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Posts Tagged ‘Philip Klein’

No, we should not take Ron Paul seriously

by Mojambo ( 12 Comments › )
Filed under Afghanistan, Elections 2012, Gaza, Headlines, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Palestinians, Republican Party, Terrorism at August 15th, 2011 - 11:41 am

Ron Paul has got some strange foreign and defense policy ideas, that’s for sure. I do not understand his cultists – he is a lousy public speaker, has no charisma, comes across as an old  crank and is a rather unattractive fellow. His performance during the debate was embarrassing and it is a crime to have to waste time rebutting his nonsense.  Had he been around in 1941 he would have opposed going to war with Japan after Pearl Harbor.

by Philip Klein

Jim Carney is a great reporter and a wonderful colleague. But I have to voice strong disagreement with his column making the case for taking Rep. Ron Paul, R-Tex., more seriously, given that he came within 153 votes of beating Rep. Michele Bachmann in the Ames Straw Poll.

In his column, Carney asks:

Why do the mainstream media and the Republican establishment persist in ignoring and dismissing Paul?

There is no one answer. You cannot chalk it all up to Paul’s perceived long-term viability problems: I know no serious forecaster or GOP operative who gives Bachmann a significant chance of being the Republican nominee, yet she is showered with coverage at every turn.

There are legitimate reasons why Bachmann should be getting more attention. Though she may not have a “significant chance” of winning the nomination herself, she has a significant chance of affecting the ultimate outcome. Bachmann’s rise has already had an impact, both by narrowing the opening for Sarah Palin to get in, and by forcing one-time top tier candidate Tim Pawlenty to drop out. She is currently the frontrunner in Iowa, and if Bachmann wins there and remains in the race for a long time, she could split the conservative vote and make it more difficult for Texas Gov. Rick Perry to overtake Mitt Romney. Should she lose Iowa and drop out early, it improves the chances that Perry will be the nominee. By contrast, no matter how close he came to Bachmann in the straw poll, Paul does not have a realistic chance of winning the Iowa Caucus. And if he stays in or gets out, it really doesn’t affect the outcome of the race. Paul’s support isn’t large enough and to the extent that it exists, a lot of his more libertarian voters find the rest of the field unacceptable. In other words, for many of his supporters, it’s Ron Paul or bust.

But that just speaks to the reasons why Bachmann is a legitimately more important political story. Carney also advances the argument that Paul’s ideas should be taken seriously because his warnings on economics and foreign policy proved to be prescient. Let’s just focus on foreign policy, because that’s the area that separates him most from the Republican mainstream. Even if I were to grant that he was right about Iraq and Afghanistan (refighting the arguments over these wars is beyond the scope of this post), that still doesn’t validate his extreme foreign policy views.

Paul doesn’t just support pulling out of Iraq and Afghanistan, but wants to close U.S. bases all across the globe. He not only wants to withdraw all foreign aid, and end our “entangled alliance” with Israel, but he’s spoken out against Israel’s efforts to defend its citizens against terrorist groups. When Israel invaded Gaza to prevent Hamas rocket attacks in 2009, Paul recorded a video calling it a “sad day for the whole world.” He said Palestinians were living in a “concentration camp” (a thinly-veiled attempt to liken Israelis to Nazis) and said terrorists had just “a few small missiles.”

[…..]

In last Thursday’s debate, Paul dismissed the significance of Iran getting nuclear weapons (a radical regime that has called for “Death to America” and wiping Israel off the map). To be clear, it isn’t a matter of him being against sending troops to Iran, or bombing Iran — he is even against imposing sanctions, or taking any other actions to attempt to stop them from getting nukes. He also warned that assassinating terrorists would “translate our rule of law into a rule of mob rule.” In May, Paul said that he wouldn’t have ordered the raid that killed Osama bin Laden because “it was absolutely not necessary.” This is just a small inkling of the positions he’s taken recently.

And none of this gets into Paul’s penchant for indulging fringe characters – from flirting with 9/11 truthers to allowing racist newsletters to be published under his name.

[…..]

I feel for Tim. It’s probably frustrating when the candidate who comes closest to espousing your worldview sounds like a complete whack job to most people who don’t reflexively agree with him. But that’s no reason for the rest of us to take Ron Paul seriously.

