Dismantling America: Part II
by Thomas
Sowell
TownHall.com
Many years ago, at a certain academic institution, there was an experimental
program that the faculty had to vote on as to whether or not it should be made
permanent.
I rose at the faculty meeting to say that I knew practically nothing about
whether the program was good or bad, and that the information that had been
supplied to us was too vague for us to have any basis for voting, one way or the
other. My suggestion was that we get more concrete information before having a
vote.
The director of that program rose immediately and responded indignantly and
sarcastically to what I had just said-- and the faculty gave him a standing
ovation.
After the faculty meeting was over, I told a colleague that I was stunned and
baffled by the faculty's fierce response to my simply saying that we needed more
information before voting.
"Tom, you don't understand," he said. "Those people need to believe in that
man. They have invested so much hope and trust in him that they cannot let you
stir up any doubts."
Years later, and hundreds of miles away, I learned that my worst misgivings
about that program did not begin to approach the reality, which included
organized criminal activity.
The memory of that long-ago episode has come back more than once while
observing both the actions of the Obama administration and the fierce reactions
of its supporters to any questioning or criticism.
Almost never do these reactions include factual or logical arguments against
the administration's critics. Instead, there is indignation, accusations of bad
faith and even charges of racism.
Here too, it seems as if so many people have invested so much hope and trust
in Barack Obama that it is intolerable that anyone should come along and stir up
any doubts that could threaten their house of cards.
Among the most pathetic letters and e-mails I receive are those from people
who ask why I don't write more "positively" about Obama or "give him the benefit
of the doubt."
No one-- not even the President of the United States-- has an entitlement to
a "positive" response to his actions. The entitlement mentality has eroded the
once common belief that you earned things, including respect, instead of being
given them.
As for the benefit of the doubt, no one-- especially not the President of the
United States-- is entitled to that, when his actions can jeopardize the rights
of 300 million Americans domestically and the security of the nation in an
international jungle, where nuclear weapons may soon be in the hands of people
with suicidal fanaticism. Will it take a mushroom cloud over an American city to
make that clear? Was 9/11 not enough?
When a President of the United States has begun the process of dismantling
America from within, and exposing us to dangerous enemies outside, the time is
long past for being concerned about his public image. He has his own press
agents for that.
Internationally, Barack Obama has made every mistake that was made by the
Western democracies in the 1930s, mistakes that put Hitler in a position to
start World War II-- and come dangerously close to winning it.
At the heart of those mistakes was trying to mollify your enemies by throwing
your friends to the wolves. The Obama administration has already done that by
reneging on this country's commitment to put a missile defense shield in Eastern
Europe and by its lackadaisical foot-dragging on doing anything serious to stop
Iran from getting nuclear weapons. That means, for all practical purposes,
throwing Israel to the wolves as well.
Countries around the world that have to look out for their own national
survival, above all, are not going to ignore how much Obama has downgraded the
reliability of America's commitments.
Iraq, for example, knows that Iran is going to be next door forever while
Americans may be gone in a few years. South Korea likewise knows that North
Korea is permanently next door but who knows when the Obama administration will
get a bright idea to pull out? Countries in South America know that Hugo Chavez
is allying Venezuela with Iran. Dare they ally themselves with an unreliable
U.S.A.? Or should they join our enemies to work against us?
This issue is too serious for squeamish silence.
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