Julian Sanchez | February 2, 2005
It is Groundhog Day—ten seconds on Iraq and suddenly it sounds like we've started over with the Bush circa campaign 2000.
Help Reason celebrate its next 40 years. Donate Now!
Try Reason's award-winning print edition today! Your first issue is FREE if you are not completely satisfied.
Except the "humble foreign policy" part seems to have been inadvertently left out....
I watched it in Japan on cspan.com...after that scary inaugural
speech I'm starting to like the old boy. He's like a crazy uncle,
muttering the word "freedom" without ever defining it, and pushing
for smaller government in the same breath as his intiatives for
government expansion. All I can do is laugh and say, "Oh
George...".
Just ONCE I'd like to hear his definitions of liberty and freedom.
His debasement of those words is an insult to real freedom-loving
people everywhere.
Ugh...I gotta run since I'm starting to get angry.
Iraq served its purpose and got him reelected. Now it's declare victory and get out so we can focus on domestic stuff, like seeing how much loot he can direct to his donors and buddies.
A predictable plot isn't always a bad thing, but the acting in this production stank.
Yesterday there was a fascinating article in the local paper
about the "talibanisation" of Bassorah (I think it was Bassorah,
anyway. I can't find the article on the Net).
According to the reporter, the goal of the leader of Bassorah is to
"inscribe the city in the sharia firmament" or something to that
effect. Women are obliged to cover up, they may not work with men,
mixed classes are forbidden... The whole bit. The Brits don't get
involved.
So maybe it _is_ Groundhog Day. But with Afghanistan as the
recurring nightmare.
For the vast majority of people who care about actual results
and aren't squeemish about Bismark's policy "sausage factory"
there's an awful lot more hope about this President. Any practical
president is going to have a mix of liberty enhancing and liberty
detracting policy initiatives (go ahead and find me one that
doesn't). Progress is measured by the liberty enhancing ones
outweighing the liberty detracting ones. In the end, Bush does well
by that yardstick.
He has moved the entire government policy debate so that there is
now an expectation that you should measure progress and government
programs that do not do their job well should be fixed or
eliminated. That's a tremendous improvement on the preceding no
accountability standard. All that libertarians have to do now is to
prove what our ideology has always held, that most government
programs don't do a very good job. If the previous regime was
trying to hit a Roger Clemens fast ball the new one is T-Ball for
libertarians.
Alas, too many libertarians are unwilling to engage in serious,
practical work. All too many of them seem to congregate here.
"Progress is measured by the liberty enhancing ones
outweighing the liberty detracting ones. In the end, Bush does well
by that yardstick."
You don't mean domestically, do you? Because if you do...well...I
think that position's untenable.
"Alas, too many libertarians are unwilling to engage in
serious, practical work. All too many of them seem to congregate
here."
I might agree with you on the former, but the latter seems to
assume that the kind of libertarians who are unwilling to engage in
serious, practical work could be in short supply--here or
anywhere else.
...One might assume that the people who think that the government
should do very little might be inclined to...but never mind. I'll
just leave that aside and let you crawl back under your bridge and
get back to your serious, practical work.
Site comments/questions:
Media Inquiries and Reprint Permissions:
(310) 367-6109
Editorial & Production Offices:
3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Suite 400
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 391-2245