Stepping Back from the Precipice

The religious views of President George W. Bush may have gotten us to where we are at this point and our national policies could do with far less of it and a far more dispassionate review of our history. Our greatest need is to literally protect and preserve the republic.
I think I first noticed a problem when Bush used the word “crusade” to describe what the
Americans generally are believers. They are predominantly Christian and they have always expected their president to demonstrate some faith in God. We have historically encountered problems when a president believes he was chosen by God for the position and that his actions are sanctioned by God. It’s one thing to pray for guidance. It is quite another to believe one’s action are divinely authorized and approved.
Woodrow Wilson believed God wanted him to be President and, with considerable irony, was re-elected on the slogan, “He kept us out of the war”. When
The U.S. Senate had the good sense to reject membership in Wilson’s dream of a League of Nations, but following the end of World War II, Franklin D. Roosevelt’s legacy was the United Nations, an international institution that ignores genocides, embraces intolerance, and is seeking to foist a totally bogus “global warming” crisis on the world.
The “entangling alliances” that George Washington warned against are now a vast matrix of treaties that puts
In his latest book, Day of Reckoning: How Hubris, Ideology, and Greed Are Tearing America Apart, Patrick J. Buchanan argues that, “If we are to make the twenty-first century the Second American Century, the first imperative is to recognize that not only is the Cold War over, the post-Cold War era is now over. Pax Americana is finished. We must stop trying to conquer or convert the world to our way of thinking or our way of life.”
At this point, I have to confess that my initial instincts after 9/11 betrayed my good sense and my knowledge of history. I most certainly favored driving the Taliban out of
There was logic to removing Saddam, but there was no precedent.
The war, as President Bush defined it, was one between good and evil. Those are religious, moral judgments, hardly a good yardstick for foreign policy and most certainly not for going to war. A quick glance around the globe reveals there is a lot of evil.
As Buchanan put it, “This is Manichaean. This is messianic. This is utopian.” One goes to war to protect national security and national interests. Going to war to bring democracy to oppressed people is a nice slogan once you’re engaged, but it is not a good reason if you or an ally are not under attack.
The attack on 9/11 was an act of war, but it was not by a sovereign nation state. It was a terrorist act. The price of empire is to suffer terrorist attacks. They are the weapons the weak use to drive out foreign nations or effect changes in policy.
Buchanan makes a very strong case for an
Given the right to vote, history is filled with evidence that people will frequently choose dictatorship or authoritarian rule. In
There is work to be done in
It is time for
Alan Caruba writes a weekly column posted on the Internet site of The National Anxiety Center, www.anxietycenter.com. His blog is http://factsnotfantasy.blogspot.com.
© Alan Caruba, December 2007
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