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The Patriot Post Brief 9-26
From The Federalist Patriot
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____________________________ OPINION IN BRIEF"The anti-government protests in Iran following the government's rigged elections are doubtless a little more than the 'robust debate' among Iranians that President Barack Obama welcomed during the election. Some of the debaters have been shot dead. Others have been hustled off to jail. I wonder whether this is an eye-opener for our novice president. ... Yet my question remains: Has our sententious new president learned anything from the unforeseen violent culmination of the Iranian elections? Frankly, I doubt it. He reminds me so much of our most recent sanctimonious pontificator, President Jimmy Carter, who at first attempted to end the Cold War by lecturing Americans against their 'inordinate fear of communism.' Then the Soviets became more aggressive. Finally, Carter began the military buildup for which his successor took justifiable credit. President Ronald Reagan knew the value of a strong military in support of resolute diplomacy. Neither Carter nor Obama has any sense of the linkage of the two, and now it looks as if the Obama administration is going to cut back on our military, even as the dangers to world peace grow. At the heart of our new president is, it seems to me, ambivalence. Within him exist opposite attitudes. What we have seen during the protests in Iran is not a clear sense of geopolitics, but uncertainty. President Obama has not had a clue as to what to do. ... Let the mainstream media purr on about this president's mastery of government. My sense is that he is out of his depth. His dithering over the Iranian protests is but one bloody example." --R. Emmett Tyrrell
RE: THE LEFT"President Barack Obama came into office apparently believing that his non-traditional background, charisma and good intentions could placate dictators hostile to America and ease global tensions. ... But so far the world's thugs do not seem to appreciate that new goodwill. ... Obama's confusion about the world's bad actors suggests that he needs a general refresher course in the world of thugs. ... Being anti-American and mouthing tired charges about imperialism, colonialism or capitalism do not make a thug authentic or populist. By definition, thugs acquire power illegitimately. They keep it unlawfully. And they exercise it illegally -- regardless of their professed concern for the 'people' or their gripes against America. Thugs are thugs, and they come in all ideologies, colors and religions -- from Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe to North Korea's Kim Jong-il to the late Slobodan Milosevic of Serbia. ... Most of the world's problems are caused by a handful of thugs. Any time one can be isolated and replaced by a consensual government, the world gets just a bit safer. ... So, Mr. President, do not talk to a thug unless you absolutely have to. Do not apologize to -- or put our trust in -- one. And whenever people rise up against a thug, speak out immediately and forcefully on their behalf -- and let the thug, not America, worry about the consequences of the spread of freedom." --Hoover Institution historian Victor Davis Hanson
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR(To submit reader comments visit our Letters to the Editor page.)
"Alexander's essay, 'Robert's Rules' was an excellent review of the historical use of successful unconventional methods for dealing with terrorism, 'fighting fire with fire,' and a well-placed boot to Obama's arrogant rear end -- this one had it all." --Los Angeles, California
"Alexander wrote that as non-U.S. citizens, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, Abu Zubaydah and Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri have no constitutional rights, but they may have some rights under international conventions. However, do they not have natural rights? I know Alexander fully understands that our rights are not awarded by government but by God. Bringing up the terrorists' barbaric executions and torture does not justify using rights-violating methods of interrogation." --Seattle, Washington
Alexander replies: Several dissenters echoed this reader's comment. First, Obama's complaint is about constitutional rights not natural rights, and I am certain that Obama distinguishes between the two, as do his Leftist cadres. He believes that your "rights" are the gift of government, not God. I have written extensively that all people have "unalienable rights" as our Founders wrote in our Declaration of Independence, however those who would take away the rights of others, forgo their own. Our prisons are full of thugs who erroneously believed their rights superseded those of their victims -- and now they have lost their right to liberty. Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, Abu Zubaydah and Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri have forgone any and all rights to life and liberty because they have, with great success, taken those rights from thousands of others. As for Obama's objection to waterboarding, and all the media and political play this has received, we are the laughingstock of the "tolerant" Islamic world.
"If Major Robert Rogers were alive today and in charge of our current ranks of fine Rangers, he would respond to airplane hijackers by having his men seek out anyone associated with the terrorists, and in end them with prejudice. As for captives, like Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, after getting what actionable intel he could, he would treat Khalid to the same violent end Khalid used to murder Daniel Pearl, but the knife would not only be dull, it would be rusty and covered with pig blood. And, Khalid's departure would be on YouTube for all his friends to see!" --Boston, Massachusetts
Alexander replies: I learned early that you do not bring a knife to a gunfight. Obama has shown up to combat nuclear terror with a cotton ball.
"As for 'cruel and unusual punishments,' cruel is a moral judgment as defined in the context of a particular society or culture in time. When the framers wrote the Constitution, dunking, hanging, flogging, keelhauling and public display in stocks, were acceptable measure of punishment. And as Alexander aptly noted, Rogers scalping of a French captive in full view of his fort's garrison was also acceptable. Today some may disagree. So today, the Left not only thinks applying water to the face of terrorists is torture,' but also complain it is 'cruel and unusual' for a judge to make a student wear a sandwich board proclaiming him a truant, or make a tagger clean up his mess. And where have such constraints on punishment gotten us as a nation?" --St. Louis, Missouri
Alexander replies: Yes, and it is 'cruel and unusual' not to allow murderers and rapists access to cable TV, the best-equipped gyms and libraries.
"I agree with your general thesis that waterboarding is not torture. In many instances, our Marines and Troops live with far fewer 'creature comforts' than the terrorists at Gitmo. Somebody should probably contact Amnesty International!" --Fort Benning, Georgia
THE LAST WORD"A week ago, CNN, the Washington Post and other major news outlets covered Obama's killing of a fly as if it was a major news event. (At least when the Russian press similarly gushes over Vladimir Putin, he's karate-chopping cinderblocks in half.) The good news: More photo-ops are coming, because the White House apparently has a major fly problem. I know that because I read the New York Times' flood-the-zone coverage. As Kool Aid-allergic columnist Robert Samuelson has noted, such sycophancy is a serious public-policy problem because the president is proposing a radical overhaul of pretty much everything, and for the most part the press hasn't cared that his explanations are iffier than gas-station sushi, his assurances more dubious than a North Korean press release. Obama's ongoing promise that he's 'creating or saving' jobs is as plausible as the chess team captain's claim that his supermodel girlfriend can't fly down from Canada for the prom. Maybe the fly infestation at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue has something to do with the fact that the White House is a central hub of bovine manure distribution?" --National Review editor Jonah Goldberg
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Veritas vos Liberabit -- Semper Vigilo, Fortis, Paratus, et Fidelis! Mark Alexander, Publisher, for The Patriot's editors and staff.
(Please pray for our Patriot Armed Forces standing in harm's way around the world, and for their families -- especially families of those fallen Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, Marines and Coast Guardsmen, who granted their lives in defense of American liberty.)