In his biography of
JFK, Kennedy senior advisor Ted Sorenson said, "...(Kennedy) was the
truest and oldest kind of liberal: the free man with a free mind...The
aggressive attitudes of many ‘professional liberals’ made him
‘uncomfortable.’”
Sorenson then quoted
what he considered to be the most formal statement of Kennedy’s credo.
In a speech to the Liberal Party of New York in 1960, Kennedy said,
"I believe in human
dignity as the source of national purpose, in human liberty as the
source of national action, in the human heart as the source of national
compassion, and in the human mind as the source of our invention and our
ideas...faith in man’s ability...reason and judgment...is our best and
our only hope in the world today.”
Sorenson goes on to
remind us that, while Kennedy’s natural instincts always leaned toward
the progressive, "his natural caution required him to test those
instincts against evidence and experience.” And when asked
what kind of president he hoped to be, liberal or conservative, Kennedy
replied, "I hope to be responsible.”
In 1960, and before,
John F. Kennedy was thought of as a mainstream liberal. However, as a
measure of how much the definitions of the terms "liberal” and
"conservative” have changed, and as a measure of how far to the left the
Democrat Party has drifted, an argument can be made that if Kennedy were
alive to speak those words today he would be seen as a mainstream
conservative.
National purpose as a
function of human dignity? National action as the product of human
liberty? National compassion as a derivative, not of government social
welfare programs, but of the human heart? Invention and ideas as the
product, not of government programs and subsidies, but of human
ingenuity? These are baseline conservative principles. These are not
principles that we hear from the lips of today’s liberals...liberals
such as the Democrats’ presumptive 2008 nominee, Barack Obama, who
strives mightily to develop an image as the reincarnation of Jack
Kennedy.
Jack Kennedy was a true
war hero. During World War II he served in the South Pacific as skipper
of a PT boat, the famous PT-109. For his heroic action in saving the
lives of his crew he was awarded the Navy & Marine Corps Medal. He was
also awarded the Purple Heart, the Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal, and
the World War II Victory Medal.
Barack Obama has no
military record, no background or experience on which to judge his
personal courage, his patriotism, or his ability to serve as Commander
in Chief of our military forces. During the years that Obama would have
served in the U.S. military, he worked on voter registration drives as a
community organizer on Chicago’s south side.
In that capacity he
relied heavily on the community organizing techniques of radical leftist
Saul Alinsky who, quite coincidentally, was the subject of Hillary
Rodham’s senior honors thesis at Wellesley College, titled, "There
Is Only The Fight...: An Analysis of the Alinsky Model.”
Returning from military
service, Kennedy ran for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives,
serving three terms from 1947 until 1953. He was then elected to the
United States Senate where he served for seven more years, from 1953 to
1960, before being elected President of the United States.
Obama was elected to
the Illinois State Senate in 1996 and served two four-year terms with an
unsuccessful run for Congress sandwiched in between. He ran for the
United States Senate in 2004 and served just two years before launching
a campaign to become the leader of the Free World. But what is most
alarming about this ambition-driven upstart, what most distinguishes him
from a man like Jack Kennedy, and what serves as the wellspring of his
campaign theme, "Change We Can Believe In,” is his allegiance to the
teachings of Saul Alinsky.
In his book,
Rules for
Radicals,
Alinsky wrote:
"There’s another reason for working inside the system...Any
revolutionary change must be preceded by a passive, affirmative,
non-challenging attitude toward change among the mass of our people.
They must feel so frustrated, so defeated, so lost, so futureless in the
prevailing system, that they are willing to let go of the past and
change the future...”
Even the
most disinterested and uneducated observer of the Obama campaign style
could not have failed to note the messianic nature of his approach or
his fealty to the concept of "change for the sake of change.” But what
"revolutionary” change? That is the question before us today.
Clinton and Obama have
been working "inside the system,” just as Alinsky prescribed. Are we
willing to gamble on what change either of them would pursue if they
were put in charge of our great nation?
So, yes, Obama,
there are those of us old enough to remember Jack Kennedy. And while you
try mightily to assume his mantle, it doesn’t quite work for you. Yes,
you remind us of a Kennedy, alright...but it’s not Jack, it’s Ted.