Where
was all the Republican outrage when one of their own slandered a Democrat's war
record?
At long last Republican presidential hopefuls crept out of their foxholes, where they’d been cowering and maintaining radio silence, to attack Donald Trump.
With one or two exceptions, the field went AWOL as Trump trashed
immigrants, calling them drug runners and rapists. But as soon
as Trump said “I like people who weren’t captured,”
suggesting that Senator John McCain was less than a hero, they pounced.
Senator Lindsey Graham fumed that Trump’s had “crossed a line.”
Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush condemned his “slanderous attacks.” Former Texas
Governor Rick Perry called on Trump to exit the race altogether.
How noble of them.
Of course, it helped having some truth on their side. As a Navy
pilot, McCain was shot down and wounded during a bombing mission in the Vietnam
War. The future Arizona senator spent five and a half years in a Hanoi prison,
two of them in solitary confinement.
He was tortured and beaten and his injuries were allowed to go
untended. Yet when his captors offered him release after discovering that his
father commanded the entire Vietnam theater of the war, he refused. He was
bound by military code to wait until everyone captured before him had been
released.
That should settle the argument. Whatever you think of the
Vietnam War, McCain showed tremendous integrity. Trump is an idiot.
But I wonder where these Republicans and their ilk were in 2004, when John Kerry was the Democratic Party’s presidential nominee. He was another hero whose patriotism was assailed. The only difference: He was a Democrat and his assailants Republicans.
The GOP built a well-financed machine to tell lies about Kerry’s
war record. His opponent, President George W. Bush, raised not a hand in
protest at this slander.
As a matter of fact there was only one prominent Republican who
spoke out in protest of the scummy Republican campaign: John McCain.
What’s happened to Republicans? They used to be such nice
people. Sure, they favored the moneyed interests and disliked unions and taxes,
but they supported good causes too — like public schools.
Some Republicans were environmentalists and internationalists.
And, never forget, it was under a Republican president, Dwight Eisenhower, that
we undertook the greatest public works project in our history — the interstate
highway system.
And it was another Republican, Teddy Roosevelt, who inaugurated
our national parks system.
That kind of Republican either doesn’t exist anymore or is
sheltered in a witness protection program.
Your current brand of Republicans wouldn’t pave a road unless it
ran in front of their houses. Even then they’d pay for it by cutting Social
Security payments.
They’re against opening up relations with Cuba, negotiating with
Iran, cutting the military budget to bring it more in line with our needs,
and raising the minimum wage. They don’t believe in climate change because
to do so would mean going against the oil interests that generously fund their
electoral campaigns.
Look at the gang that’s running for the Republican nomination:
The worst of them seem deranged and the best appear fearful that they’ll do
something to raise the ire of the party’s tea party wing. Like criticize Donald
Trump when he slanders immigrants.
It’s not like the Democrats are white knights. They have more
than their share of hypocrisy and cowardice. But the Republicans are talking it
to a whole new level.
Even Ronald Reagan must be spinning in his grave.
OtherWords columnist Donald Kaul lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan. OtherWords.org.