Tuesday, January 17, 2006

"It's Like the War on Dandruff..."

I've often wondered how the left views the War on Terror, or, as it is more and more often called, the war on Islamofacism. It's been clear that they don't take it particularly seriously. They seem to think simply capturing Bin Laden would have spelled the end of it. They don't seem to see a correlation between Saddam having WMD (whether on hand, or the ability to make them fresh) and a danger that he might give them to terrorists. They deny any relationship between Iraq and al Queda, despite the fact that Clinton made that tie himself in his indictment of Bin Laden. They see no need to try to intercept communications between known terrorists and operatives inside the U.S.A. In short, they don't seem to think it's real.

So, there I am last night, minding my own business, watching the Lincoln biography on the History Channel. One of the experts being interviewed was Gore Vidal, who wrote, "Lincoln." In a section where they were talking about Lincoln suspending habeas corpus, closing down newspapers, jailing the opposition, and generally being semi-dictatorial, Vidal says something like, "But Lincoln was in a real war. It wasn't like the way some presidents, who I will not mention, try to use a phony war as an excuse for dictatorial behavior..." And then he said, and this is a direct quote: "The war on terror? That's like 'the war on dandruff'. It's a metaphor."

The war on dandruff, my friends. September 11th. The Cole. Khobar Towers. Embassy bombings. The first WTC bombing. Dandruff. Al Queda in Iraq blowing up innocent Iraqis and killing as many American soldiers as possible. Dandruff. Richard Reed. A plot to blow up the bridges leading to New York City. The Y2K plot. Dandruff. Bombing a train in Spain. Bombing the subways in London. Dandruff.

In my opinion, Osama Bin Laden was not kidding when he stated that he wanted to destroy us. I take it seriously when Islamofacists say that they want to establish a Caliphate and that we westerners and non-believers are non-persons worthy of death before Allah in establishing that Caliphate. I understand that there are some crazy bastards in this world who can be convinced to grasp at the straw of a special place in heaven occupied by virgins just awaiting their martyred entrance who would kill all of those I love and care about for that bizarre promise. It's in the news all the time. I hear insane talk coming from the leadership of Iran, and no matter how peace-loving I am in my heart, or how much I'd love to see the poor, oppressed Iranian people have a shot at a better life, I start thinking that bombs need to be dropped.

To me, there is a war happening. And, it's vitally important that we win it. To Gore Vidal, and I assume to other far-left liberals, it's merely "like the war on dandruff. It's a metaphor."

Vidal could understand fighting and winning a war to free the slaves and keep the Union together. He could get behind extreme losses and justify temporary restrictions on civil liberties to support that effort. But, to keep all of us free (including him) from the death or dhimmitude that the Islamofacists would impose, and to preserve Western civilization, he can't even come to grips with the problem, let alone get behind the effort to effectively wage and win the war.

Now I understand the depth of the denial and the rationalization. "It's like the 'the war on dandruff.'"

1 Comments:

At 4:36 PM, Blogger WomanHonorThyself said...

I certainly hope for his sake that "Head and Shoulders" is the panacea for the nuclear bomb or bio terrorism.

 

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