Fw: Paul Craig Roberts: A Party Without Virtue
Paul Craig Roberts: A Party Without  Virtue
by Paul Craig  Roberts
01/25/05 "LewRockwell.com"  -- After listening to his inaugural speech, anyone who thinks President Bush and  his handlers are sane needs to visit a psychiatrist. The hubris-filled  megalomaniac in the Oval Office has promised the world war without  end. 
Bush’s crazy talk has even upset rah-rah Republicans. One  Republican called Bush’s speech "God-drenched." It has begun to dawn on the  formerly Grand Old Party that a bloodless coup has occurred and that Republicans  have lost their party to Jacobins, who cloak themselves under the term  "neoconservatives." 
What is a Jacobin? Jacobins ushered in the  French Revolution and the Reign of Terror. The Jacobins saw themselves as  virtuous champions of universalist principles that required them to impose  "liberty, equality, fraternity" not merely on France by a reign of terror, but  also on the rest of Europe by force of arms. 
Unlike America’s  Founding Fathers, who exhorted their countrymen to cultivate their own garden,  Jacobins were not content with revolutionizing France. They were driven to  revolutionize the world 
President Bush’s second inaugural speech is  Jacobin to the core. It stands outside the American tradition. Declaring  American values to be universalist principles, Bush promised to use American  power to spread democracy and to end tyranny everywhere on earth. As one of  Bush’s neocon puppetmasters, Robert Kagen, approvingly wrote in the Washington  Post on January 23, "The goal of American foreign policy is now to spread  democracy, for its own sake, for reasons that transcend specific threats. In  short, Bush has unmoored his foreign policy from the war on  terrorism." 
Michael Gerson, the Jacobin White House speechwriter  who wrote Bush’s infamous "God-drenched speech," defensively insists that Bush’s  wars will only last "a generation." We can take comfort in that. According to  the dictionary, a generation is "about 30 years," so it is only our children and  grandchildren who will have to be sacrificed for "Bush’s historic mission."  Along about 2035 things should be calming down. Whoever remains can begin to  attack the $50 trillion national war debt. 
Kagen calls America’s  moral crusade against the world "the higher realism that Bush now proclaims."  Gerson declares that Bush’s "methods are deeply realistic." 
What is  realistic about declaring weapons of mass destruction to exist where they do not  exist? 
What is realistic about assigning blame for September 11  where it does not belong? 
What is realistic about destroying a  secular state and creating a vast breeding ground for  terrorists? 
What is realistic about making Osama bin Laden an  Islamic hero and shaking the foundations of America’s reigning puppets in the  Middle East? 
What is realistic about declaring a world crusade in  the face of evidence that the US cannot successfully occupy Baghdad, a city of  only 6 million people, much less Iraq, a country of only 25 million  people? 
There is nothing realistic about Bush or any of his  advisers. The world has not seen such delusion since the Children’s Crusade led  by a visionary French peasant, Stephen of Cloyes, marched off to free the Holy  Land from the Muslims in the year 1212. The children were captured and sold into  slavery. 
Bush and the Republican Party have morphed into a Jacobin  Party. They sincerely believe that they have a monopoly on virtue and the  obligation to impose US virtue on the rest of the world. This Jacobin program  requires the supremacy of executive power and is dependent on an unwarranted  belief in the efficacy of force. 
There is nothing American or  democratic about this program. Bush speaks as Robespierre when he invokes "a  fire in the minds of men" that "warms those who feel its power." Bush possesses  Robespierre’s "pure conscience" as he destroys Iraqi’s infrastructure and the  lives of tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians, levels cities, and practices  torture. American casualties (dead and wounded) have reached 10 percent of the  US occupation force and are but the "realistic methods" Bush uses to achieve his  "deeply idealistic" goals. 
At home the casualties are the US  Constitution and Bill of Rights. Republicans explode in anger when a liberal  judge creates a constitutional right. But they sit in silence when the US  Department of Justice (sic) creates the right for Bush to decide who has  constitutional protections and who has not. 
Like Robespierre, Bush  justifies the state of terror that he has brought to Iraq by his noble  aspirations. The effect is to destroy idealism with hypocrisy about violence.  When the neoconservatives succeed in draining idealism of its power, will they  then declare violence alone to be their goal? 
Led by Bush, the  Republican Party now stands for detainment without trial and war without end. It  is a party destructive of all virtue and a great threat to life and liberty on  earth. 
Dr. Roberts [send him mail] is John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy and Research Fellow at the Independent Institute. He is a former associate editor of the Wall Street Journal, former contributing editor for National Review, and a former assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury. He is the co-author of The Tyranny of Good Intentions.



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