Author Topic: It's Not My Party  (Read 435 times)

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Offline EasyAce

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It's Not My Party
« on: July 23, 2016, 05:34:56 pm »
By Andrew C. McCarthy
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/438255/donald-trump-republican-party-not-conservative

Quote
You reap what you sow. For a generation since Ronald Reagan left Washington — that would be the Ronald
Reagan who knew that “I’m from the government and I’m here to help” was a punch line — the “conservative”
Republican party has sown an incoherent statism that has trouble telling the good guys from the bad guys. On
Thursday night came the harvest: The party was formally taken over by an incoherent statist whose “conservatism”
is not done justice by scare quotes. Oh . . . and he has trouble telling the good guys from the bad guys.

Of course, you wouldn’t get that from his acceptance speech. Donald Trump doesn’t know much, but he has a
genius for self-promotion and marketing. The conservative intellectuals and Washington political class so
dismissive of his bravura 72-minute performance for its high-decibel staccato and occasional rambling repetitiveness
are missing the point, as they have throughout Trump’s ascent.

From 30,000 feet, which is as close as most Americans get to government policy in all its intricacies, Trump gave a
great speech. If you knew nothing of Trump, if your only impression was the Donald bestriding the Manichaean world
he portrayed Thursday night, you wanted to be with him.

He’s with the cops against the thugs who shoot them down. He’s with peace-loving Americans (and don’t forget the
“Q” after “LGBT”) against the barbaric Islamic terrorists who besiege them. He’s with wall-deprived communities preyed
upon by illegal aliens. He’s now with the upright American middle class screwed over by the cabal of Beltway insiders
and crony capitalists (of which he was, until moments ago, a member in good standing). He is the embodiment of law
and order, pitted against Hillary Clinton, a recidivist felon in the court of public opinion — one the throng in Cleveland
wants “locked up,” pronto.

You can see why it would drive an informed person nuts. But a note to all eggheads: Save your dissertation on why
free trade does not actually undermine the dignity of work. Forget the stubborn facts that manufacturing is thriving
in America, that a trade war with China is a moronic idea, and that Trump has forsworn any action on the entitlement
spending that drives the ruinous $19 trillion national debt he decries. And don’t dare mention the bombshell Trump
conveniently omitted in his stemwinder: his commitment to give legal status (pssst– that means amnesty) to millions
of the illegal aliens he risibly promises to deport.

As every demagogue from Huey Long to Saul Alinksy to Barack Obama knows, what the masses want is a villain to
seize on. There’s a right side and a wrong side, good and evil. Trump gets that the power of caricature triumphs over
fact and complexity in modern America. Just ask “Lyin’ Ted.”

That’s why “Crooked Hillary” ought to be nervous. Trump is more ill-suited for the presidency than anyone who has
ever sought it . . . with the exception of Mrs. Clinton herself. She is an atrocious enough candidate that she could
forfeit the Democrats’ electoral-map advantages, just as she managed to lose a shoo-in primary contest in 2008 and
nearly botched her coronation this time around. Trump could very well win.

That ought to make the rest of us nervous. And no, the specter is made no less nerve-wracking by the patent unfitness
of the former secretary of state — who, as I argue in the current issue of National Review, ought to be impeached
now, before she can darken the Oval Office doorstep.

Trump’s speech was a paean to centralized power — which, personified by Trump, would become larger-than-life
government. As sloganeering, “Make America Great Again” may not be quite as bold as Obama’s “hope and change,”
which was to have healed the earth and lowered the sea levels by now. But Trump vows to end ISIS, violent crime, illegal
immigration, bad trade deals, and (of course) wasteful government spending — all, evidently, in the first days of his
administration. He will do all this and more by flexing Leviathan’s muscles.

If you were waiting for Trump to champion individual liberty and limits on state power, you waited in vain — except for
a couple of throw-away lines about preserving the Second Amendment and free-speech rights . . . which were impressive
only if you were unfamiliar with Trump’s history of support for President Clinton’s ban on “assault weapons” and for looser
libel laws that would make it easier for him to sue his legions of detractors.

Trump’s fury at radical Islam was not limited to ISIS. He inveighed that Egypt, with an assist from Mrs. Clinton, had been
“turned over to the radical Muslim Brotherhood, forcing the military to retake control.” Unbeknownst to the adoring throng,
Trump had no idea what he was talking about.

