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May 19, 2005,
8:18 a.m. So, Al Sharpton is going down for a meeting with Vicente Fox. Jesse Jackson has already beaten him to it but Sharpton’s following suit (as he usually does with Jackson). The Mexican president, as you know, said something judged offensive to black Americans, and he phoned both Sharpton and Jackson to apologize. That’s covering your bases! Now the Rev. Al like the Rev. Jesse is milkin’ it, traveling down Mexico way.
No, Bush is president of all Americans, and he’s the one who should have received a phone call, if Fox needed to place it. Damn.
So too, the Democratic leader in the Senate calls President Bush a “loser,” and the reaction is basically inaudible. Look, we’re all grownups, but the media’s double standard yawns at us again: No injury done Republicans can really count. And if a Republican leader so much as looks cross-eyed at someone media-approved . . . Scandal City. I think the press has simply accepted that Dean is a little “touched,” or alternatively “passionate,” freewheeling, and that his outrages aren’t really news. If Ken Mehlman were grossly insulting or irrational that would be “Man Bites Dog.” But is no Democrat embarrassed by Dean? Then again, as we’ve said about them before they don’t embarrass easy. (Lovely phrase.)
Well, she’s been givin’ it to the Syrians lately, and Syrians Syrian citizens, or subjects, not the ruling machine have reacted joyfully. Please glance at a report from the Reform Party of Syria, known as RPS (its website is here): On May 11, Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL) delivered a speech on the floor of the U.S. Congress in which she asked [Congress] to stand by the people of Syria and to assist them to bring to justice ex-Ba’athists who have committed atrocious crimes against the Syrian people, mainly the massacre of Hama, Tadmur, and the thousands of incidents of torture of Syrians at the hands of government intelligence and security personnel. I am reminded, as I often am, of Jeane Kirkpatrick, who, on the floor of the U.N., named the names of Soviet prisoners. (This was from 1981 to 1985.) The naming of names was crucially important, as Sharansky and others have testified. I’ve told you this story before, but listen to it, briefly, again: When Jeane K. was in Moscow, Andrei Sakharov sought her out, and said, “Kirkpatski, Kirkpatski! I have so wanted to meet you and thank you in person. Your name is known in all the Gulag.” It was because of her simple moral attention at the United Nations. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen is another woman who knows what political prisoners and other oppressed persons need that simple moral attention, for one thing. They will love her in Syria, as they do Kirkpatrick, Robert Conquest, and blessed others in the ex-Soviet Union.
Various groups and institutions around the world have expressed their solidarity with the Cuban democrats, including the U.S. Congress. The House passed a resolution and 22 congressmen voted against. Oh, yes. Who were they? Oh, you know the usuals: Charles Rangel, Dennis Kucinich, Maxine Waters, John Conyers, Barbara Lee, Jim McDermott, Cynthia McKinney, Pete Stark . . . You’ve heard me say a thousand times before that Rangel is about Castro’s best friend in the United States at least in the political class. This is doubly a shame, because Rangel is so beloved of the American media. “Good ol’ ‘Chollie,’” they say (because Rangel is a New Yawker, and he talks like that irresistibly charming guy, most people find). Guess what he told Meghan Clyne of the New York Sun? He said that he voted against the Cuba-democracy resolution because American politicians “refuse to give the government the respect that it deserves.” He was referring to his friend Fidel’s regime, of course: a regime that imprisons, tortures, and executes at will. That denies its subjects all rights. That is listed by the State Department as terrorist. We hear all the time that all Americans certainly those in our political class love freedom and democracy. We’re all joined in the same cause, no matter what our (minor) differences. But guess what: It isn’t so. It just isn’t. We are not all on the same side, even broadly speaking. It is sometimes called McCarthyite to point that out. I regard it as realistic.
