Iowa Republicans To Choose Their Favorite Fearmonger
Posted January 2, 2008 | 06:56 PM (EST)
Thursday night, Republicans in Iowa will gather in various caucus locations to choose the candidate who will do the best job of scaring the fucking shit out of America. Months ago, the most overzelaous fearmonger of the group, Rudy Giuliani, pulled out of Iowa and the resulting vacuum sucked Mike Huckabee and Mitt Romney into the shared role of scaring the fucking shit out of Iowa. Since then, both have proved to be equally qualified in this regard.
Additionally, with the exception of 1980 and 1988, the Iowa Caucus has correctly chosen the eventual Republican nominee. It's also worth noting that
the Iowa Republicans have elevated some serious wackaloons and hoopleheads into the top three.Pat Robertson leg-pressed his way to second in the 1988 Iowa Caucus. In 1996, Pat Buchanan narrowly missed victory by three percentage points. Three points. This demands restating: Pat Buchanan achieved second place in Iowa and, in the view of Republican caucus-goers, was only three points less qualified to be president than Senator Bob Dole. In the 2000 caucus, Iowa Republicans thought John McCain was less qualified to be president than Alan Keyes who placed third. Senator McCain placed a distant fifth.So not only do
Iowa Republicans have a flair for choosing the presumptive nominee, they also
possess an uninterrupted predilection for championing crazy people who use fear to better their political chances.It's a lot of pressure. It's a matter of life or death -- and it all comes down to Thursday night.
Huckabee or Romney. Who's crazier, Iowa?You can choose
Mike Huckabee, who said to Tim Russert on Sunday:
"But remember that most single -- critical job is that of preserving and protecting the American people."Huckabee is clearly referring to the Presidential Oath of Office here. Of course he totally misquoted the thing with phrasing that awkwardly reminded me of "putting food on your family."
The oath says nothing about protecting and preserving the people, but rather:
"I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States."The Constitution, it says. The president swears (or affirms) to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution. Not the people. Huckabee's stated goal, rather, is to preserve the people first and worry about the Constitution later because the evildoers will kill us otherwise.
On the upside, no matter the outcome of Thursday night, this is probably the closest Huckabee will ever come to publicly reciting the actual presidential oath.Running second to Huckabee is
Mitt Romney whose ability to scare the fucking shit out of America has surged recently, especially when he told the Boston Globe recently:
"Our most basic civil liberty is the right to be kept alive."The right to be kept alive, eh? Surely it's more concise than Huckabee's awkward mangling of the Founder's intentions -- and he's not misquoting the presidential oath in the process.
But
Romney's talking about wiretapping here and he believes that "the right to be kept alive" is more important than the Fourth Amendment -- hell, more important than all other civil liberties combined. He's also missing the entire point of the Declaration of Independence which enumerates certain unalienable rights. "Life" is listed in there, but liberty and the pursuit of happiness are given equal weight. Sorry, Mitt.
Patrick Henry in particular had something to say about "the right to be kept alive." Ironically, a derivation of Henry's famous quote happens to be the
slogan of New Hampshire: "Live Free or Die." But New Hampshire is next week.<snip>
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bob-cesca/iowa-republicans-to-choos_b_79374.html