John Zmirak

Nothing But the War

Posted by John Zmirak on April 22, 2008

Sunday’s NY Times story talks about the divergences between one-time running mates (and popular vote winners) Al Gore and Joseph Lieberman. Noting that Lieberman has moved to the “right” by becoming hawkish on Iraq, while Gore has moved to the “left” by staying true to his initial skepticism about that war, and becoming an activist on the subject of global climate change. Lieberman has gone so far as to start campaigning for John McCain--leading some lefties to wonder if they should try (again) to take him out of the Senate. But no: “A member of the Senate Democratic leadership, who insisted on not being identified, said: “The bloggers want us to get rid of him. It ain’t happening.” He added: ‘We need every vote. He’s with us on everything but the war.’”

How telling that is. Turn it around, and imagine a Republican leader admitting: “He’s against us on everything but the war.” Immigration, affirmative action, even partial birth abortion… on each of these subjects Lieberman votes like what he is--a liberal Democrat. Yet this is the man whom John McCain is still considering seriously as a VP candidate, whom the White House quietly supported against his Republican opponent in his last senatorial bid, when a peace candidate, Ned Lamont, wrested from Lieberman the Democratic nomination. And now this muttering Kermit is a star of Republican presidential rallies. Which just goes to show you what matters to the party leadership, and the most influential voices in the “conservative” media: Nothing but the war.

In 2002-3, when I was one of the least significant of the few conservatives to warn against invading Iraq--I was snubbed by Frum in his honor-roll of “unpatriotic conservatives"--I had no idea quite how important the war would turn out to be. I suspected that it would last far longer, cost much more, and turn out very much uglier than the chicken-hawks all promised. I knew that the Christians of Iraq were probably doomed to death or exile, while the prospects of building an Arab Switzerland on the Euphrates were pretty much nil. But no part of me expected that over 100,000 Americans would still sit under siege in Iraq in 2008; that the war would break the budget, inflate the dollar, cause a recession, and kick the Republicans out of leadership in two houses of Congress. All those outcomes exceeded my Criswellian powers of prediction. Not that it would have mattered--such predictions would have sounded deranged to my gung-ho friends and my readers at FrontpageMag. Like telling the Kaiser in August 1914 that invading Belgium would lead, by 1919, to Bolsheviks seizing power in Munich.  To which he would have answered something like ”What-sheviks?”

One thing I did suspect, however, was that the war would quickly eclipse other issues among conservatives, as wars always do. The deep-seated, anthropological instinct to rally behind the troops kicked in among most Americans, and this White House is skilled, if in nothing else, in manipulating primal instincts--turning wholesome responses into political pathologies. Soon, any leftist hack (like Christopher Hitchens) who jumped onto a tank and waved a flag was christened a comrade, while long-time conservative, patriotic stalwarts like Pat Buchanan were tarred as saboteurs. (Or should I say, ”wreckers”?) When Taki was first planning to launch what became The American Conservative, I urged on him a different title, meant to mock this emerging meme among the warmongers. “Let’s call it Fifth Column, I urged him.” (Cooler heads prevailed.)

Soon enough, “conservatism” came to mean in the media and even inside the movement, “unlimited, unconditional support for this particular war.” Perhaps the crowning moment arrived with Ann Coulter’s TV “endorsement” of Hillary Clinton over John McCain: “She’s better on torture, and she’s better on the War.” So that is what “conservatism” has come down to, for the headline speakers at gatherings like CPAC, for the party that once stood for caution abroad and prudence at home, for social stability and (briefly, in the 1980s) traditional morality: War and torture. And lies, of course--it was only with a wave of misinformation reminiscent of Watergate that the neocons sold America on this war, and Americans should never be permitted to forget it. Mushroom clouds over major American cities. (More like magic mushrooms.) Iraqis behind the anthrax attacks. Mohammed Atta drinking pilsner with Al Qaeda in Prague. Curveball. Chalabi....  These words should serve as our mantra, and every time we read (by some strange mischance) a “conservative” magazine that happily spread these lies pontificating on any other subject--immigration, abortion, global warming--we should ask ourselves: ”Are they lying again?” By which I mean: Does this magazine (this columnist, this pundit) really care about this issue? Can it be trusted to tell the truth? Or does its agenda boil down, in then end, to “nothing but the war”? Here’s a quick and easy test: Use your handy Google window to find out how this news/opinion source handles Joseph Lieberman. If it treats him as a statesman, an ally, a solid patriot who might be a tad misguided on one or two “marginal” issues, but is fundamentally One Of Us.... well then, you have your answer. 


