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World News See other World News Articles Title: Tucker Carlson, Neocon Slayer He scores two takedowns in two days Oh, it was glorious fun, yielding the kind of satisfaction that us anti- interventionists rarely get to enjoy: not one but two prominent neoconservatives who have been wrong about everything for the past decade yet never held accountable getting taken down on national television. Tucker Carlson, whose show is a shining light of reason in a fast-darkening world, has performed a public service by demolishing both Ralph Peters and Max Boot on successive shows. But these two encounters with evil werent just fun to watch, theyre also highly instructive for what they tell us about the essential weakness of the War Party and its failing strategy for winning over the American people. Tuckers first victim was Ralph Peters, an alleged military expert whos been a fixture on Fox News since before the Iraq war, of which he was a rabid proponent. Tucker starts out the program by noting that ISIS caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi may have been killed in a Russian airstrike and that the talk in Washington is now moving away from defeating ISIS and focusing on Iran as the principal enemy. He asks why is this? Why not take a moment to celebrate the death of Baghdadi and acknowledge that we have certain common interests with the Russians? Peters leaps into overstatement, as is his wont: We cant have an alliance with terrorists, and the Russians are terrorists. Theyre not Islamists, but they are terrorists. He then alleges that the Russians arent really fighting ISIS, but instead are bombing hospitals, children, and our allies (i.e. the radical Islamist Syrian rebels trained and funded by the CIA and allied with al-Qaeda and al-Nusra). The Russians hate the United States, and we have nothing in common with the Russians nothing! The Russians, says Peters, are paving the way for the Iranians the real evil in the region to build up an empire from Afghanistan to the Mediterranean. Ah yes, the Shia crescent which the Israelis and their amen corner in the US have been warning against since before the Iraq war. Yet Tucker points out that over 3,000 Americans have been killed by terrorists in the US, and none of them are Shiites: all of [these terrorists] have been Sunni extremists who are supported by the Saudis who are supposed to be our allies. And while were on the subject: Why, asks Tucker, if were so afraid of Iran did we kill Saddam Hussein, thereby empowering Iran? Because we were stupid, says Peters. Oh boy! Peters was one of the most militant advocates of the Iraq war: we were stupid, I suppose, to listen to him. Yet Tucker lets this ride momentarily, saving his big guns for the moment when he takes out Peters completely. And Peters walks right into it when Tucker wonders why we cant cooperate with Russia, since both countries are under assault from Sunni terrorists: PETERS: You sound like Charles Lindbergh in 1938 saying Hitler hasnt attacked us. TUCKER: I beg your pardon? You cannot compare me to somebody who makes apologies for Hitler. And I dont think Putin is comparable. PETERS: I think Putin is. TUCKER: I think it is a grotesque overstatement actually. I think its insane. PETERS: Fine, you can think its insane all you want. For the neocons, its always 1938. The enemy is always the reincarnation of Hitler, and anyone who questions the wisdom of war is denounced as an appeaser in the fashion of Neville Chamberlain or Lindbergh. Yet no one ever examines and challenges the assumption behind this rhetorical trope, which is that war with the enemy of the moment whether it be Saddam Hussein, the Iranian ayatollahs, or Vladimir Putin is inevitable and imminent. If Putin is Hitler, and Russia is Nazi Germany, then we must take the analogy all the way and assume that well be at war with the Kremlin shortly. After all, Charles Lindberghs opponents in the great debate of the 1940s openly said that Hitler, who posed an existential threat to the West, had to be destroyed, and that this goal could not be achieved short of war. Of course, Franklin Roosevelt pretended that this wasnt so, and pledged repeatedly that we werent going to war, but secretly he manipulated events so that war was practically inevitable. Meanwhile, the more honest elements of the War Party openly proclaimed that we had to aid Britain and get into the war. Is this what Peters and his gaggle of neocons are advocating that we go to war with nuclear-armed Russia and annihilate much of the world in a radioactive Armageddon? It certainly seems that way. The Hitler-Lindbergh trope certainly does more than merely imply that. Clearly riled by the attempt to smear him, Tucker, the neocon slayer, then moves in for the kill: I would hate to go back and read your columns assuring America that taking out Saddam Hussein will make the region calmer, more peaceful, and America safer, when in fact it has been the opposite and it has empowered Russia and Iran, the two countries you say you fear most lets be totally honest, we dont always know the outcomes. They are not entirely predictable so maybe we should lower that a little bit rather than calling people accommodationist. This is what the neocons hate: reminding them of their record is like showing a vampire a crucifix. Why should we listen to Peters, whos been wrong about everything for decades? Peters response is the typical neocon riposte to all honest questions about their policies and record: youre a traitor, youre cheering on Vladimir Putin! To which Tucker has the perfect America Firster answer: Im cheering for America as always. Our interests ought to come first and to the extent that making temporary alliances with other countries serves our interests, Im in favor of that. Making sweeping moral claims grotesque ones comparing people to Hitler advances the ball not one inch and blinds us to reality. Peters has no real argument, and so he resorts to the method thats become routine in American politics: accuse your opponent of being a foreign agent. Tucker, says Peters, is an apologist not only for Putin but also for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Again, Tucker answers smears with cold logic: So because Im asking rational questions about whats best for America Im a friend to strongmen and dictators? That is a conversation stopper, not a beginning of a rational conversation. My only point is when Syria was run by Assad 10% of the population was Christian and they lived in relative peace. And thats really the whole point: the War Party wants to stop the conversation. They dont want a debate when, really, have we ever had a fair debate in this country over foreign policy? They depend on fear, innuendo, and ad hominem arguments to drag us into war after war and Tucker is having none of it. So why is any of this important? After all, its