CTBT stops words, not bombs

The Washington Times

The substance of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, now enmeshed in controversy over ratification by the U.S. Senate, is something over which reasonable people differ. On one side, the treaty may, at the margins, create a regime that deters nations from acquiring a nuclear capability – though clearly, the treaty will do nothing to stop the nuclear ambitions of a North Korea or Iraq, to pick two international menaces, nor would it likely have done anything to check the determination of India and then Pakistan to get the bomb. Russian and Chinese nuclear programs likewise seem to be proceeding apace.

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George W. berates GOP

The Washington Times

Twice in two weeks, George W. Bush has rapped the knuckles of the Republican congressional party. The first was a smack at a proposal to revise the Earned Income Tax Credit, spreading out the annual payment lower income workers now receive at tax time over 12 months instead. The Capitol Hill GOP proposed the change as a way to help meet budget targets this year. Mr. Bush denounced it as an effort “to balance the budget on the backs of the poor.” It’s dead.

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Where’s the rest of him?

The Washington Times

Edmund Morris’ “Dutch: A Memoir of Ronald Reagan” is a spectacular failure. It’s a compelling example of brilliance gone hopelessly awry – a portrait of an artist-biographer, beset by who knows what demons of history and personality, who tries to escape disaster by setting forth with grim determination on a course that can only lead to ruin of another sort. What else can one say about a decision by the authorized biographer of the 40th president of the United States to produce, in effect, an historical novel in which the twin protagonists are that president and a fictionalized version of the biographer himself, recast now as a contemporary of Mr. Reagan’s?

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Command performance

The Washington Times

A three-part series in The Washington Post last week, “The Commanders,” offered a fascinating behind-the-scenes portrait of NATO’s Kosovo campaign. It illustrates just how complicated, frustrating and tense things were among the generals themselves and between the generals and the political leadership of NATO’s 19 member countries. But it also offers some reassurance.

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Who care for the poor?

The Washington Times

Writing in the current edition of the Weekly Standard, David Brooks posits that a new strain of conservative politics is emerging from the petri dish of the fight for the GOP nomination. In George W. Bush’s “compassionate conservatism” and in John McCain’s robust call for Americans to recognize their country’s greatness, Mr. Brooks detects the birth of what he calls “one nation conservatism.” This GOP political program abandons the libertarian rhetoric of getting government off your back and instead supports a limited but activist government pursuing a conservative reform agenda that will benefit all Americans, especially the poor.

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Washington Goes Hollywood

The Wall Street Journal

Once upon a time, a first lady would take to the cover of Parade magazine to inspire ordinary Americans with behind-the-scenes tales about the first family’s wonderful White House life. Nowadays, the first lady takes to the cover of Tina Brown’s hot new Talk magazine, glosso di tutti glossi, to titillate star-struck Americans with behind-the-scenes tales of the president’s dysfunctional upbringing and marital infidelity.

A glossy magazine cover featuring Gwyneth Paltrow along with Hillary Clinton and George W. Bush, of all people, would once have been unimaginable. By now, the only question is which one will be wearing the bikini. (Gwyneth, thank God.) Jerry Springer, the onetime Cincinnati mayor turned TV freak-show host, has joined Mrs. Clinton in considering a race for the Senate. Perhaps when Sen. Clinton delivers a speech in the 107th Congress, the C-Span caption will read not “D., N.Y.,” but “My husband cheated on me because he was abused as a child!”

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From party to party

The Washington Times

AN INSTANCE IS NOT A TENDENCY, let alone a trend, let alone the opening of a floodgate. But the case of the switch of Rep. Michael Forbes of New York from the Republican Party to the Democratic Party bears keeping an eye on. GOPAC, the political committee that came to fame under the tutelage of former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, has kept careful track of party switchers nationwide, not only at the national level but state and local officeholders as well. In the past six years, more than 400 officials have switched from Democrat to Republican, including two U.S. senators and a handful of representatives. There were few more than a handful of switches in the other direction, none particularly high profile.

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Money and Politics

View this article at Policy Review, August/September 1999

ELIZABETH DREW.  The Corruption of American Politics: What Went Wrong and Why. BIRCH LANE PRESS. 278 pages. $21.95 

IS AMERICAN POLITICS corrupt? Those who raise the issue usually think it is, and the reason they think so is money. The specter is a grim one: Vast moneyed interests — corporations, wealthy individuals, single-issue groups — seek to work the political system to their own advantage. Our politicians either eagerly assign themselves as tools of these interests, in order to enrich their campaigns, or soon find themselves the victims of them, targeted for political destruction for hewing an independent line. A political process in which politicians are bought and sold — that is the condition of American governance we are invited to contemplate.

Not, to be sure, that most of those making this accusation are quite willing to pull the trigger. Almost no one names Rep. X, Sens. Y and Z, and administration officials A, B, and C as having been bought and paid for. We do, after all, have laws against bribery, taking illegal gratuities, using your office for personal financial gain or for the personal financial benefit of others, and other forms of corruption in office — as well as corresponding laws aimed at those trying to influence public officials improperly. These are serious crimes. Nor are the laws merely window dressing, the tribute vice pays to virtue in an otherwise corrupt system. From time to time, public officials and private citizens go off to prison for running afoul of them. So in this system supposedly shot through with corruption, where are the specific accusations of corrupt action?

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