Comments

Well said John.  Thank you.

And let’s face it, it comes down to Israel, and support thereof, most of the time.

Posted by daveg on Apr 22, 2008.

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“....Gore has become an activist.” Why is it that other countries have a right wing
and a left wing, while, in America, we have a right wing and Activists?

Posted by savwa on Apr 22, 2008.

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Conservatism has understood in popular parlance, signify’s approval for the Permanent Revolution. McIntyre has it right; today the conservative position is to inhibit any challenges to the Liberal Tradition from within. This year’s Presidential election is merely an intra-mural dispute on the Left. Since the differences are so small between each candidate, the campaign is bound to be especially bitter, personal and void of substance. This is an excellent time for us to consider a monastic life that is receptive to families.

Posted by Kevin on Apr 22, 2008.

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More blogs should be talking abou this.

http://www.gopcatholics.blogspot.com

Posted by Peter on Apr 22, 2008.

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Exceptional article. The neocon hatred for Ron Paul, for example, is especially amusing, as he is to the right of John McCain on just about every red mead right-wing issue. But his opposition to the war, of course, disqualifies him as a conservative, and even leads him to be an object of “conservative” hatred and scorn.

One way to sum the change in US conservatism is via the differences that have existed between US and Europe.  In the latter, “conservatism’s” hallmarks have been an agressive, nationalistic, militaristic foreign policy and a paternalistic welfare state in domestic policy—Bismark is the archetype of this conservatism.  Bismark also examplifies the desire for a strong “unitary executive” common to European conservatism.

Traditional US conservatism has been characterized by a small, strictly constrained government, large individual freedoms and an isolationistic, pacifistic foreign policy.  This kind of “conservatism” is unknown on continental Europe. Indeed, according to my personal experiences most Europeans find the whole concept totally incomprehensible. 

The change that neocons have effected in the US can be seen as the Republican party switching to the European type of conservatism.  There is an effort to hide this fact via some lip service to the idea of reducing the state, but actions speak far louder than words.  The adoption of the European model is quite expicit, because The Weekly Standard has published numerous articles praising the militaristic, paternalistic, strong-central government type of conservatism--they see Disraeli as the English representative of the type.

Bismark or Napoleon? Little Nappie in the White House sees himself as the new Napoleon spreading the Revolution around the world. Marshall Wolfowitz and Marshall Kristol leading the Old Guard to the cannons and running when the going gets hot.

Isn’t a Napoleon complex usually an exaggerated inferiority complex caused by knowing he is a failure or by having a stubby shillelagh or both?

I don’t know who is responsible for the decision to remove Russell Seitz’s asinine
piece of shit of an article in re: abortion “art,” but bravo.  I hope he’s fired from
the site, not least of all for such a grave insult to Mr. Piatak and, by extension, you,
Mr. Zmirak.

Posted by Caper on Apr 22, 2008.

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Sorry to add that, here, Mr. Zmirak.  Now I see where I should have left that post.

Posted by Caper on Apr 22, 2008.

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With Joe Lieberman as McAmnesty’s running mate, the merger will be complete.

Posted by roho on Apr 22, 2008.

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Bets if Hillary gets President post, she will have Liebermann as VP? Seems right-both Israel firsters.

Lieberman can run as VP on both tickets. We can go back to the Founding Fathers and see the Jefferson - Burr back stabbing battle for the nr. 1 slot redone in our own time.

I am confused John, you want people to vote for neo-con McCain?

Posted by Jet on Apr 23, 2008.

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And why in the heck are you spreading NYT ]liberal] froth?????

Dont try to bamboozle me John, speak the truth as I wonder what your agenda is.

Posted by Jet on Apr 23, 2008.

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Are you actually trying to equate political Gore Vs Lieberman as to switching ideology and with you being the neutral inflamer that cant be blamed?

You need to stop that crap John. Its nutty professor logic to set one man against another while using both to, supposedly, prove your point. Yet when your point is proven unviable you will claime one of the previous ideology or the other at fault and not you.

Thats BS.

Posted by Jet on Apr 23, 2008.

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NEWSFLASH: Jet doesn’t care for Zmirak. For the love of God, Jet, bang another key or go away.

Posted by rayne on Apr 23, 2008.

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Regarding ‘NEWSFLASH: Jet doesn’t care for Zmirak. For the love of God, Jet, bang another key or go away.’

Naw...let him hang around.  He provides a good example of journalistic incoherence.

Posted by DJ on Apr 23, 2008.

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Rayne must be smarter than me, because she can puzzle out SOME strand of significance from the Latin characters which Jet has successfully typed....

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