Though
the presidential race has yet to even pseudo-simmer, the way
it kind-of will once the so-called debates begin, my colleagues
at Antiwar.com are already seething. They despise Howard Dean,
and if you think peaceniks lack bile, try these quotations on
for size:
"Aside
from Dean's position on the Iraqi war, I don't see much in his
candidacy that makes me feel hopeful, but then again I take
AIPAC very
seriously, having seen what they've done to politician after
politician who didn't toe their line. A cynical observer might
argue that Dean recognized early that the road to the Presidency
runs through AIPAC headquarters, and that he's doing whatever
is necessary to make that passage as smooth as possible."
Anthony Gancarski, "A
Tale of Two Democrats"
"I
want to apologize to my readers for ever saying a single good
word about the double-talking, double-dealing, dubious Dean,
a snake in the grass if ever there was one, slimier even than
Bill Clinton. Just as Caligula
was a piker, as Rome's imperial villains go, compared to the
megalomaniacal evil of Nero, so the damage done by President
Dean will far surpass that done by any of his recent predecessors."
Justin Raimondo, "The
Dean Deception"
Jeez,
you'd think this was about something important, not just our
quadrennial game of pin the crown on the Caesar. So Dean is
slithering towards The New Republic, so his recent musings
on Iraq evoke Bill Kristol's "generational
commitment," so he says we owe Israel
and Liberia
our blood and what's
left of our treasure. So what? If American history teaches
us anything, it's that regarding foreign policy, what candidates
profess on the stump is nearly the opposite of what they
do in the White House. With that in mind, Dean could
turn out to be the least belligerent president since Warren
Harding.
Look
at the "peace" candidates who actually won in the
last century. Woodrow
Wilson clinched a tight race in 1916 by pledging not to
feed Europe's abattoir. Franklin Roosevelt beat his straw opponent
of 1940, a proto-neoconservative,
by recycling Wilson's pledge. Lyndon Johnson pulled a rout by
telling American mothers he would never
send their boys to do what expendable proxies could do on the
cheap. No one ever bellows from November's dais, "If
you elect me, your soaring taxes will build
a cage around the Palestinians! Your children will impose
democracy on Iran! I will sponsor covert wars in Colombia,
Peru,
and a thousand other nests of future blowback! I will give weapons
to bloodthirsty
a**holes
to achieve dubious short-term goals! My successors will compare
those a**holes to Hitler, then send your grandkids to die deposing
them!" This is the sort of result we always get, but it's
not what candidates offer the gullible throng. Oh, they peddle
spectacular visions, including the abolition of toil, discomfort,
and the grave itself, but they never promise voters the one
thing they can always deliver: more war.
But
what if they did promise war, unabashedly pointless war without
end? Presenting
candidate Dean. The fact that he's pushing an anything-but-humble
foreign policy should be music to antiwar ears. We must
remember that this is the
age of Strauss. As the historical examples above indicate,
politicians have always lied, but they once did so in a milieu
of belief. No longer. Thanks to the work of such able disciples
as Paul
Wolfowitz, the Straussian gospel of the "noble lie"
has become the dominant paradigm (no, I don't like the word
either, but one can't think big thoughts without it). Today's
hip citizen understands that when a government spokesman says
"X has weapons of mass destruction," this really means
that X wouldn't know yellowcake
from carrot cake. When the president claims to be stamping out
terrorism, he's actually accepting the blame for terrorist acts
to come. When Dean
says, "Our long range foreign policy ought to embrace
nation building, not run from it," surely he means, "The
great rule of conduct for us, in regard to foreign nations,
is in extending our commercial relations to have with them as
little political connection as possible." He just can't
say so directly. Dishonesty is the new truth.
Unfortunately,
we're not all Straussians yet, so finding each other in a crowd
is still difficult. If Dean is not lying, then supporting him
would be a mistake. Of course, given the alternatives,
who cares? At least Dean could give us a little suspense.