Shades
of the Twilight Zone
July 19, 2003
When I talked
to Democrats and listened to their spokesmen on TV following the
Bush-Gore post-election battles, I felt like I was in the Twilight
Zone. Now, with the Democrats' take on the war against Iraq, I'm
getting that feeling again.
One author
wrote that "Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus."
But what about Democrats and Republicans or liberals and conservatives?
Seriously,
it amazes me, from time to time, just how differently we view
the world. We experience history together, looking at exactly
the same events yet often coming to entirely different conclusions.
Just think
of some of the major events in the last half-century. Was America's
intervention in the Vietnam War justified to stop the expansion
of totalitarian communism or imperialistic intermeddling in a
civil war? Were America's cultural elites really committed to
opposing the Soviet Union during the Cold War, as they now claim,
or were they communist sympathizers? If they'd had their way,
would we have prevailed in the Cold War?
Speaking
of the Cold War, was Ronald Reagan instrumental in America's victory
and Mikhail Gorbachev a reluctant obstacle until the very end,
or was Reagan a jingoistic bully and Gorbachev the enlightened
progressive whose glasnost and perestroika ended the Soviet's
reign of terror?
Were the
Reagan Eighties a period of prosperity where the financial well
being of all income groups in America greatly improved or a decade
of greed? Was Bill Clinton responsible for the economic prosperity
of the Nineties, or was that period a continuation of a longer
boom beginning in the Eighties and only possible because the 1994
Republican Congress saved Clinton from his own excesses?
Were the
Clinton scandals "high crimes" or much ado about nothing?
Was Ken Starr a committed public servant or a man preoccupied
with Clinton's sexual peccadilloes?
Is there
a legitimate debate in the scientific community about the existence,
severity, cause and effects of global warming? If it turns out
that this phenomenon has been overblown, how will the history
books record the moralistic, alarmist rantings of the intelligentsia?
How do history books today record the rantings of this same class
of people who were just as sure a generation ago that global cooling
was the world-threatening menace?
Will the
anti-abortionists later be seen as having occupied the moral high
ground on the life issue, or will the pro-abortionists be remembered
as noble champions of women's freedom and dignity?
Will Enron
type scandals be recorded as symptomatic of a greedy, capitalistic
system or an aberration in a mostly ethical business environment?
Will the
Gore-Democrats be seen as having tried every conceivable legal
shenanigan to steal the 2000 presidential election, or will the
Republicans be regarded as election felons through their so-called
enablers on the United States Supreme Court?
Now, fast
forward to the present and the controversy over Iraq. When I listen
to Democrats accusing President Bush of deceit about Iraqi WMDs
and painting him as a murderer of thousands of Americans and Iraqis
to justify his preconceived, neoconservative, imperialistic war,
I find myself right back in the Twilight Zone. Again, how can
we witness the same events and come to such radically different
conclusions?
Many rank-and-file
Democrats might not know better, but their leaders do. They were
privy to the same intelligence Bush was, and they know that Saddam
had WMDs and used them, that he repeatedly violated U.N. resolutions,
that he kicked out U.N. inspectors, that he filed a fraudulent
report, that he directed his scientists to bury evidence, that
he had a mobile chemical lab, that he harbored and otherwise aided
terrorists, and that he was himself a terrorist.
They know
the Bush administration didn't base its decision to attack Iraq
on the disputed report that it tried to purchase uranium from
Niger and that Congress had already voted for the war resolution
prior to that allegation surfacing. Indeed they know there is
still credible evidence that this intelligence is true and that
Britain stands behind it. They know that Bush did not hype the
evidence against Iraq.
But as with
the 2000 election, reacquiring the White House is far more important
than the truth. If anyone is guilty of deceit, it's the Democratic
leaders who have once again unconscionably sent their followers
into the farthest reaches of the Twilight Zone. There, they stew
in bitterness and confusion wondering why the majority of people
don't view President Bush as a scoundrel instead of the man of
faith and character they believe him to be.
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