Most of us place politicians
down at the level of used-car salesmen, personal injury lawyers and Hollywood
actors. In fact, theyâre much like
actors, only, their acting is generally a bit better. But we tend to miss the point about our
leaders. The problem with politicians is
that theyâre trying to please us.
Mind you, I donât mean theyâre
trying to please those of us who read and render commentary. They donât have to worry about us fringe types
â we donât really command many votes.
Weâre like a pesky fly they canât quite swat (although theyâre trying to
with measures such as the Fairness Doctrine).
My point is that if they were trying to please God, they would be godly
men. But as the great Alan Keyes has
proven, that doesnât tend to win elections.
So the successful ones try to please the masses, but this doesnât make
them massive men. It makes them minor
men.
A case in point is Republican
National Committee Chairman Michael Steele, who recently proved his Lilliputian
status in a now notorious GQ interview,
one showing that the best way to get a politician to change positions is to
change his audience. And the problem
wasnât confined to just what has drawn him the most criticism: Abortion. But letâs start with that. Here is the portion of the interview dealing
with it:
Are you
saying you think women have the right to choose abortion?
Yeah. I mean, again, I think thatâs an individual choice.
You do?
Yeah. Absolutely.
Thatâs pretty clear,
right? Well, this is perhaps where
Steele said to himself, âOops! Did I
really say that?â So, after opining that
Roe v. Wade should be overturned for
constitutional reasons, here is what transpired:
âOkay,
but if you overturn Roe v. Wade, how do women have the choice you just said
they should have?
The states should make that choice. Thatâs what the choice is. The individual
choice rests in the states. Let them decide.â
Is this what you call a
âsaveâ? Women have the choice to opt for
abortion because they can vote along with the men in their states on the
matterâs legality? So now Steele can go
to leftists and claim he has said that abortion is âabsolutelyâ an âindividual
choice.â He can talk to traditionalists
and say that he has touted statesâ right to settle the issue. Heâs pro-choice. Heâs pro-life. Heâs pro-statesâ rights. Heâs pro-whatever you want him to be. Heâs for everything and against nothing.
Given how Steele has also
stated that Republicans needed a hip-hop strategy, interviewer Lisa Depaulo also asked him about rap
music. And after saying he enjoyed P.
Diddy quite a bit, he said,
âI guess Iâm sorta old-school
that way. Remember, I came of age with the DJ and all this other stuff, so Iâm
also loving Grandmaster Flash, and thatâs not hip-hop, but⊠Um, you know, I
like Chuck D. And I always thought Snoop Dogg wasâhe just reminded me of the
fellas back home. So Iâve always thoroughly enjoyed him.â
But then Steele said he also
liked âBing Crosby, Sinatra, [and] Dean Martin.â Hey, you wouldnât want to offend any
musically-inclined constituency. And
reiterating his old-school passions, he continued, âIâm a big Pack Rat. I love the Pack Rats from the 1950s . . .
.â Depaulo corrected him and pointed out
that the proper name was the âRat Pack.â
Heâs a great fan, though.
Now, since I guard my tongue,
Iâll characterize hip-hop simply by saying itâs cultural trash. Of course, if I were a hip-hop aficionado,
Iâd use a different word (I also wouldnât know the term âaficionadoâ). Iâll say additionally that an affinity for hip-hop
indicates greatly corrupted judgment and taste, and Iâd like leaders who
operate on a slightly higher cultural plane.
Then again, itâs also possible that Steele doesnât really listen to the
Pack Rats or the Rap Rodents and was just being a pandering possum. Perhaps itâs like Hillary Clintonâs statement
when running for the Senate in New York, âI've always been a Yankees fan.â No, Hillary (and Steele), actually, youâve
always been a ceiling fan â you specialize in spin.
As for the GOPâs political fortunes,
if your only concern is getting people in office with âRâsâ after their names,
slouching commensurately with the culture certainly helps. But leave me out of it. My primary concern is spreading Truth, not
spreading Râs. For if a political movement
is to do any good at all, it must represent and extol virtue. And, for such a movement to succeed, it has
only one viable option: Address problems on a cultural level and raise people
up morally so theyâll be receptive to the message (this is why Iâve
written so much about the culture).
Trying to present a package of virtue in a wrapping of vice wonât work.
Then Steele said, âAnd some
call them [rappers] urban terrorists, which I think is an offensive term.â Really?
