I thought we already had the House GOP shake-up when Tom DeLay was pushed from office and Roy Blunt lost the race for Majority Leader. Now we have to dump Dennis Hastert too? I remember when Newt Gingrich had to go, only to be replaced by Bob Livingston, but then he had to go, too. I remember when Trent Lott was pushed from office, replaced by Bill Frist. And then I heard rumblings about how Frist had to go because, well, he was ineffective. Meanwhile, the Democrats hang tough, through thick and thin. They slobber all over Bill Clinton, who actually had sex with a 19-year-old intern and abused his office and women left and right. William Jefferson, a Class-A crook, remains in office with no effort by his party to expel him because in a close election, Nancy Pelosi needs him. West Virginia’s Alan Mollohan has become wealthy in office, apparently helping to funnel money to his favorite causes. Sen. Bob Menendez apparently rented property to a nonprofit agency which he helped to receive federal funds. Cynthia McKinney assaulted a police officer, and she wasn't expelled. (The voters fired her.) John Murtha was an unindicted co-conspirator in the Abscam scandal, yet is now touted as the future House Democrat leader. And the media's favorite Republican, John McCain, was caught up in the Keating Five scandal. We have leakers, womanizers, boozers, and anti-Semites in Congress, not to mention Ted Kennedy. And I could go on and on.
Oh yes, I hear we conservatives are better than the liberals, and that we must hold ourselves to a higher standard. But throwing Republican leaders overboard to prove the point without sufficient information is no standard at all. It may make pundits more comfortable and may attract praise from unlikely circles, but it doesn't make us better than liberals. In fact, it doesn't make us better people, period. What we need is information. Most of us only learned about the Foley communications last Friday. Demanding Hastert’s head tonight, as I said in an earlier post, is irresponsible. Among other things, we need to know who was aware of these three-year-old instant messages, only to make them public at a time of enormous help to the House Democrats. Clearly Foley wasn’t the only one exploiting these teenagers.
I’ve been around Washington too long to know that scandals of this sort don’t just happen. Just ask Karl Rove and Lewis Libby. Three years later, most of us are appalled at the Fitzgerald investigation. But when Libby was indicted, many dismissed questions about the investigation as irrelevant to the charges.
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Tuesday, October 03, 2006
Throwing Conservative Leaders Under the Bus
Mark Levin makes a point:
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I have long lamented the fact that Democrats even though morally bankrupt as a party, know one thing that Republicans can't seem to get and that is how to stick together. At the first sign of trouble, they want to beat the Democrats in ridding themselves of the offender, convicted or not. Just as the Democrats have no shame in supporting the shabbiest among them, the Republicans have no shame in abandoning their friends at the merest hint of wrongdoing. Would the New York Times ever demand a Democratic Speaker resign? Silly Question.
Who is defending George Allen, who defended Tom Delay, where is the Republican drumbeat to rid the congress of William Jefferson (Dem. La.), Ted Kennedy (Dem. Ma.)
Foley is a slime, but where is the drumbeat to indict Brian Ross, Investigative Reporter ABC, for allowing Foley to continue in office for so long after these messages were known to exist. If he really cared for these innocent young men Foley was preying upon shouldn't Ross have spoken up long ago?
The pattern is all too clear. Destroy Delay, destroy Allen, destroy Foley, destroy Rove, destroy Libby,destroy Cheney, destroy Bush, the list goes on.
If you can't beat them, destroy them.
Meanwhile, Clinton, the rapist, is lauded as a humanitarian, and Laura Bush joins him on the platform. Ted Kennedy, of chappequidick fame, passes moral judgement on Bush's Supreme Court nominees, and Nancy Pelosi can't wait to take over Hastert's job.
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