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Posted on 08.27.08 by Thomas L. Knapp
“Given what ought to be the GOP’s signature slogan — wartime all the time — the implications for the survival of the republic are ominous. However, it was a Democrat — Harry Truman — who set the fatal precedent when he called American troops to defend South Korea without bothering to go to Congress for permission. Ever since then the precedent has not only held, it has gone largely unchallenged. Politics may indeed stop at the water’s edge, but a president’s authority really begins there: he is the supreme arbiter of our foreign policy, a virtual dictator in that vital realm, whereas his authority over domestic policy is not even remotely comparable. This brazen Bonapartism is merely the logical outgrowth of a foreign policy initially taken up with alacrity by the Democrats: first, with Woodrow Wilson at their head, and later on with FDR leading the charge. Both dragged us into easily avoidable foreign wars. Both cracked down on internal opposition, jailing antiwar protesters, instituting censorship via U.S. government control of the mails, and utilizing British and other undercover agents to neutralize the opposition.” (08/27/08) Link: http://www.antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=13365 Filed under: RRND Commentary | Report Bad Link Bookmark this post in Furl or Del.icio.us | |