Just a day before, in an interview with the New York Times, Trump effusively praised Turkey’s radical-Islamic strongman,
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, for putting down an attempted coup d’état. The military uprising aimed to thwart Erdogan’s sharia
authoritarianism and restore the secular society guaranteed by the country’s constitution. In defeating the putsch, he
heavily relied on his Muslim Brotherhood allies, who led the pro-government resistance on the streets.

In sum, Turkey was a replay of Egypt, and Trump played it exactly as Clinton did: backing the Islamic supremacists. It is
really no surprise in light of Trump’s long history of donating heavily to Clinton, praising her performance as secretary of state,
and opining that she’d make a stellar president. Meanwhile, he told the Times that he hopes to get lots of help from Erdogan
in confronting ISIS. Apparently, Trump is unaware that ISIS would not be ISIS were it not for Erdogan’s support.

It bears remembering here that the Republican administration of George W. Bush was the first to embrace Erdogan, sticking
by him as he re-Islamized Turkey and brutally suppressed dissent. Those were the heady days of “Islamic democracy”
promotion when Republicans assured us that sharia and freedom were perfectly compatible. And now, as Trump blows
kisses at the rapacious Vladimir Putin and signals to the Times that he is ready to abandon our nation’s NATO treaty
obligation to defend the Baltics from Russian aggression, it similarly bears remembering that it was Bush who first
proclaimed Putin trustworthy — a strategic partner — upon gazing into his eyes and examining his soul.

For these post-Reagan Republicans, conservative was passé. They needed to be “compassionate conservatives,” as if
there were something vaguely inhumane about the liberty enterprise. Government was no longer the “necessary evil”
envisioned by the Framers, the butt of the Gipper’s aforementioned quip. It was our beneficent guardian who “has got
to move
” whenever “somebody hurts.” These Republicans doubled the national debt before Obama came along to
double it again. The new and improved GOP swelled the size and scope of government; created new entitlements
even as the existing ones were bankrupting us; enacted “campaign-finance reform” well aware that it flouted the First
Amendment; and derided their own base as racist xenophobes for resisting amnesty for illegal aliens. And was there
any Obama overreach that they weren’t happy to foot the bill for?

Take away the conservatism, the limited-government constitutionalism, the devotion to liberty, the fiscal discipline,
the clear-eyed recognition of America’s enemies, and what are you left with? A Republican party whose only real boast
is that it can do statism with more adult moderation than the hard Left that has captured the Democratic party. To
the extent that, a generation ago, “Republican” was fairly thought synonymous with “conservative,” it thus became
a party “Republican” in name only — a party in which all principles were negotiable.

That made it a party ripe to be taken over by Donald Trump. But what is now officially Trump’s party has not been
my party for quite some time.

It is a comfort that Trump will have some solid people around him, but the truth remains that he is uninformed on
many topics, ill-informed on others, untrustworthy, and pathologically vindictive. I will never be able to say I want
him to win — only that I’m certain I want Hillary Clinton to lose.

Whoever wins, I know that come January, I will be in the conservative opposition to a statist administration, and
in search of a new party to call home.

Andrew C. McCarthy is as senior policy fellow at the National Review Institute and a contributing editor of National Review.


"The question of who is right is a small one, indeed, beside the question of what is right."---Albert Jay Nock.

Fake news---news you don't like or don't want to hear.

geronl

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Re: It's Not My Party
« Reply #1 on: July 23, 2016, 05:53:57 pm »
great article

Offline Taxcontrol

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Re: It's Not My Party
« Reply #2 on: July 23, 2016, 06:06:11 pm »
To all that feel the same, I would encourage a look at the Constitution Party.  30 years I was a loyal and dependable Republican then the party has moved so far left that they have left me.  Now that Christian Conservatives have been purged from the party, I have found a new home.  I encourage all others who feel the same to at least check out the Constitution Party and also consider changing their affiliation.

geronl

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Re: It's Not My Party
« Reply #3 on: July 23, 2016, 06:09:53 pm »
The DNC could give the exact same speech at their convention and congratulate Trump for being "on their side". Same with Ivanka's speech.

Offline Bigun

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Re: It's Not My Party
« Reply #4 on: July 23, 2016, 06:13:39 pm »
Andrew is not alone! Not by a damned site!
"I wish it need not have happened in my time," said Frodo.

"So do I," said Gandalf, "and so do all who live to see such times. But that is not for them to decide. All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us."
- J. R. R. Tolkien

Offline Fishrrman

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Re: It's Not My Party
« Reply #5 on: July 24, 2016, 02:11:53 am »