Muth's Truths -
chuck@chuckmuth.com
February 1, 2006
SOTU 2006: THE REMINDER SPEECH
If nothing else, this year's State of the Union speech, known
inside the beltway as SOTU, served as a reminder to many
conservatives why they are so darned displeased with much of
President Bush's domestic agenda, but also why they had
absolutely no choice but assure his re-election over Sen. John
F. Kerry in 2004.
Fear is a powerful motivator. And unhappy conservatives in 2004
harbored a double-dose it as they trudged to the ballot box.
Fear that John Kerry would be in charge of the war on
terrorists. And fear that John Kerry would get to appoint
Supreme Court justices. Their fears were well-founded and their
decision was affirmed in President Bush's speech Tuesday night.
First, the easy part: SCOTUS. Which is Washington-speak for
Supreme Court of the United States. The nation's two newest
justices were featured and highlighted during the speech. Chief
Justice Roberts and Justice Alito are clearly superior,
well-qualified selections who will not be inclined to "legislate
from the bench."
Had John Kerry been elected president in 2004, nothing close to
these intellectual and philosophical judges would have been
allowed within 200 miles of Democrat's short-list. We need no
other evidence of this than the fact that John Kerry declared a
filibuster on Sam Alito - from, as a White House spokesman noted
with tongue planted firmly in cheek, a five-star ski resort in
Switzerland. Because of George W's re-election, the Supreme
Court has now decidedly moved a large step in the "right"
direction. That alone was probably worth the vote in 2004.
But more importantly, there's the war on terrorists. After 9-11,
there was a very real danger that the American public, absent
any immediate or further attacks, would be lulled back into a
sense of complacency about terrorism. And it has. Fortunately,
the president and his administration have NOT. It would be very
easy for George Bush, faced with both public apathy and public
opposition, to "go wobbly" on the war on terrorists. To his
great credit, he hasn't. And he doesn't apologize for it either.
That's the primary reason conservatives sucked it up and cast
their ballot for him in 2004. And it was the right decision.
Can you just imagine John Kerry saying the following things in
his State of the Union address had he been elected POTUS, which
is Washington-speak for President of the United States?
"If we were to leave these vicious attackers alone, they would
not leave us alone."
"There is no peace in retreat. And there is no honor in
retreat."
"Fellow citizens, we are in this fight to win, and we are
winning."
"The road to victory is the road that will take our troops
home."
"(Decision to) decrease our troop levels (in Iraq)...will be
made by our military commanders, not by politicians in
Washington, DC."
"Hindsight alone is not wisdom. And second-guessing is not a
strategy."
".(O)ur nation has only one option: We must keep our word,
defeat our enemies, and stand behind the American military in
its vital mission."
"If there are people inside our country who are talking with
al-Qaeda, we want to know about it - because we will not sit
back and wait to be hit again."
Contrast those statements with John Kerry's professed belief
that the United States should only use military force to protect
its interests and citizens if it gets permission from the United
Nations. Kerry is the king of "retreat and defeat" crowd. He's
the head moonbat. Cut-and-run would have become official U.S.
policy. The Kerry doctrine would be, to paraphrase a line by
actor Jim Carey in the "Liar, Liar" movie, "Hit me again, bin
Laden...and this time put some stank on it!"
So yes, this year's SOTU was a clear reminder of the wisdom of
keeping Teresa Heinz's "squeeze" out of the Oval office. But it
also reminded conservatives of what is driving them nuts with
this White House.
Let's start with immigration.
Or I should say, ILLEGAL immigration. The "illegal" part is the
key part. And while President Bush talked tough about tightening
our borders, he continued to insist that any such legislation
include an amnesty component, though he also continues to insist
his "guest worker" program is NOT an amnesty program.
The White House doesn't have a tin ear on this issue; it's DEAF.
And it isn't just conservatives who want stricter border control
without the amnesty...er, guest worker program. Citizens from
sea to shining sea of all political stripes simply won't support
any kind of "guest worker" program until they FIRST see serious
and dramatic changes in how the nation's immigration laws are
enforced. Period. End of story.