Read the rest – No, we shouldn’t take Ron Paul more seriously

American liberal Jews and the coming Holocaust

by Mojambo ( 163 Comments › )
Filed under Politics at May 20th, 2010 - 8:30 am

This all reminds me of the American Jews  (such as Congressman Sol Bloom and Rabbi Stephen Wise) during the 1930’s and 40’s.  Few major rallies in the streets demanding that the Jews of Europe be given exit visas, no pressuring of the Roosevelt administration to allow the people on the St. Louis to disembark, no demanding that the Air Force bomb the railway lines leading into Auschwitz.  “Roosevelt is our best friend, don’t  make trouble, the gentiles will get angry”. They much preferred the notion of Jews as victims rather then as a people who take their destinies into their own hands. The “J Street” crowd as well as the New York Times Jews will have a lot to answer for before History.

hat tip – The Other McCain

by Philip Klein

In the past, I’ve remarked to friends that the difference between a Jewish liberal and a Jewish conservative is that when a Jewish liberal walks out of the Holocaust Museum, he feels, “This shows why we need to have more tolerance and multiculturalism.” The Jewish conservative feels, “We should have killed a lot more Nazis, and sooner.”

I thought of this as I read Peter Beinart’s new essay, “The Failure of the American Jewish Establishment,” which argues that “liberal Zionism” is in danger unless groups such as AIPAC start to take a more critical view of Israel’s actions. Beinart, using a Frank Luntz survey of young American Jews as a jumping off point, writes:

Particularly in the younger generations, fewer and fewer American Jewish liberals are Zionists; fewer and fewer American Jewish Zionists are liberal. One reason is that the leading institutions of American Jewry have refused to foster — indeed, have actively opposed — a Zionism that challenges Israel’s behavior in the West Bank and Gaza Strip and toward its own Arab citizens. For several decades, the Jewish establishment has asked American Jews to check their liberalism at Zionism’s door, and now, to their horror, they are finding that many young Jews have checked their Zionism instead.

The problem, however, isn’t with leading Jewish organizations that defend Israel, but with liberalism. As sickening as it sounds, Jewish liberals see their fellow Jews as noble when they are victims being led helplessly into the gas chambers, but recoil at the thought of Jews who refuse to be victims, and actually take actions to defend themselves. It isn’t too different from American liberal attitudes toward criminal justice or terrorism, where morality is turned upside down and the lines between criminals and victims become blurred, and in certain cases, even reversed.

[…]

Read the rest: How liberal Jews are enabling the second Holocaust

Will Petraeus be the Eisenhower of 2012?

by Mojambo ( 176 Comments › )
Filed under Politics, Republican Party at May 4th, 2010 - 1:00 pm

I do not know that much about General David Petraeus outside of the fact that he designed the brilliant surge plan in Iraq and has had a hell of a time working with the appeasement oriented Obama administration. However I think the stakes are so high in 2012 that anyone who can beat Obama deserves a serious consideration and some of the social issues do not seem nearly as important as putting an end to government deficit spending,  the socialistic take over of the economy, and a cowardly foreign policy. The down side to a Petraeus presidency could be that we would have a repeat of so many Republican administrations – trying to be “above” partisanship means that you give your opponents free reign to subvert you – see Eisenhower, George H.W. Bush, and George W. Bush.

by Philip Klein

In the early stages of implementing the surge strategy in Iraq, United States military commanders started to detect that the new plan was working, but the signs of progress were overshadowed as casualties mounted while American soldiers fought to secure the cities.

During a meeting around this time, a senior officer put his arm around Gen. David Petraeus, then leading the war effort in Iraq, and advised, “You know, you’ve got a messaging problem.”

Petraeus replied, “With all due respect, what we really have is a results problem.”

In late March of this year, Petraeus recalled the encounter at a press conference held during a trip to Manchester, New Hampshire. He punctuated the story by noting, “Occasionally, I can hear my old Dutch-American sea captain father, who would periodically remind his son, ‘It’s about results, boy.'”

At a time when the U.S. is facing multiple crises at home and abroad and Americans are increasingly disenchanted with Washington, Petraeus’s record of accomplishments — most prominently helping to turn around the Iraq war that many had written off as lost — has set him apart from other national leaders. And as the Republican Party struggles to repair the image for incompetence it gained during the Bush era, Petraeus finds himself the subject of continued speculation as to whether he may seek the presidency, no matter how many times he tries to put the issue to rest.

“I’d like to see Gen. Petraeus warm up,” Bob Dole, the former Senate Majority Leader and 1996 Republican presidential nominee, told the Politico last fall. “I don’t know anything about his politics, whether he has an interest. It’s kind of a time for another Eisenhower, in my view.”

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Read the rest here: Will Petraeus be like Ike?