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  1. #1
    i hunt fenced animals clambake's Avatar
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    October 06, 2008 Issue
    Copyright © 2008 The American Conservative

    An Open Letter to Sarah Palin PDF


    By TAC Editors


    To: Gov. Sarah Palin
    From: TAC Editors
    Re: What Your Tutors Aren’t Telling You

    Congratulations on being chosen as John McCain’s
    running mate. It’s an honor, if a dubious one. As you
    know, conservatives have reservations about McCain.
    To your credit, they have few such concerns about you.

    You’ve given new life to a party whose brand was
    bankrupt. You’ve energized a campaign that was
    embarrassing its own partisans. Across America,
    crowds flock to see you—not that old man who
    barely wheezed his way through the primaries.
    If John McCain wins, he will owe you, as the guy
    in the undisclosed location says, “Big time.”

    Wonder why Middle America finds you irresistible?
    Maybe they’re big Tina Fey fans. More likely, you
    remind them of the conservative values they
    feared lost: faith, family, independence. This
    impression owes more to who you are than what
    you’ve done. But at least you keep Obama from
    cornering the market on hope. Conservatives have
    faith in you. Don’t fail them as George W. Bush has.

    You see what happened: the president’s entire
    domestic agenda collapsed under the weight of
    his failed foreign policy. Social Security reform
    stalled. Pro-lifers became political orphans. And
    whatever gains Bush’s tax cuts secured were
    wiped out by record spending. Everything was
    subordinated to the war on terror.

    Conservatives grasping for something to commend
    give the president points for his judicial picks. But
    he would have much preferred justices like Alberto
    Gonzales and Harriet Miers—toadies whose top
    qualification was their willingness to give the
    executive more power.

    The party that championed the things you prize
    —individual liberty, fiscal restraint, and a strong
    defense—has trampled civil rights, pushed us to
    the brink of insolvency, and broken our Armed Forces.
    After eight years of Bush, even diehard Republicans
    are glad to see him go. You might have noticed the
    elephant not in the room in St. Paul.

    There’s a better way. In fact, you figured it out in
    the 1996 presidential primary when you sported the
    flair of the leading pro-life candidate. (Your minders
    would prefer that we not mention his name. It triggers
    their Tourette’s.) As you surely know, even beyond
    social issues, he represents a strain of conservatism
    that offers a consistent ethic of life and philosophy
    of limited government. It was not a coincidence that
    the most pro-life candidate in ’96 was also passionately
    noninterventionist.

    It’s also no coincidence that those who want you
    to heed the siren call of global democratization
    care little for traditionalist causes. Recall that
    second night of the Republican Convention when
    you were told to blow off a reception in your honor
    hosted by Phyllis Schlafly so Joe Lieberman could
    chaperone your debut before the directors of AIPAC.
    Neoconservatives pay lip service to life, but, as their
    enthusiasm for Lieberman shows, they have higher
    priorities. Now they plan to make them yours.

    You’ll find the new friends conducting your
    foreign-policy crash course pleasant enough,
    if a little dogmatic and a lot condescending.
    They call you “Project Sarah.” We saw that
    one staffer at AEI—that mystery monogram on all
    your briefing books—said you’re “a blank slate.”
    He added, “She’s going places, and it’s worth
    going there with her.” That’s how they operate.
    They don’t implement their agenda themselves.
    Rather, they impose it on rising star. If things
    don’t work out, it’s because the Project wasn’t
    sufficiently committed. (Just ask President Bush.)

    Now you’re the latest object of their attention,
    and you’re probably finding the program a bit
    confusing. They tell you that the U.S. is fighting
    “World War IV,” a struggle against “Islamofascism.”
    We can win, they say, as long as we’re prepared
    to bomb Iran and build up the national-security
    establishment at home, just like Reagan did.

    Trouble is, your tutors also believe we’re still
    engaged in “World War III,” the Cold War with
    Russia. So maybe the Gipper didn’t win that one
    after all. In fact, neoconservatives like Norman
    Podhoretz chided Reagan for appeasing Moscow.
    And when terrorists struck the Marine barracks in
    Lebanon in 1983, Reagan, instead of “staying the
    course,” withdrew our troops. Your Beltway suitors
    prescribe the opposite of Reagan’s strategy.

    And as they would have it, we’re not only waging
    World Wars III and IV, we’re still fighting World
    War II. At least, that’s the way it sounds when
    Robert Kagan opens a Washington Post op-ed
    by likening Russia’s conflict with Georgia to Hitler’s
    invasion of Czechoslovakia.

