Pat Buchanan Decimates the "Never Trump" Morons
* * *
“No modern precedent exists for the revival of a party so badly defeated, so intensely discredited, and so essentially split as the Republican Party is today.”
Taken from “The Party That Lost Its Head” by Bruce
Chapman and George Gilder, this excerpt, about Barry Goldwater’s defeat in
1964, led Thursday’s column by E.J. Dionne of The Washington Post.
Dionne is warning what could happen if the GOP
perpetrates the political atrocity of nominating Donald Trump.
(*ROLLING MY EYES*)
For weeks now, the Post’s editorial page has sermonized
about the “moral” obligation of all righteous Republicans to repudiate Trump.
* SEE MY PREVIOUS (FB) POST CONCERNING WASHINGTON POST
OWNER JEFF BEZOS.
The Post’s solicitude for the well-being of the
Republican Party is the stuff of legend.
(*GUFFAW*)
* THAT'S KNOWN AS "BITING SARCASM," FOLKS.
(*GRIN*)
Yet it is a bit jarring to see these champions of
abortion on demand, same-sex marriage, and visitation rights for cross-dressers
in the girls’ room, standing in a pulpit lecturing on morality.
Yet, there was something off about that Chapman-Gilder
quote.
First, both were members of the Harvard-based,
Rockefeller-backed, liberal Ripon Society.
Second, their prognosis of the party’s future proved to
be spectacularly wrong.
The year, 1966, their book on the headless GOP appeared,
to press hosannas, Richard Nixon led the party to its greatest off-year victory
since 1946, adding 47 new seats in the House.
* DID YOU FOLKS KNOW THIS? IF I ONCE KNEW IT, I'LL BE
HONEST, I'D FORGOTTEN.
Two years later, Nixon won the presidency, inaugurating
an era in which Republicans won five out of six presidential contests, two by
49-state landslides.
* YEP! THAT I KNEW!
Out of Goldwater’s defeat came the New Majority and
Reagan Revolution. (And Chapman and Gilder moved rightward to serve with
distinction in that revolution.)
The prodigal sons were welcomed home, and Gilder would
recant:
“The far Right — the same men I dismissed as extremists
in my youth — turned out to know far more than I did. At least the ‘right-wing
extremists,’ as I confidently called them, were right on almost every major
policy issue from welfare to Vietnam to Keynesian economics and defense...”
* YEP!
While the Goldwater campaign, as an insurgency of
outsiders, bears comparison with Trump’s, in other ways it does not.
Goldwater never compiled anything near the vote that
Trump did. At this point in 1964, Goldwater was behind Johnson 79-18 in the
Gallup poll. Trump is behind Hillary Clinton by single digits. New polls have
him running even in Ohio, Florida and Pennsylvania.
* TRUMP WOULD D*E*S*T*R*O*Y CLINTON IN A ONE-ON-ONE
MATCH-UP.
Now, consider the issues comparison with 1964.
In July 1964, Johnson signed the popular Civil Rights Act
that Goldwater had opposed. The GOP Convention in San Francisco revealed a
deeply divided party, subject to the charge, validated by the rule-or-ruin
Rockefeller-Romney faction, that it was receptive to right-wing radicals.
* LIKE FATHER LIKE SON... THE ROMNEY CLAN IS AS POISONOUS
AS ARE THE BUSHES.
Lyndon Johnson’s decision to bomb North Vietnam after the
Gulf of Tonkin incident made him a war leader, and Americans rally to
presidents in a time of war.
* AND REMEMBER, FOLKS... THE GULF OF TONKIN WAS PERHAPS
THE BIGGEST CON EVER PULLED ON THE AMERICAN PEOPLE BY A PRESIDENT! (IF YOU
DON'T KNOW WHAT I'M REFERRING TO... DO A BIT OF GOOGLING.)
In 2016, however, Trump holds a fistful of face cards.
After eight years of President Obama, he is the candidate of change in 2016,
and Clinton is the candidate of same.
Trump may bring more excitement than some folks can
handle.
(*NOD*)
But Clinton has become a crashing bore, until she gets
agitated, and then the voice rises to where she sounds like the siren on the
hook-and-ladder in “Chicago Fire.”
(*SNORTING AS I SMILE*)
Other than that she would be the first woman president,
what is there about her agenda that has popular appeal? That lack of appeal
explains why her crowds are a fraction of Bernie Sanders’.
The Clinton of 2016 is not the Clinton of 2008.
* AND THE CLINTON OF 2008... LOST.
(*LIPS PURSED IN A SMIRK*)
As for the issues dividing Trump and Speaker Paul Ryan,
Trump appears to have won the argument, if the debate is decided by voter
preferences rather than Beltway preferences.
* I STILL WANT TRUMP TO CRUSH RYAN LIKE A BUG - FOR THE
GOOD OF THE NATION!
Trump’s denunciation of NAFTA and other “free-trade”
deals Ryan supports is echoed by Sanders, who opposed those deals when they
were up for a vote.
(*NODDING*)
Hillary Clinton no longer rhapsodizes over husband Bill’s
NAFTA, and signals she will not support Obama’s Trans-Pacific Partnership in a
lame-duck session.
(*SNORT*)
* NO PRINCIPLES WHATSOEVER.
Ryan professes to be a man of principle. Why does he not
then stand by his principles, as Goldwater did, and bring up TPP for a vote?
* RHETORICAL QUESTION...
(*SMILE*)
Is Paul Ryan’s “immigration reform” package as popular
inside his party as Trump’s tough line? It would seem not. The longer the
primaries went on, the closer the other GOP candidates moved toward Trump. And
if Ryan believes in it on principle, why not bring it up?
* BECAUSE HE'S A FAKE, PHONY, RINO FRAUD!
Ryan voted for the Iraq War that Trump calls a disaster.
* YEP! AND UNLIKE MYSELF... RYAN HASN'T RECANTED AND
TAKEN RESPONSIBILITY FOR HAVING BEEN WRONG AS FAR AS I KNOW.
The people seem now to agree with Trump that the war was
misconceived.
* DUH!
Thursday’s Post reported that, five years ago, Ryan stood
on the House floor to declare, “This is our defining moment.”
(*SPITTING ON THE GROUND*)
And what was Ryan’s defining moment?
“On that day in 2011,” said the Post, “the House’s new
GOP majority approved Ryan’s budget plan — which ... called for cuts in a
government program that voters knew and loved: Medicare.
“Ryan ... wanted eventually to turn the massive
health-benefit program over to private insurers.”
* WELL... RYAN WAS RIGHT ON BOTH COUNTS. (HEY... I ALWAYS
GIVE CREDIT WHERE CREDIT IS DUE!)
Come to think of it, Barry Goldwater wanted to turn
Social Security over to private enterprise. How did that one work out?
* UNFORTUNATELY IT DIDN'T... BUT HAD HE WON THE ARGUMENT
THE NATION WOULD TODAY BE FAR BETTER OFF.
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