment as merely the umpteenth
confirmation of the senator's unerring ability to SwiftBoat himself, it
belongs in a slightly different category of Kerry gaffe than, say, the time
they went into Wendy's and Teresa didn't know what chili was. 

Whatever he may or may not have intended (and "I was making a joke about how
stupid Bush is but I'm the only condescending liberal in America too stupid
to tell a Bush-is-stupid joke without blowing it" must rank as one of the
all-time lame excuses), what he said fits what too many upscale Dems
believe: that America's soldiers are only there because they're too poor and
too ill-educated to know any better. That's what they mean when they say "we
support our troops." They support them as victims, as children, as potential
welfare recipients, but they don't support them as warriors and they don't
support the mission. 

So their "support" is objectively worthless. The indignant protest that "of
course" "we support our troops" isn't support, it's a straddle, and one that
emphasizes the Democrats' frivolousness in the post-9/11 world. A serious
party would have seen the jihad as a profound foreign-policy challenge they
needed to address credibly. They could have found a Tony Blair -- a big
mushy-leftie pantywaist on health and education and all the other sissy
stuff, but a man at ease with the projection of military force in the
national interest. But we saw in Connecticut what happens to Democrats who
run as Blairites: You get bounced from the ticket. In the 2004 election,
instead of coming to terms with it as a national security question, the
Democrats looked at the war on terror merely as a Bush wedge issue they
needed to neutralize. And so they signed up with the weirdly incoherent
narrative of John Kerry -- a celebrated anti-war activist suddenly
"reporting for duty" as a war hero and claiming that, even though the war
was a mistake and his comrades were murderers and rapists, his four months
in the Mekong rank as the most epic chapter in the annals of the Republic. 

It's worth contrasting the fawning media admiration for Kerry's truncated
tour of duty with their total lack of interest in Bob Dole's years of
service two presidential campaigns earlier. That convention night in Boston
was one of the freakiest presentations in contemporary politics: a man being
greeted as a combination of Alexander the Great and the Duke of Wellington
for a few weeks' service in a war America lost. But Kerry is the
flesh-and-blood embodiment of the Democratic straddle, of the
we-oppose-the-war-but-support-our-troops line. That's why anti-war Dems,
outspinning themselves, decided they could support a soldier who opposed a
war. And as Kerry demonstrates effortlessly every time he opens his mouth,
if you detach the heroism of a war from the morality of it, what's left but
braggadocio? Or, as the senator intoned to me back in New Hampshire when I
tried to ask what he would actually do about Iraq, Iran or anything else,
"Sometimes truly courageous leadership means having the courage not to show
any leadership." (I quote from memory.) 

In fairness to Kerry, he didn't invent the Democrats' tortured relationship
with the military. But ever since Eugene McCarthy ran against Lyndon Johnson
and destroyed the most powerful Democrat of the last half-century, the
Democratic Party has had a problematic relationship with the projection of
power in the national interest. President Jimmy Carter confined himself to
one screwed-up helicopter mission in Iran; Bill Clinton bombed more
countries in a little more than six months than the Zionist neocon warmonger
Bush has in six years but, unless you happened to be in that Sudanese
aspirin factory, it was as desultory and uncommitted as his sex life and
characterized by the same inability to reach (in Ken Starr's word)
"completion." As for John Kerry, since he first slandered the American
military three decades ago, he's been wrong on every foreign policy question
and voted against every significant American weapons system. 

To be sure, like Kerry in 2004 deciding that the murderers and rapists were
now his brave "band of brothers," the left often discover a sudden
enthusiasm for the previous war once a new one's come along. Since Iraq,
they've been all in favor of Afghanistan, though back in the fall of 2001
they were convinced it was a quagmire, graveyard of empire, unwinnable,
another Vietnam, etc. Oh, and they also discovered a belated enthusiasm for
the first President Bush's shrewd conduct of the 1991 Gulf War, though at
the time Kerry and most other Democrats voted against that one, too. In this
tedious shell game, no matter how frantically the left shuffles the cups,
you never find the one shriveled pea of The Military Intervention We're
Willing To Support When it Matters. 

To be sure, the progressives deserve credit for having refined their view of
the military: not murderers and rapists, just impoverished suckers too
stupid for anything other than soldiering. The left still doesn't understand
that it's the soldier who guarantees every other profession -- the defeatist
New York Times journalist, the anti-American college professor, the
insurgent-video-of-the-day host at CNN, the hollow preening blowhard
senator. Kerry's gaffe isn't about one maladroit Marie Antoinette of the
Senate but a glimpse into the mind-set of too many Americans.



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