    But Russia is not Germany, Georgia is no innocent
    Czechoslovakia, and Vladimir Putin is not Adolf Hitler—
    no matter what your guru Randy Scheunemann says.
    (He probably forgot to tell you that he used to lobby
    for the government of Georgia.)

    Here’s a hint: don’t believe everything you read in
    the papers, especially if the byline is Kristol or Krauthammer.
    Russia is not an expansionist, ideological empire. It’s a
    traditional, semi-authoritarian great power intent on
    preserving its influence in its own backyard and its prestige
    on the world stage. That’s why Russia intercedes in the
    domestic disputes of unruly states on its periphery. Putin
    balks at Poland hosting our antimissile systems for the
    same reason we would bristle at Cuba or Mexico receiving
    Chinese an ank missiles.

    With more validity, some of the people whispering in
    your ear tell you that Moscow wants to corner the
    European markets for oil and natural gas. And what
    nefarious end does Putin have in mind? Raising prices
    and reinforcing Moscow’s political clout, not with nuclear
    blackmail but with good, old-fashioned economic power.
    We have plenty of that ourselves (or at least we used to).
    Putin, far from being a totalitarian ideologue, is an economic
    nationalist, as the leaders of great powers traditionally have
    been.

    Then there’s the Middle East, where only American arms
    (and lives) can prevent little Israel from being swept
    into the sea by Muslim hordes. Surely that’s what AIPAC
    told you that night you left Phyllis cooling her heels.
    But again, it isn’t true. Israel has nuclear weapons,
    for one thing, and can outfight her neighbors even
    without resort to atom bombs. Israel’s problem isn’t
    external threat so much as internal security and
    demographics. When the Jewish state was founded,
    tens of thousands of Palestinians—Christians as well
    as Muslims—lost their homes. Palestine was no wide-open
    Alaskan frontier: when the newcomers moved in, Arabs
    were moved out, often by force. Terrorism didn’t come
    to the region with Hamas or Hezbollah; decades earlier
    groups like the Stern Gang and Irgun used violence to
    clear the way for Israel’s creation. Nor was Palestinian
    Authority leader Yassar Arafat the first terrorist to lead
    a state in the Holy Land. Israeli Prime Ministers Menachem
    Begin and Yitzhak Shamir had unclean hands as well.

    While your minders probably don’t put much stock
    in his work, University of Chicago political scientist
    Robert Pape has shown that suicide terrorism develops
    almost always among occupied peoples. The task
    before the Israelis is not to defend themselves against
    aggressive neighbors but to give justice to the Palestinians
    already in their midst—to suppress terrorism without
    suppressing civil liberties and human rights, which
    only leads to more bloodshed. The most helpful role
    the United States can play is that of impartial mediator
    in the conflict. There is injustice and suffering on both sides.

    No doubt you’ve been told (again and again) that
    Iran wants to “wipe Israel off the map.” Here’s
    something to keep in mind: Iran does not have
    nuclear weapons and is far from attaining them.
    Ironically, the Bush Doctrine’s pledge that “America
    is committed to keeping the world’s most dangerous
    weapons out of the hands of the most dangerous
    regimes” makes rogue states like Iran more likely
    to seek nuclear devices, as a deterrent against
    pre-emptive U.S. strikes. This is a vicious circle.
    Instead of boxing Iran into a corner, we should
    engage with Ahmadinejad, unsavory fellow though
    he is. Even with nuclear weapons, Iran would not
    pose an existential threat to Israel, let alone America.

    Since you had some difficulties in your oral exam
    with Charlie Gibson, your new friends will no doubt
    ramp up their lessons. (For the record, you can scarcely
    be blamed for fumbling the answer about the Bush Doctrine.
    Your tutors were clearly reluctant to bring it up, even
    though the whole scheme was theirs, not Project George’s.)

    They may even start assigning you book reports. It
    will feel like the third grade, except the subjects won’t
    be charming orphans. Now it’s rogue states against
    America the Benevolent. Near the top of the list will
    be An End to Evil by Richard Perle and David Frum.
    They’d have you think that Muslims will impose Islamic
    law on America if we don’t go to war with 18 different
    countries. But you know that a bunch of Muslims can’t
    make red-blooded, moose-hunting Americans wear
    burqas. Think what happens if you try to get a book
    pulled out of the library.

    That’s only the beginning of the curriculum.
    You’ll be handed les like Present Dangers and
    The Return of History. Thankfully, just like third
    grade, you don’t really have to read them. If they
    ask, just say, “The enemies of freedom won’t be
    appeased. We must stand firm, like Churchill.”

