It's now possible to compare some Americans with those
Italians and Germans who fell under the spell of the evil tyrants
Mussolini and Hitler in the 1930s. Selling one's soul is usually
a last-ditch act made out of desperation and hunger, so how does
one explain why so many comfortable, well-fed Americans barter
whatever integrity and character they possess?
Anyone who finds that grim analysis hard to swallow must take a
hard look at the past week to recognize that Americans can be
bribed into accepting the most vile, evil, and corrupt
individuals into their midst. Consider how Rep. Charles Rangel
wimped out in his editorial letter to the Daily News condemning
President Chavez's "devil" attack on President Bush at
the United Nations. He claimed he was outraged, but he just had
to add: "By offering discounted fuel oil in the winter to
provide warmth to people in need, Venezuela has won many friends
in low-income communities of New York and other states. As long
as U.S. companies buy oil from Venezuela without offering any
program to reduce its price for the poor, I will be grateful for
the generosity of the government of Venezuela."
Why, congressman, didn't you tell Mr. Chavez where he could put
his discounted oil? Exactly how do the poor, who don't own
buildings or cars, benefit from cheap oil? Mr. Rangel must think
poor communities have as little integrity as some New Jersey
residents.
All last week, a former New Jersey governor, James McGreevey was
touting his sex memoir, whining and moaning about how difficult
it was to hide his homosexuality while selling out his state's
homeland security; allowing corruption to run rampart; cheating
on his wife, and sexually assaulting a state employee.But that
didn't stop someone from posting on an Internet forum that Mr.
McGreevey had saved him a lot of money by reforming the state's
insurance laws. Ka-ching!
The latest polls show a rise in President Bush's approval rating.
Is this because Americans are finally waking up to the danger we
face from a fanatical enemy? No, folks, it's because gas prices
are going down.
We sure are a different species from the valiant people who
developed this nation. We're too attached to creature comforts,
and so afraid of the wolf at the door that we seem to have lost
the will to fight him.
As President Clinton angrily defends his administration's record
on terrorism and he astonishingly tries to compare Mr. Bush's
eight months before the September 11 attacks against his eight
years in office, his defenders wax nostalgic about how good a
president Mr. Clinton was. Why, I ask them? The economy was
great, I'm told.
It's Congress that passes legislation that affects the economy,
and in 1993 and 1994, when Mr. Clinton had a Democrat Congress,
the first thing he did was gut the military. His wife tried to
ram socialism down our throats. His first two years were an
economic disaster, and the best thing he did as president was
sign onto the Republicans' 1995 Contract with America. The
balanced budget, welfare reform, and tax cuts brought on the
boom, but why bother explaining that? The Clinton legacy has
assumed mythic proportions because it is based solely on hype,
not facts.
The soul sellouts exist in both parties, where politicians spend
half their terms getting pork for their districts in exchange for
funds to campaign in the second half. Show them the money - and
it doesn't make any difference who you are or what kind of person
you are.
Bribing the American people has become so routine that our mayor
is now proposing a plan to reward the poor just for making
healthy choices and everybody thinks it's a good idea. Would I
still be stuck in the barrio if the government had paid my mother
cash for taking me to the doctor to get shots? The idea is
totally ludicrous, and indicates a denial of the root causes of
poverty. Poverty isn't synonymous with poor values except when
the poor are crippled by schemes that enable dependency by
stifling ambition.
Have we really lost our ability to recognize evil when it's
cloaked in a dollar bill with an offer you just can't refuse?
Mayor Giuliani booted terrorist chief Yasser Arafat from Lincoln
Center, and yet Arafat was always greeted warmly in the Clinton
White House. Governor Romney refused state protection for the
ex-Iranian president who once called for the destruction of
Israel. The academics at Harvard who invited Mohammed Khatemi;
the Chavez-cheering crowd that included Danny Glover, Charles
Barron, and Cornel West, and Mr. Rangel could use a tutorial from
these gentlemen in how to identify tyrants, terrorists, and
dictators.
Call it Soul-Searching 101.