I find it offensive that he thinks validly labeling cultural terrorists
is offensive. He went on to say,
âBut you know, they miss the
point of what hip-hop is. Hip-hop is about economic empowerment. Youâre
talking about a generation of men from, you know, P. Diddy to Russell Simmons
and the like who have created empire from their talent.â
Uh, yes, so have the Mexican
drug cartels. So have Larry Flynt and
Hugh Hefner (note that pornography is among the most lucrative of
rackets). These are empires of sin, and
itâs no secret that vice sells better than virtue. But is this to be congratulated? Does it profit a nation to gain the world but
to lose its soul, Mr. Steele?
Following up on this topic of
âminority outreach,â there was this exchange,
âWhy do you think so few
nonwhite Americans support the Republican Party right now? âCause we have offered them nothing! And
the impression weâve created is that we donât give a damn about them or we just
outright donât like them.â
Wrong. The leftist media have given minorities this
impression of the party of Lincoln and abolitionism while casting the party of
George Wallace in a positive light.
Steele went on to say,
âI think the way weâve talked
about immigration, the way weâve talked about some of the issues that are
important to African-Americans, like affirmative action⊠I mean, you know,
having an absolute holier-than-thou attitude about something thatâs important
to a particular community doesnât engender confidence in your leadership by
that community.â
So what is the strategy? Are we supposed to say, âLook, we were wrong
to be right, but hereâs why weâre rightâ?
Are we supposed to embrace open-border policy and affirmative action? Should we compromise our principles just a
bit and offer them an affirmative fraction?
Iâm also sick and tired of how
conservatives have been cowed into being apologetic. Who has this âholier-than-thou attitude,â Mr.
Steele? All I see are pandering
Republicans such as you.
But this is another example of
entertaining corruption. Securing our
borders is a matter of upholding the rule of law, maintaining cultural
cohesiveness and public safety. And
opposing affirmative action stems from a desire to be fair and to avoid
facilitating irresponsibility and mediocrity.
If people wonât accept this, the remedy is not to lower the principles
but elevate the people and make them worthy of the principles.
Steele also played the race
card in the interview, saying,
âThere are people in this
country right now who would look at Barack Obama and still refer to him as âboy.â
Period.â
Who would these people be, Mr.
Steele? When was the last time you
actually experienced such a thing? Now,
if you mean that someone somewhere in this nation of 300 million people may be
so inclined, perhaps, but insignificant fringes donât warrant mention. It has been estimated that we have about 100
active serial killers in the country, too, but it would be silly to speak of
them as if theyâre a political and cultural force.
The interview touched on
education as well, and Steele made this comment,
â. . . thereâs a black kid who
just left a public-school system in which heâs using a ten-year-old book in a
classroom that barely has lights, and heâs getting a poor education.â
Yes, he is getting a poor
education, but it has nothing to do with lights or books. Itâs a function of a spirit of
permissiveness, relativism and corruption that besets our whole culture,
leaving schools and families bereft of Truth, love and discipline.
Steele is right about the
problem of using a 10-year-old book, however.
Students would be better off using 60-year-old books. Then they would be exposed to more Truth and
less politically-correct social engineering.
If I were a standard
commentator, I would now emphasize that Steele is a sub-standard
politician. But the truth is that he is
quite standard. He isnât evil; he isnât
even Machiavellian. Heâs just an example
of what political parties tend to produce: Men of our time. But what we need are men of the timeless. Only people who arenât slaves of their age,
and thus can penetrate the veneer of lies obscuring the Truth today, can
transform the culture.
And âcultureâ is the word. When I say âWe Need Something Stronger than
Steele,â the âweâ doesnât refer to Republicans, as salvation doesnât lie in the
political realm. I donât even mean
conservatives. I mean that we need
spiritual and cultural revolutionaries.
As Iâve written
before, unless we can take the cultural reins and stop the leftward drift, all
is for naught, as the political just reflects the cultural. And the liberals understand this.
They've altered the culture not through the Democrat Party as much as through
academia, the media and entertainment.
But effecting such substantive
change isnât easy, and it explains why the chairman of the Republican Party
would talk like a 1980s Democrat. That
is to say, politicians pander because itâs easier to change positions than
hearts.
© 2009 Selwyn DukeâAll Rights Reserved



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