Senin, 04 Februari 2008

Just Not Feelin' It...

We all have days like this, I suppose. But, as my post title states: “I’m just not feelin’ it” today. In spades. But…like all things… “this, too, shall pass.”

That said, I did come across an editorial in today’s WSJ I want to quote and link. First, the excerpts:

We believe that the nomination of John McCain is the best option to preserve the ongoing restoration of constitutional government. He is by far the most electable Republican candidate remaining in the race, and based on his record is as likely to appoint judges committed to constitutionalism as Mitt Romney, a candidate for whom we also have great respect.

We make no apology for suggesting that electability must be a prime consideration. The expected value of any presidential candidate for the future of the American judiciary must be discounted by the probability that the candidate will not prevail in the election. For other kinds of issues, it may be argued that it is better to lose with the perfect candidate than to win with an imperfect one. The party lives to fight another day and can reverse the bad policies of an intervening presidency.

The judiciary is different. On Jan. 20, 2009, six of the nine Supreme Court justices will be over 70. Most of them could be replaced by the next president, particularly if he or she is re-elected. Given the prospect of accelerating gains in modern medical technology, some of the new justices may serve for half a century. Even if a more perfect candidate were somehow elected in 2012, he would not be able to undo the damage, especially to the Supreme Court.

{…}

Conservative complaints about Mr. McCain's role as a member of the Gang of 14 seem to encapsulate all that is wrong in general with conservative carping over his candidacy. It makes the perfect the enemy of the very good results that have been achieved, thanks in no small part to Mr. McCain, and to the very likely prospect of further good results that might come from his election as president.

Emphasis mine. Most of this you may remember, Gentle Reader, was exactly what I was on about here. And despite the fact “the perfect vs. the good” has become something of a 21st century cliché…the sentiment is so very apt when it comes to the GOP nomination. But we’ll see what we see tomorrow, eh?

In the meantime…read the whole thing editorial, as it’s said. One editorial probably won’t convince die-hard conservatives, but then again…there’s absolutely no harm in trying.

Update 2/04/2008 1900 hrs: Very few bloggers had weighed in on this editorial when I put this post up this afternoon. That's changed now. But of all the folks weighing-in on this subject, no one... and I mean NO ONE... says it better than Gerard. He hit the ball out of the gawdamned park. Just an excerpt or two:

Still, it is instructive to follow the heft of the arguments that shore up the ruins of the Republican party. These seem mostly to stem from McCain's real or imagined positions on "The Big 3 Issues" -- abortion, immigration, homosexuality -- plus -- just for fun -- some sort of running around outside his marriage a decade or more back. The latter is often thrown in because it just wouldn't be politics as usual without some mud in the mix.

Why the blow-up on the Right. It's not really about McCain. The conservative rage to my mind is powered not by the actual prospect of McCain candidacy itself. The looming reality of McCain's nomination brings a deeper failure into focus. That knowledge is powered by the unconscious awareness that, on "The Big 3 Issues", the culture war is over. And the conservatives have lost. Reaction? Consume your own.

Here's the news on "The Big 3 Issues:"

{...}

Reversing Illegal Immigration: Done deal #3. I know that, like visions of sugarplums, visions of some sort of "fence" protecting America from the hordes of marching Mexicans dance in the heads of Americans who just want them all to turn around and march back. But, alas, that too joins the previous two issues in the category, "It Ain't Gonna Happen."

I know, believe me, all the designs for a kinder and gentler fence that will have hi-tech detectors and some sort of ready interdiction corps sitting on helicopter scramble pads across the southern border. I know all the arguments for expanding the ever-so-effective techniques used to stop the flow of illegal drugs to stop the flow of illegal aliens. None of these will prove any more effective than "The War on Some Drugs" we've be squandering billions on over the decades.

What would work would be some sort of East German wall 1,969 miles long. This monstrosity would have guard towers, mine fields, attack Dobermans, armored cars, and about 100,000 armed border guards with a shoot on sight policy (3 shifts of 17 guards per mile). After around 500 Mexican civilians were shot dead, this might have some effect on reducing the flow. I'm not quite ready for this draconian a solution. Are you?

Then there is the extended policy of finding those illegals here and, well, just deporting them. Another 25-watt idea.

Okay, let's follow that one home with the vision of hundreds of buses chock full of thousands of illegals (rounded up in armed swoops through the US barrios) departing daily for Tijuana and all points south. The first problem is finding and then imprisoning the illegals. That would mean raids into homes and apartment buildings around the country as well as stop and frisk identity checks on the street for "looking Mexican." Then you'll have to refurbish those Japanese internment camps in the Owens valley and elsewhere as holding pens. Think the Manzanar Concentration Camp to the 10th power on the outskirts of every major city. You start opening those up and armed Mexicans are going to be the least of your problems.

And there's much, much more... you'll note I began the excerpt with Done Deal Number Three. Two items precede that one, and the analysis is spot-on. Forget that WSJ editorial if you're pressed for time. Just go read Gerard. And then come back and tell me how you're gonna stay home, or vote for some third-party candidate with less than the proverbial snow ball's chance in Hell. I particularly like Gerard's close. If that don't raise the hair on the back of your neck, well...you're pretty much a lost cause. Or a Democrat.

P.S.: Read Rachel Lucas, too. Oh my, yes. Please do.

P.P.S.: Eugene Volokh is on-board, too.

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