4.27.00
Hillary and Elian

4.26.00
Detroit News Fires Tom Bray

4.25.00
Bush's Social Security Gamble

4.24.00
Gore Story

4.20.00
Palmetto Pandering

4.19.00
Bye Bye Bayh

4.18.00
The DLC's Other Candidate

4.17.00
Out of Gas

4.13.00
Charity Case

4.11.00
NYPD Black & Blue

4.10.00
Davis for Mayor

4.07.00
Marching In Place

4.06.00
Gassed Out

4.05.00
Santorum vs. Klink

4.04.00
Uncivil Commission

4.03.00
Alien Nation

 
4/27/00 4:25 p.m.
Hillary and Elian
What conservative hypocrisy?

By NR's Ramesh Ponnuru & John J. Miller
 

iberals on the send-Elian-home bandwagon have been saying that conservatives on the other side are hypocrites, having in the past championed parental rights and criticized Hillary Clinton for denying same. The charge of hypocrisy can be sustained only if Mrs. Clinton's early-seventies critique of pervasive American oppressionchildren's powerlessness, she wrote, is both unjustified and "part of the organization and ideology of the political system itself" — is on a par with conservatives' claims about Cuba. Wrote Mrs. Clinton: "The pretense that children's issues are somehow above or beyond politics endures and is reinforced by the belief that families are private, nonpolitical units whose interests subsume those of children."

A lot of people said and did stupid things in the seventies, and Clinton subsequently backed off those views. But the notion that she was talking only about abusive or dysfunctional families is pure revisionism. Her view then was that the family should be treated as a political institution. Castro, in his infinitely more terrible way, believes the same thing; and conservatives aren't hypocrites for opposing both views.

Speaking Of Hypocrisy, Though...
Doesn't Ken Starr deserve an apology? He was a brute and a thug, recall, because his subordinates interrogated Monica Lewinsky in between her shopping excursions in the Pentagon City mall. (Our friend Jonathan Schell, writing in the Nation, waxed particularly eloquent about the horror Americans should feel at the image of this interrogation.) Starr was damned as well because Lewinsky's mother was brought to tears during grand-jury questioning.

But in the Gonzalez case, now liberals are all tough guys. What's the big deal about the raid, they ask? The gun wasn't pointed right at Elian, and the safety was on. And it's not like anybody died. (Much of the commentary seems to imply that the Gonzalez family should be grateful about Janet Reno's forbearance on this pointas, given her record when it comes to children, perhaps they should be.) The guys with guns were just professionals upholding the rule of law. Liberals buy that line, at least when the professionals threaten some Cuban-Americans and not the president.

Kissling's Sea Change
A group called Catholics for a Free Choiceand no, they're not talking about school vouchers to help parochial schoolsis running a campaign, dubbed "See Change," to eliminate the Vatican's permanent observer status. The argument is that the Vatican represents a religion, not a state. Which makes the following quote from Frances Kissling, president of Catholics for a Free Choice, rather embarrassing: "I spent twenty years looking for a government that I could overthrow without being thrown in jail. I finally found one in the Catholic Church" (Mother Jones, May/June 1991).

 
 
If you would like to receive the Washington Bulletin via e-mail, please send an e-mail message to majordomo@us.net. The first line in the body of the message should read: "subscribe washingtonbulletin". In order to ensure that you are not accidentally subscribed, you will receive a reply message with a confirmation number, to which you must reply to complete the subscription process. To unsubscribe leave the subject line blank and have the first line in the body of the message read: "unsubscribe washingtonbulletin".

Think a friend would want to read this? Send it along.

Your e-mail address:

Recipient's e-mail address:

 

Columns / Current Issue / Goldberg File / Nota Bene
Washington Bulletin
/ Subscribe / Ad Info / Home

National Review 215 Lexington Avenue New York, New York 10016 212-679-7330 Customer Service: 815-734-1232. Contact Us.