A sharp counter-punch to Kerry-ites - and the entire, deluded Seattle newspaper establishment - comes from Seattle Post-Intelligencer business columnist Bill Virgin.
Given the verbiage contained in this daily fish wrap celebrating John Kerry and wailing what a threat to the planet George W. Bush constitutes, I suppose it is time for someone to sluice out the Augean stables of accumulated political nonsense.
....In a more frivolous time -- say, the Clinton administration -- it would be enough to recommend re-election merely by listing the accumulation of generally deplorable people -- Michael Moore, Al Franken, Garry Trudeau, Bill Moyers, Garrison Keillor, et al. -- caterwauling about Bush.
But...serious times mean dealing with serious issues, most of them having to do, in some form, with the economy.
There's been a lot of fatuous talk about presidents creating or losing jobs. Here's a news bulletin: They don't. Bush didn't lose jobs any more than Clinton created them (of course, if the Dems want to take credit for the bubble economy of the '90s, they can also take credit for its collapse, since it was already in full retreat by Inauguration Day 2001).
What presidents can do is tinker at the margins, and to create a climate for businesses to generate jobs (or do the sorts of things that discourage job creation). This Bush has done with not one but two tax cuts (which, despite what you have heard, substantially benefited the middle class) that helped tide the economy over its rough spot and set the stage for a recovery.
On foreign trade, Bush has been (to borrow the old Scoop Jackson comment about liberalism) a free-trader without being a damn fool about it.
Virgin then gets on to terrorism.
But by far the most serious economic issue of our times also happens to be this campaign's big-ticket issue: global security.
On that issue, Bush is clearly the superior choice. He was exactly right to go after the Taliban in Afghanistan, and then to go after Saddam Hussein in Iraq. He correctly saw those two events as part of a continuum on the war on radical Islamofascism.
The Kerryites and others with limited mental dexterity have a hard time distinguishing between the words "safe" and "safer." Did booting the Taliban from Afghanistan, forcing Saddam to live like a dissolute hobbit and putting al-Qaida on the run make the world "safe"? Of course not. The world wasn't "safe" then, isn't "safe" now, never will be "safe."
But did taking those actions make the world safer, and better, not just for Americans but for those nations that aspire to some degree of freedom and tranquility? Absolutely. Deposing Saddam deprived global terrorism of one place in which to set up an operating base and one more sponsor (and yes, Saddam was working on more nasty weapons to supplement those he hid or shipped to Syria, and he was definitely working on being al-Qaida's new best friend).
It also sent to the rest of the world a message of American resoluteness, that it would not cower at home in anticipation of the next attack. Compare that with the Kerry approach, which appears to be a mixture of obsequiousness and forelock tugging before the corrupt and venal United Nations.
Bravo, Mr. Virgin. You should be promoted to editorial page editor.
Posted by Matt Rosenberg at October 13, 2004 02:46 PM
Trackback Pings
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.rosenblog.com/mt/mt-tb.cgi/545
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Virgin Nails It:
How did the editors of this fishwrap let loose such a clear thinker as Bill Virgin on politically retarded Seattle? It sounds like Mr. Virgin would actually agree with the recent pronouncement of the Nobel Prize winner in economics who opposes any tax increases as harmful to the economy.
Lets hope this PI heretic continues to publish. The PI needs journalists of this caliber if it ever hopes to halt it's circulation slide.
I wonder what Bill really thinks of Patty Murray or Jim McDermott?
Posted by: Gary B at October 13, 2004 03:56 PM
Not quite sure how this guy slipped under the editorial radar at the PI, but he rocks.
Could it be that sanity is slowly seeping into the clouded minds of the Editorial Board at the PI?