    Meanwhile, we suggest sneaking a look at The
    Limits of Power by Andrew Bacevich. It’s stern stuff,
    but he gets to the point: America can’t spend money
    it doesn’t have, beat everyone up, and expect to stay
    healthy, wealthy, and wise. If you want a good book
    on how America screwed up in Iraq, there is Fiasco by
    Thomas Ricks. You said some nice things about Ron Paul
    during the primary. He gave Giuliani a list of books that
    might be worth your time.

    You’ll have to keep your extracurriculars quiet. We know
    how these things work. Since he helped you break into
    the big leagues, you have to toe McCain’s line. But the
    outgoing administration has shown us how powerful a
    veep can be. If you go all the way, President McCain will
    be in your debt. (If he forgets, ask him how many rallies
    he held while you were home in Alaska. He wisely opted
    not to deliver speeches in phone booths.) Don’t leave your
    maverick spirit on the campaign trail.

    Despite all the briefing books being thrown at you, you
    know your own mind—and you realize that the
    neoconservative agenda doesn’t square with your
    worldview. You prize localism, their vision is grandiose.
    You value fiscal discipline, neocons will ruin the country
    to finance endless war. You honor life, and they think
    nothing of killing hundreds of thousands in the service
    of ideology. But they’ll tell you this alien vision—imported
    from the Left—is coherent and conservative.

    It is neither, but your supporters are both. They’ve
    turned against this war and definitely don’t want
    another. Yet your running mate does. Perhaps you’ve
    noticed that his interest in domestic policy pales
    alongside his foreign-policy ambitions. Or maybe you
    caught his virtuoso performance of “Bomb, bomb, bomb,
    bomb, bomb Iran.”

    You surely see that the Bush policies have come
    to a dead end. If the millions poised to vote for you
    wanted four more years, the president’s approval
    rating wouldn’t be 25 percent. This isn’t because
    Republicans dislike Bush personally or disagree with
    his positions on energy and taxes. It’s because they
    know that his main legacy—the Iraq War—is a disaster.

    Thankfully, they don’t think you’re like him. They see
    in you someone like themselves—a patriot and a mother.
    The Middle Americans waiting hours to hear you speak
    don’t want the United States to be defeated, and they
    don’t want Iraq to be a haven for al-Qaeda—something it
    never was before the invasion. They are pleased that the
    surge has made it more possible to leave because
    they don’t want to send their boys back for a third or
    fourth tour. They want America to come home—not because
    she’s weak but because she’s wise. They hope that you are, too.


    The American Conservative welcomes letters to the editor.
    Send letters to: [email protected][size4]

  2. #2
    The Great Eight Ocotillo's Avatar
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    Did X-Ray ghost write that?

  3. #3
    i hunt fenced animals clambake's Avatar
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    it's in his honor. he's no longer with us.

  4. #4
    Murdering Prostitutes Findog's Avatar
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    Moose is going back to Alaska on November 5th. No more need for hand-wringing.

  5. #5
    i hunt fenced animals clambake's Avatar
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    Did X-Ray ghost write that?
    i don't know why it came out like that.

    but, is this really a conservative magazine?

  6. #6
    Believe. Anti.Hero's Avatar
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    Moose is going back to Alaska on November 5th. No more need for hand-wringing.
    Moose . Nice


    I wonder what equivalent I could call Obama and how many would cry about it.


    Moose ? Your parents did a of a job

  7. #7
    United Autodidact Society Shastafarian's Avatar
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    Moose . Nice


    I wonder what equivalent I could call Obama and how many would cry about it.


    Moose ? Your parents did a of a job
    Lion ?

  8. #8
    Veteran DarrinS's Avatar
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    Moose is going back to Alaska on November 5th. No more need for hand-wringing.


    Classy

  9. #9
    Believe. byrontx's Avatar
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    It was an interesting read. I detest Bush and did so since he was governor but I am fairly conservative in values. The neocons are just right-wing liberals; nation-building, deficit spending, toadies to international corporations (with corporate welfare) and so on. They give conservatives a bad name.

  10. #10
    Senior Member TheMadHatter's Avatar
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    You're the worst kind of Republican. Afraid to admit you are one.

  11. #11
    The Dude Buddy Holly's Avatar
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    I wonder what equivalent I could call Obama and how many would cry about it.
    Cow ?

    Oh nooose! How mean of you! I am totally and utterly offended that you would even hypothetically think about the use of such a horrible name to call Mr. Obama.

    Oh wait, that's right, I'm not a pussy, who cares what you call him or what anyone calls her. Now stop crying and go to bed.

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