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Just Say “NO” to Bush And Amnesty
by
Christopher G. Adamo
Perceptive conservatives have long seen
this train wreck coming. Back in 1999 and 2000, the conservative base
along with Republicans in general were so gripped by fear of a Gore
presidency that they were willing to temporarily overlook some ominous
signals emanating from the Bush camp. Yet those signals turned out to be
undeniable harbingers of what was to come. The “day of reckoning”
eventually became inescapable.
We were forewarned when we heard the
President borrowing liberal terminology, as with his opposition to
“balancing the budget on the backs of the poor.” An insult to every decent
and hard-working American who struggles under the burden of our
ever-growing government, this epithet essentially accused the middle class
of wanting to extract greater taxation from a segment of the populace that
pays no taxes.
Yet it was George Bush’s adoption of the
phrase “compassionate conservatism” that should have sent up all the
warning flags. When attempting to deflect criticism over its usage, he
would sometimes demur by claiming that conservatism was inherently
compassionate. But more often than not he would reveal his true intent,
which was to invent and implement more efficient socialism.
He should have been immediately confronted
about the logical impossibility of exhibiting compassion by giving out the
wealth and property of others. Had Heartland America instantly called him
on this, as well as his other forays off into the misbegotten thinking of
the left, America might not be facing the abysmal situation threatening it
today.
Now the country fights desperately to
retain whatever vestiges of its national soul remain, in the wake of a
massive and dispassionate invasion of illegals, abetted by a President who
ardently seeks to give away a country that is not his to give away.
The truth needs to be repeated as often as
the deceivers in Washington spout their diatribe. The word “comprehensive”
in relation to immigration “reform” means only one thing... amnesty. White
House assertions that requiring the invaders to jump through a few “hoops”
at their leisure, will somehow negate the outrage of amnesty, reflects a
viciously insulting condescension towards the American people. The reality
is as simple as it is grim, and it cannot be so easily disguised.
Promises of eventual border security,
accountability by employers, or any other appealing conditions tagged onto
the bill are merely “fig leaves” meant to cover its most obscene
provisions in order get it through the legislative process so the
President can sign it. Amnesty plus anything equals amnesty.
Were the President truly committed to
uplifting the downtrodden, or any of the other high-sounding ideals that
he professes in connection to all of this, he could employ them on a
personal basis. He might start by proving his “benevolence” towards the
invaders by allowing them to overrun and trash his Crawford Texas ranch
just as they have done to so many other places closer to the border.
In contrast, his ranch is well guarded from
intruders. He need only occasionally consider such prospects when not
inside the D.C. “cocoon” from which he can view the world through
rose-colored glasses. Yet he demands that the rest of America accept the
results of his sanctimony.
And those results are increasingly dire.
The number of Americans who have lost their lives at the hands of the
illegal invaders dwarfs the slaughter of 9-11. The financial costs are a
horrendous and increasing burden to those who have played by the rules.
Amnesty for the invaders will only accelerate the dismal repercussions
that have already ensued.
If Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi, and the rest
of the liberal cabal have perpetrated crimes against real America by their
continued derision of the terror war and their dispiriting propaganda
against the U.S. Military, President Bush has done no less in his
impassioned advocacy of a force that abrogates and undermines America’s
very culture, and his castigation of any who seek the only reasonable
means to restore the nation to its former integrity.
During his consuming endeavor to implement
amnesty, Bush has metamorphosed from impassioned to determined to
obsessed. In the process, he has become truly arrogant and indifferent to
the fate of real Americans, appearing more sympathetic to the plight of
the invaders. One has to wonder if he even recalls, on Inauguration Day in
2001 and 2005, just whose interests he swore an oath before Almighty God
to guard and uphold.
Nor should his “bipartisan” Senate
collaborators be given a pass. By their actions, they are proving that
they have already adopted much of the mindset of the third world autocrats
from which people are fleeing to what is left of America.
The current, shadowy plans to keep details
of the latest iteration of the amnesty bill secret until the last minute,
and then pass it in dark of night stand as yet more evidence of a
governing mindset far more characteristic a of banana republic than of
traditional America.
Of course the most heinous example of this
in recent days is embodied by the comment from Senate Minority Whip Trent
Lott (R.-MS), who asserted that an informed and engaged public constitutes
a “problem” that he and his cohorts “need to deal with.” Millions of
invaders swarming the country, trashing its laws and hostile to its
culture, somehow constitute less of concern to him and his kind.
Catcalls of “racism” against the bill's
opponents, so typical and indicative of liberal tactics (though they
emanate from both parties), must be noted and their authors never
forgotten by the electorate. But neither should those Senators who are on
record “opposing” amnesty, while clearly not doing all that is within
their power to stop it.
Ronald Reagan, once a Democrat, changed
parties explaining that he had not left the Democrats. Rather, they had
left him. Likewise while grassroots Republicans remain committed to the
principles that made their party and their country great, George Bush has
abandoned critical precepts of what it once meant to be a Republican.
The current debate represents a watershed
moment for the GOP. Frustration and anger among the base has now exceeded
critical mass. If the President is determined to discard the core
conservative values of the Republican Party and now holds them in
unrestrained contempt, Republican office holders need to publicly oppose
him in order to remain true to those values.
GOP Senators who still believe in the
principles embodied by their party ought to be fighting the amnesty
juggernaut as if the very future of the country hangs in the balance,
which it inarguably does.
New Media Alliance Television
Christopher G. Adamo is a
freelance writer and staff writer for the New Media Alliance. He lives in
southeastern Wyoming. He has been active in local and state politics for
many years. His contact information and archives can be found at
www.chrisadamo.com
The opinions expressed in
this column represent those of the author and do not necessarily reflect
the opinions, views, or philosophy of TheRealityCheck.org
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