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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-15-06 07:17 PM
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The myth that shapes Bush's world

The myth that shapes Bush's world


By Mark Helprin
Mark Helprin is a senior fellow of the Claremont Institute. His novels include "A Soldier of the Great War" and "Winter's Tale." A version of this article will appear in the forthcoming issue of the C

January 15, 2006

THE PRESIDENT believes and often states, as if it were a self-evident truth, that "democracies are peaceful countries." This claim, which has been advanced in the past in regard to Christianity, socialism, Islam and ethical culture, is the postulate on which the foreign policy of the United States now rests. Balance of power, deterrence and punitive action have been abandoned in favor of a scheme to recast the political cultures of broad regions, something that would be difficult enough even with a flawless rationale because the power of even the most powerful country in the world is not adequate to transform the world at will.

Nor is the rationale flawless. It is possible to discover various statistical correlations among democracy and war and peace, depending on how they are defined and in what time frames. The chief pitfall in such social-science exercises is in weighing something such as, for example, the Mughal Campaign in Transoxiana, 1646-47, against something like, for example, World War II. Generally, a straightforward historical approach is better. And what does it show?

Even without reference to the case of a democracy that, finding self-defense insufficient justification and retaliation an insufficient end, makes war on a non-democracy so as to make the non-democracy a democracy, the postulate on which the president has in all good faith chosen to rely is contradicted by inconvenient fact.

Germany, the primary instigator of World War I, was a democracy. Although party governance weakened immediately before the war, it did so according to the popular will. When hostilities broke out, power flowed back to the Reichstag as a result of its increased belligerency in reaction to the threat of, perhaps ironically, nondemocratic Russia. Democratic Italy joined the entente because it had been spoiling for a fight to wrest South Tyrol from Austria. Extending its northern defenses to the natural Alpine barrier was obviously in Italy's interest, and popular sovereignty acted not as a break on war for this purpose but as a stimulus.

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http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/sunday/editorials/la-op-helprin15jan15,1,7979672.story?coll=la-travel-headlines&track=mostemailedlink
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StClone Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-15-06 07:50 PM
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1. "They know no boundaries or rules"...good article
From Jane Smiley article: http://www.slate.com/id/2109218


The reason the Democrats have lost five of the last seven presidential elections is simple: A generation ago, the big capitalists, who have no morals, as we know, decided to make use of the religious right in their class war against the middle class and against the regulations that were protecting those whom they considered to be their rightful prey—workers and consumers. The architects of this strategy knew perfectly well that they were exploiting, among other unsavory qualities, a long American habit of virulent racism, but they did it anyway, and we see the outcome now—Cheney is the capitalist arm and Bush is the religious arm. They know no boundaries or rules. They are predatory and resentful, amoral, avaricious, and arrogant. Lots of Americans like and admire them because lots of Americans, even those who don't share those same qualities, don't know which end is up. Can the Democrats appeal to such voters? Do they want to? The Republicans have sold their souls for power. Must everyone?
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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-15-06 08:01 PM
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2. So true! Lay, Skilling, Koslowski, etc., etc. n/t
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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-15-06 09:08 PM
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3. Yup. When Bush Has Completed Our Transformation Into Fascism
civil war will break out.
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