But there was an even more outrageous statement made by the
president on this issue in the speech - and it shows that this
White House still doesn't "get it," or doesn't want to get it.
"We hear claims that immigrants are somehow bad for the
economy," the president said.
Bull! This is a dishonest cheap shot at opponents of his amnesty
proposal. No one has said that immigrants are bad for the
economy. However, quite a few folks have said that ILLEGAL
immigrants are a drain on local, state and the national
economies. And they are. That one word makes a BIG difference.
The president clearly was trying to infer that anyone who
opposed ILLEGAL immigration is ipso facto anti-immigrant. That
kind of false statement and tactic should be below the President
of the United States. But it wasn't. How disappointing.
Then there's the spending issue.
The president said, "I am pleased that members of Congress are
working on earmark reform," a comment which caused Sen. John
McCain to clap and bounce his head like Goofy on crack. "And we
can tackle this problem together, if you pass the line-item
veto."
No, Mr. President. We can tackle this problem if you would just
use the veto power you ALREADY possess. You have yet to veto a
single spending bill, including that earmark-loaded Porkapalooza
highway bill last summer. You didn't need a line-item veto to
erase the Bridge to Nowhere. All you needed was a Bic pen. You
could have borrowed mine.
Then there was Social Security reform.
"Congress did not act last year on my proposal to save Social
Security," the president said, receiving a hootin'-and-hollerin'
standing "O" from the Democrats; his best line of the evening
from their perspective. So what does the president propose to do
about it THIS year? What any red-blooded politician would do in
a similar situation, of course: Kick the can down the street by
"creating a commission" to do the job our congress-critters were
elected to do. That's leadership?
Back to spending.
Let's see, the president called for "a 22-percent increase in
clean energy research," "to double the federal commitment to the
most critical basic research programs in the physical sciences,"
a new training program for "70,000 high school teachers, to lead
advanced-placement courses in math and science," "add resources
to encourage young people to stay in school" and "provide new
funding to states" for AIDS medicines.
All fine-sounding programs. But here's the gazillion dollar
question: Exactly how much are these new programs going to cost
us, and what are the "offsets" going to be to pay for them? Or
are we just going to keep adding new spending programs on top of
new spending programs without cutting out some old spending
programs? Which will mean one of two things: (1) Higher taxes
down the road to pay for the new programs, or (2) Bigger and
bigger deficits. Neither or which are acceptable to
conservatives. So again, where are the offsets?
And finally, education.
The president called for math and science course which are
"rigorous enough to compete with other nations." Laudable goal.
But does he really believe our government-run public schools can
accomplish that? As John Stossel ("Stupid In America") would
say, "Gimme a break."
If the president wants "schools that teach every child;" if he
wants American students to excel and be able to compete with
their peers in other countries; if he wants to assure that
American kids get the kind of education which will help them
"succeed in life" and thereby "ensure that America succeeds in
the world," then he has no choice but to abandon his top-down No
Child Left Behind program and push for true, meaningful school
choice which empowers parents and breaks up the monopoly and
stranglehold the educrats and teachers unions have on our school
systems.
And that includes vouchers for EVERYBODY'S kids, not just the
kids in the worst of the worse public schools. No matter what
Teddy Kennedy says.
So yes, this year's State of the Union speech was a big
reminder. A reminder of why we didn't elect John Kerry in 2004.
And a reminder of what conservatives need to look for in a new
presidential candidate in 2008.
# # #
Chuck Muth is president of Citizen Outreach, a non-profit public
policy advocacy organization in Washington, D.C. The views
expressed are his own and do not necessarily reflect the views
of Citizen Outreach. He may be reached at
chuck@citizenoutreach.com .
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
Copyright 2006 Chuck Muth. All rights reserved. "Muth's Truths"
may be republished providing the column is copied intact, and
full credit is given. Talk show producers interested in
scheduling an interview with Mr. Muth should call (202) 558-7162
-
chuck@chuckmuth.com
http://www.citizenoutreach.com
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