just a TV show, and as amusing as it is to watch a prominent neocon get creamed, what doe it all mean in the end? Well, it matters because Tucker didnt start out talking sense on foreign policy. He started out, in short, as a conventional conservative, but then something happened. As he put it to Peters at the end of the segment: I want to act in Americas interest and stop making shallow, sweeping claims about countries we dont fully understand and hope everything will be fine in the end. I saw that happen and it didnt work. Whats true isnt self-evident, at least to those of us who arent omniscient. Many conservatives, as well as the country as a whole, learned something as they saw the disasters in Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, and Syria unfold. On the right, many have rejected the neoconservative idealism that destroyed the Middle East and unleashed ISIS. When Donald Trump stood before the South Carolina GOP debate and told the assembled mandarins that we were lied into the Iraq war, the chattering classes declared that he was finished yet he won that primary, and went on to win the nomination, precisely because Republican voters were ready to hear that message. Indeed, Trumps America First skepticism when it comes to foreign wars made the crucial difference in the election, as a recent study shows: communities hard hit by our endless wars put him over the top in the key states of Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania. This, and not Russian meddling, handed him the White House. Tucker Carlsons ideological evolution limns the transformation of the American right in the age of Trump: while Trump is not, by a long shot, a consistent anti-interventionist, Tucker comes pretty close. He is, at least, a realist with a pronounced antipathy for foreign adventurism, and that is a big step forward from the neoconservative orthodoxy that has bathed much of the world in blood. If the demolition of Ralph Peters was the cake, then the meltdown of neoconservative ideologue Max Boot the next evening was the frosting, with ice cream on the side. Perhaps the neocons, having been trounced in round one, thought Boot could do better: they were mistaken. Tucker took him apart simply by letting him talk: Boot didnt answer a single question put to him, and, in the course of it all, as Boot resorted to the typical ad hominems, Tucker made a cogent point: [T]o dismiss people who disagree with you as immoral which is your habit isnt a useful form of debate, its a kind of moral preening, and its little odd coming from you, who really has been consistently wrong in the most flagrant and flamboyant way for over a decade. And so, you have to sort of wonder, like BOOT: What have I been wrong about, Tucker? What have I been wrong about? CARLSON: Well, having watch you carefully and known you for a long time, I recall vividly when you said that if we were to topple the governments of Afghanistan and Iraq, the region will be much safer and the people who took their place would help us in the global war on terror. Of course it didnt happen Boot starts to completely melt down at this point, screeching You supported the Iraq war! To which Tucker trenchantly replies: Ive been wrong about a ton of things, you try to learn your lesson. But when you get out there in the New York Times and say, we really should have done more to depose Qaddafi, because you know, Libya is going to be better when that happens. And then to hear you say we need to knock off the Assad regime and things will be better in Syria, he sort of wonder like, well, maybe we should choose another professions. Selling insurance, something youre good at. I guess thats kind of the point. Are there no sanctions for being as wrong as you have? Why oh why should we listen to Peters and Boot and their fellow neocons, who have been literally dead wrong about everything: their crackbrained ideology has led to untold thousands of deaths since September 11, 2001 alone. And for what? In the end, Boot falls back on the usual non-arguments: Tucker is immoral because he denies that Trump is a Russian agent, and persists in asking questions about our foreign policy of endless intervention in the Middle East. Tucker keeps asking why Boot thinks Russia is the main threat to the United States, and Boot finally answers: Because they are the only country that can destroy us with a nuclear strike. To a rational person, the implications of this are obvious: in that case, shouldnt we be trying to reach some sort of détente, or even achieve a degree of cooperation with Moscow? Oh, but no, because you see the Russians are inherently evil, we have nothing in common with them in which case, war is inevitable. At which point, Tucker avers: Okay. I am beginning to think that your judgment has been clouded by ideology, I dont fully understand where its coming from but I will let our viewers decide. I know where its coming from. Tuckers viewers may not know that Boot is a Russian immigrant, who like so many of our Russophobic warmongers arrived on our shores with his hatred of the motherland packed in his suitcase. Theres a whole platoon of them: Cathy Young, who recently released her polemic arguing for a new cold war with Russia in the pages of Reason magazine; Atlantic writer and tweeter of anti-Trump obscenities Julia Ioffe, whose visceral hatred for her homeland is a veritable monomania; Gary Kasparov, the former chess champion who spends most of his energy plotting revenge against Vladimir Putin and a Russian electorate that has consistently rejected his hopeless presidential campaigns, and I could go on but you get the picture. As the new cold war envelopes the country, wrapping us in its icy embrace and freezing all rational discussion of foreign policy, a few people stand out as brave exceptions to the groupthinking mass of the chattering classes: among the most visible and articulate are Tucker Carlson, Glenn Greenwald, journalist Michael Tracey, Prof. Stephen Cohen, and of course our own Ron Paul. I tip my hat to them, in gratitude and admiration, for they represent the one thing we need right now: hope. The hope that this madness will pass, that well beat back this latest War Party offensive, and enjoy a return to what passes these days for normalcy. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Ada (#0)
U.S. Constitution - Article IV, Section 4: NO BORDERS + NO LAWS = NO COUNTRY
U.S. Constitution - Article IV, Section 4: NO BORDERS + NO LAWS = NO COUNTRY
From David Duke to Saddam Hussein to Moammar Ghadafi to Vlad Putin to President Trump - they're all the reincarnation of Adolf Hitler according to the neocons in BOTH the Republican Party and the Democratic Party. It was nice seeing Tucker Carlson kick the shit out of that sleazy motherfucker Ralph Peters. Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest |
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