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January 26, 2008 - 8:01am.
Post-mortems on Fred Thompson's short presidential run focus on how the actor and former senator ran his campaign. Started late, poorly managed, lack of enthusiasm, etc. But these analyses miss the more fundamental, and instructive, problem -- his message. Touted as the only "real conservative," a careful look shows that this label was pretty dubious. His ideas were devoid of the vision and leadership that fueled Republican ascendancy a quarter-century ago and badly needed today. On the social agenda, the difference between Thompson and Mike Huckabee was palpable and significant. Huckabee understands that abortion, like the slavery issue years ago, is not a matter of constitutional nuance. It defines our core moral structure as a people and cannot be legal in a nation that exists "under God." Thompson's take on abortion: It's an issue for the states, not the federal government. Polls show that public opinion on abortion is moving in the direction of Huckabee. Americans sense the need for moral leadership and it just wasn't there in Thompson's tepid social conservatism. On the economic front, it's astonishing that the man running as the "real conservative" rolled out a proposal to save our biggest entitlement program -- Social Security. When Thompson was making his preliminary moves to announce his candidacy, I got interested. I was impressed that he legitimately, and I thought then courageously, pointed out that no candidate was talking about the massive entitlements crisis facing us. Entitlements -- Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid -- now account for almost 40 percent of the spending in our federal budget. A new report from the Congressional Budget Office says that at the current rate of expenditures, this could rise to 70 percent by 2030. And there is no plan in place to pay for the enormous growing liabilities of these programs. Moody's, the well-known bond-rating service, recently indicated that the current AAA rating of U.S. Treasury bonds could be downgraded. I thought Thompson was going to revive the important initiative to transform Social Security from a government tax-and-spend program to a program of ownership -- personal retirement accounts. But instead he unfurled a proposal that could easily have come from Hillary Rodham Clinton or Barack Obama. No personal accounts. Just the same system with a lousier deal. Make a technical change in the index used to calculate cost-of-living increases each year and thereby reduce the size of the payment that the government is obligated to make. The tax increases and benefit reductions that have been made over the years to sustain this nanny-state socialism have already made Social Security a horrible deal. A young person now entering the work force at age 21 could have twice as much money at retirement by simply putting the 10 percent of his or her pay going to Social Security into a savings account or using it to buy government bonds. And then there is the moral issue that free people in a free country should not have their income confiscated because politicians have concluded that they can't take care of themselves. Shouldn't you at least have a choice? Not long ago, when the Republican Party was an exciting place to be (remember the "ownership society"?), transforming Social Security to an ownership system was one of the important pillars of reforms being put forward to address causes rather than symptoms of our nation's growing problems. But, somehow, after the great success of welfare reform in 1996, the energy seemed to dissipate. It was easier to dredge up a groundswell of enthusiasm to move black women off the dole than to get the government off the backs of black blue-collar and service workers (and everyone else) and allow them to take back the 10 percent of their income being taxed and build wealth through their own retirement savings accounts. If Republicans are to again capture the high ground in the battle for leadership of this country, it must be understood that the failure of the Thompson candidacy was as much substance as style. We've got to have candidates who take seriously the agenda of traditional values and limited government and apply it imaginatively and courageously to the many problems facing us today. (Star Parker is president of CURE, Coalition on Urban Renewal and Education (www.urbancure.org) and author of three books. She can be reached at parker(at)urbancure.org.)
Capitol Hill Blue's columnists, blogs and reader comments Capitol Hill Blue is an independent, non-partisan news site that belongs to no political party and subscribes to no political or philosophical point-of-view. Our columnists are welcome to their opinions but readers should understand that their views do not necessarily reflect the editorial policies of this web site. We also welcome comments to selected opinion columns and in our popular ReaderRant discussion forum. Please remember, however, that we believe in civility on this web site and comments may be reviewed, moderated or removed if we feel they contain obscenities, racism, bigotry, anti-Semitic remarks or attack other posters. Our goal is reasoned discussion on issues facing this nation and we do not feel that goal is served by personal attacks and by seeing how many cute adjectives you can attach to an elected official or politician's name. Copyright © 2008 Capitol Hill Blue
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Parker Demonstrates A Lack
Submitted by Winghunter on January 27, 2008 - 4:19am.Parker Demonstrates A Lack of Listening Skills.
While showing us that her idea of what conservatism is doesn't get close enough to it for a smell test.
Not only did Thompson not start late but, if he had started today with an informed voter base that didn't fall into the spin of mainstream media and his opponent's campaign sabotage with voters performing their own research on the internet, Thompson would have won a landslide victory. Make no mistake here, this is America's grievous loss, not Thompson's.
( Just for the record; slavery could never be compared to abortion...nuanced or not. )
On abortion, not long ago we tried the "quick-fix" of a pro-life amendment when we had control of both Houses and the White House where we still could not garner the super-majority vote required to pass it but, even the attempt to do so was wrong for us to try. If we are to learn from our failures, especially when we were on the wrong path to begin with, we must remember them. Thompson remembered and correctly proposes we follow the instruction on Federalism provided by our founding fathers as our government is their design to maintain our freedom...only fools would deviate from it twice down the same wrongheaded path.
Abortion was handed to us by judicial activism. The only way to fight against it is to appoint strict constructionist judges who will stick to interpreting our law and not overreach the separation of powers by making their own...just as Thompson has repeatedly explained to us in detail. Federalism is the path we must follow to get this one right and succeed so, why wasn't Parker listening or look into why Thompson would offer it? Why would Parker offhandedly dismiss one of the wisest men we have willing to serve our country?...Did she think he didn't have a good reason?? Not hardly.
Fred Thompson explaination on Federalism;
http://www.fred08.com/Virtual/Federalism.aspx
Now that we've established, once again, why we can't pass or repeal amendments to our Constitution we can look at the Huckster's campaign platform of no less than four amendments to fully appreciate this is the same as listening to a snake-oil salesman selling pipedreams. Sure, if people don't know what the facts are this nonsense sounds good but, we know not one will ever pass and it's wrong for us to try in the first place. That's not leadership, it isn't conservatism and the Huckster wasn't even a republican governor let alone a conservative...just ask Arkansas GOP;
Candidate Research - Know Who You're Voting For ( The Easy Way ) http://tinyurl.com/2vqv8h
On Social Security, Parker obviously doesn't also remember privatization was turned down where Thompson's solution stabilizes Social Security without hurting current or future recipients. If we wish to try privatization at a later date with a better plan in a better environment we are not pushed to do so. Concentrate on one thing at a time Parker!
Thompson's Social Security Plan; http://www.fred08.com/virtual/socialsecurity.aspx
This is her second offer in the same article for us to follow a path that is little more than beating our head against the wall. If we've tried it and failed lets move on and try from a different angle which will help us towards our goals within success...anything else is foolish. Thompson saw this and found an answer and solution that worked. That's real leadership, honest conservatism and he is a president if we elect him or not.
Hit the books Parker, you've got some catching up to do.