Voting Against the Foley Follies

Voting Against the Foley Follies
Mark Foley is gone from Congress - that's the good news. Denny Hastert is on the ropes because of it - that is probably bad. Let me say from the outset that it's good that Foley is gone. We just got another bad apple out of the barrel - I hope before that decaying apple has contaminated all the other fruit.It's a good thing we already know better then to trust the main-stream media's "objective" reporting of the news, lest we believe that this incident will result in all the moral conservatives "sitting this election out." I have never seen a more blatant attempt at creating an avalanche of self-fulfilling prophecy, then that produced in the Foley aftermath. A classic case of "monkey hear-monkey do" is being foisted upon us. The media tells us that moral conservatives are staying home in protest of the "Foley cover up," apparently in hopes that other moral conservatives will automatically join in the boycott. It's promoting the time-tested tactic of turning the principled tendencies of your opposition to work against themselves, so to speak. As one colleague said to me recently, "conservative Christians vote with their heart, not their heads." Perhaps this is a left-handed way of saying that they are principled, thus are at a distinct disadvantage to left-leaning voters who are more pragmatic and expedient in their choices (they are smarter and will do anything to win). Maybe that colleague had a point; nobody in the media predicted that Clinton would lose the support of feminist constituencies despite his alleged shabby treatment of women. A little "trailer trash" could be jettisoned if the commitment to keep abortion safe and legal remained the status quo.This strategy du jour is even being picked-up and implemented by novices. A letter writer in my local paper has been as faithful as any good horseman of the apocalypse, trying to undermine the Bush administration by writing derogatory epistles every month without fail. Just recently he has changed his tune, exhorting true conservatives to stay out of the election to protest the betrayal of the conservatives' planks and platform by undisciplined Republicans. It is a political rope-a-dope so painfully obvious and artful that it would make Mohammed Ali turn shades of green.So let's turn our eyes back to Speaker Hastert. The cry and the hue calls for him to resign amidst the innuendo that he knew about Foley's perverse proclivities long ago. All that is missing is any credible evidence. If an investigation surfaces with any convincing proof, I will join the chorus and sing the loudest. I am not sure Hastert has been the best Speaker - he's certainly no Newt Gingrich - but that is no reason to toss him from the train preemptively. As I understand it, there were two classifications of electronic communications; E-mails and instant messages. The E-mails were apparently examined by both the FBI and certain Florida newspapers. The benign nature of the communications caused the FBI to decline any further investigation, and the newspapers couldn't find anything juicy enough to warrant publication. It was the instant messages, which Hastert claims he had no knowledge of, that supposedly contained the salacious communications in question.Now suppose you're Hastert. You might suspect Foley has inappropriate proclivities, but if you act on a hunch without legal proof that he had communications of a sexual nature with minors, you're castigated as a bigot or a homophobe. If you give him a slap on the wrist, you take the chance that a scandal explodes in your face. If you resign, then for political purposes, you're as good as guilty. What a wonderful choice of "damned if you do, damned if you don't" alternatives! In our day of political correctness and "perpetrators rights," being preemptively circumspect is almost too heavy-handed.Of course the timing of this raises no suspicion at all. Gallup polls indicate that 42% of Americans believe that the falling oil prices since August, are being orchestrated for political benefit despite overwhelming evidence and logical inference to the contrary. Too many Americans can see the snakes and spiders crawling all over them, when they can't smell the rat hiding under the kitchen table. Such folks are going to cancel out your informed vote.There are certainly problems enough in the Republican Party that we ought to be angry. But let's not get so blindly enraged that by default we place back in power those who by their political nature will raise our taxes, neglect the immigration problem, support expanding the definition of marriage, treat terrorism as a law enforcement issue, and vote on the wrong side of pro-live issues, etc.That is what I will be thinking of November 7th, not about former Rep. Foley.Robert E. Meyer

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