In that piece, I mention a celebration held on Capitol Hill, to mark the coming of peace in Sudan’s south. (Darfur, which is in the west, is another, horrific story.) Faith writes, “I wish you could have been at our celebration. As you say, the mood was jubilant. I wish you could see the gift for President Bush that the Lost Boys from Nashville brought an amazing painting (by one of the Lost Boys, Bol) of an elephant, on a very, very heavy piece of Tennessee rock.” Let me interrupt for a moment. The Institute on Religion and Democracy describes the “Lost Boys of Sudan” as “the group of some 17,000 orphaned boys from Southern Sudan who wandered for a decade throughout the region seeking relief after their families, homes and villages were destroyed by Sudan’s government and its proxy militias.” Faith continues, “They chose the elephant because it is strong and powerful, like America, they said, and like President Bush, who is a strong and powerful leader. When I also pointed out to them that the elephant is the symbol of the President’s party, they were delighted! They had not realized that. “I also wish that you could have heard the Southern Sudanese from Kansas City, who are reaching out to the black-African Muslims from Darfur in the refugee camps even though at one time, before the Government of Sudan turned its guns on them, the Darfurians constituted over 75% of the Sudanese Army (use a slave to kill a slave), and many of those who are now reaching out lost their families in Southern Sudan to Darfurian soldiers. These Darfurian refugees, rebel leaders included, are saying to the Southern Sudanese that they believe that President Bush because of his stand against Islamist terrorism is their only hope. They do not expect salvation from the Arabs. They expect it will come from America.” And a follow-up: “We’re still trying to figure out the best way to get the elephant into President Bush’s hands! A couple of years ago, when we had a seven-day prayer vigil for Sudan outside the State Department, the Lost Boys all put their signatures and thanks to the President on a framed map of Sudan. When I attended the signing of the Sudan Peace Act the next month, I had the presence of mind to bring it with me, and the audacity to ask the President if I could give it to him. He said, ‘You just did,’ and took it. Unfortunately, I don’t think I’m going to any Presidential signing ceremonies again anytime soon, and the elephant rock is a bit heavier . . .”
As he told me, “It’s no good doing Monday-morning quarterbacking. If you care about politics and the condition of the country and world you should do some actual quarterbacking.” (I am paraphrasing but Gove did use that American expression, having to do with our football.) In preparation for this piece, I immersed myself in Gove’s writings, and a splendid, enriching bath it was. His pen is almost as fine as his mind, which is saying something. I wish to share with you a swatch from a piece he did for The Spectator (here). It contained a kind of credo. It reminded me a little of WFB’s famous credo from the end of Up from Liberalism. Anyway, here is Gove. See what you think: . . . Those Conservative values, which we abandon at our peril, are a belief in the maximum freedom for individuals, a recognition that wickedness should be countered by discipline, not therapy, and an acceptance that the price of progress is a patchwork world. And so on. Gove is only 37 years old. Will he make it all the way to the prime ministership? I don’t know, but I’ll sure enjoy reading him, for years to come, I hope.
I received an interesting note from Jeff Jacoby, the invaluable columnist for the Boston Globe. He wrote, “I was in Israel with my family over Passover, and went to see the new Yad Vashem museum in Jerusalem. There is a display of anti-Jewish signs that materialized throughout Germany during the early Nazi years towns would put these up to publicize their anti-Semitism. One in particular struck me. It said (in German, of course), ‘Attention Jews! The road to Palestine doesn’t pass through this town.’ Another one showed a replica of a railway ticket. It said, ‘Free ticket to Jerusalem valid from every German station. No return. Fourth Class.’ When I saw them, I said to my father exactly the same thing you heard David Pryce-Jones say . . .”
For a review of the New York Philharmonic, with Pinchas Zukerman, please go here. For a review of Franco Alfano’s Cyrano de Bergerac at the Metropolitan Opera, and for a review of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Pierre Boulez, conductor, and Daniel Barenboim, pianist, please go here. For a review of the Met’s gala concert in honor of Mirella Freni, please go here. And for a review of the mezzo-soprano Sarah Connolly in recital, please go here.
Friends, I’m busier’n a one-armed paper hanger, and don’t know when I’ll write again, but I hope it’ll be fairly soon, and I’ll see you, and you take care of yourselves and watch Newsweek. * * * YOU’RE NOT A SUBSCRIBER TO NATIONAL REVIEW? Sign up right now! It’s easy: Subscribe to National Review here, or to the digital version of the magazine here. You can even order a subscription as a gift: print or digital! |
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