Author Archives: Ron Lipsman

Handicapping the GOP Presidential Field

I count 20. That is the number of people that I have seen identified in a serious way by some major media outlet, political organization, pundit or other legitimate “handicapper.” In this article I will argue that only four of these assorted fingers and toes have any chance of securing the nomination – and I will name them.

Here’s the list, in alphabetical order:

Michele Bachman
Jeb Bush
Herman Cain
Chris Christie
Mitch Daniels
Jim DeMint
Newt Gingrich
Rudi Giuliani
Mike Huckabee
Jon Huntsman
Gary Johnson
Sarah Palin
George Pataki
Ron Paul
Tim Pawlenty
Mike Pence
Rick Perry
George Romney
Rick Santorum
Donald Trump.

Incidentally, there might very well be names that I have inadvertently omitted – I can’t keep track of every pundit’s blog. And although not impossible, I believe that anyone not yet on the radar screen has a very limited chance of being the eventual nominee.

A few months ago, in an attempt to sort out the tweedle-dees from the tweedle-dums, I started reading the books produced lately by some of these folks. In particular, I read those cast upon the waters by DeMint, Gingrich, Huckabee, Pawlenty, Paul and Romney. The only one I missed was Palin’s – which won’t really matter (see below). Of these tomes, I would say: Romney’s was the best written; Pawlenty’s was the most autobiographical – and therefore, in some ways, the most interesting; Huckabee’s the most folksy or informal; Paul’s the most esoteric and polemical; Newt’s the most wonkish; and – for me – DeMint’s the most inspirational. I still believe that Romney’s a RINO and that Paul is a libertarian too far. If I had to vote based only on the books, DeMint is an easy winner, with Pawlenty a respectable second.

But the books are largely irrelevant at this point. Here is the proper handicap analysis:

  • Daniels, Huckabee, Pence and Trump have explicitly taken themselves out of the game.
  • DeMint has not formally removed himself, but he shows no indication whatsoever that he is a candidate and I believe that he is indeed not.
  • Christie, like DeMint, has given no indication that he will be a candidate; in fact, any of his statements addressed to the matter are as strongly negative as those of the four in the first group above.
  • There’s a large group among the 20 – ranging from people who have explicitly said that they are running to those who have tried to squelch any such rumors – whose members have virtually no national name recognition, no business being in the race, and absolutely not a snowball’s chance in hell of being nominated. That group consists of Cain, Huntsman, Johnson, Pataki and Santorum. Ultimately, they will vanish meekly from the presidential sweepstakes.

That leaves a baseball team of nine: Bachman, Bush, Gingrich, Giuliani, Palin, Paul, Pawlenty, Perry and Romney.

  • Giuliani has name recognition and nothing else. The last time around was his best shot. Having fizzled so spectacularly then, he will do no better this go-round.
  • Jeb Bush appears to be wise enough to realize that the public will not tolerate another Bush – even if he is the most talented and the most conservative of the three. The GOP nominates him only if it has a death wish.
  • Ron Paul will run a spirited race that will energize his limited cadre of followers. He’ll do no better than he did in ‘08. The public is Center-Right, not extreme libertarian.
  • Gingrich is an undisciplined, loose cannon and everyone knows it. He did himself irreparable damage with this irresponsible attack on Paul Ryan. His goose is cooked.
  • Sarah Palin is a fascinating possibility, but she has been so thoroughly demonized by the Left that – fair or not – she cannot win. And most of the GOP rank and file knows it. I think she knows it too. Not happening.

We are left with four: Bachman, Pawlenty, Perry and Romney. At this very early stage, Romney is – sad to say – the front runner, with Pawlenty likely his most serious opposition. If the GOP follows its historic habit of nominating “the next in line,” Romney will get the nod. But serious discomfort has bubbled up in the GOP rank and file in the last two years and perhaps they will shove George aside. While Pawlenty’s conservative credentials are stronger than Romney’s, he doesn’t exactly set the people’s hair on fire. In which case, one of Bachman or Perry might mount a late charge. Perry is an extraordinarily attractive candidate – very different from the last Governor of Texas who auditioned for the job. If he jumps in and if one of the two front runners hasn’t sewn it up, he will be formidable. But if he doesn’t, and the rank and file doesn’t want the front runners, then they might turn to Bachman. She has outstanding conservative bona fides, is a power-house fund raiser, with a sharp mind and a personality that generates enthusiasm. (The Left tried to Palinize her – unsuccessfully.) Having elected a minority, the electorate is clearly ready for a woman. Hillary was flummoxed and Sarah is not the one. Perhaps Michele is. She would make an exciting candidate. At this point she is a long shot, but she has a path to the nomination, unlike the other 16 that I have eliminated.

Finally, it behooves me to say something about Paul Ryan. Many conservatives, anxious about what they see as a weak field, are urging him to get in the race. Thus far, he is resisting such urges; but that might change. He is another highly attractive candidate: extremely intelligent (I wager far beyond our supposedly brilliant President), conversant on all the major issues, a fierce and skilled debater, courageous, articulate and staunchly conservative. I would be pleased to see him join the fray and expand four viables into five.
_______
This article also appeared in The Land of the Free at:

Obama-man

Obama-man

A Song by Ron Lipsman
Sung to the tune of Piano Man
(With sincere apologies to Billy Joel)
______
It’s nine AM on a Wednesday
As the cabinet slowly shuffles in.
Hillary’s right here sitting next to me,
Thinking “How in the hell did he win?”
She says, “Barack, can you tell me a secret?
It’s just killing me; I really must know.
  Rahm told me once;
  Man, that guy was a dunce;
Where you born in the Belgian Congo?
[Refrain]
Sing us a song, you’re Obama-man,

Sing us a song tonight;
Well we’re all in the mood for prosperity,
But you’ve got us feeling uptight.

There’s Biden, Holder and Geithner.
My pal Tim, he wrecked the currency.
  Yea Eric’s a bigot
  And Joe is an idiot;
I’m thinking Larry, Moe and Curly.
And way down the table sits Gates,
My one token from the GOP.
But I think that it’s time to get rid of him,
Since I plan to deep six the Navy.
Now I’m really proud of Obamacare
And Dodd-Franks was very good news.
  They’re exploding the debt
  Unsustainable, and yet…
I‘ll just put all the blame on the Jews.

Well I managed to kill Bin Laden,

But they blame me for America’s decline;
Can’t they see, making the US like France
Is an amazing idea of mine?
Sing us a song, you’re Obama-man,

Sing us a song tonight;
Well we’re all in the mood for prosperity,
But you’ve got us feeling uptight.

Half the nation thinks I’m a socialist,
And the others that I practice Islam.
  But they’d really raise a stink
  If they knew that I think
That America’s eternally damned.
‘Cause Washington was a dirty slave-owner
And Hamilton was probably a quear.
  Jefferson raped Sally
  In a dark Monticello alley;
Man, what am I doing here!
Sing us a song, you’re Obama-man,

Sing us a song tonight;
Well we’re all in the mood for prosperity,
But you’ve got us feeling uptight.

The reader may watch and listen to the composer’s video rendition of this song on youtube at:

America’s Attitude toward Israel Proves that the US is Still Exceptional

Part of the American gestalt has always been that the US is an exceptional country among the nations of the Earth. The exceptionalism is sometimes interpreted in different ways: some citizens believe that the country was founded under the guidance of divine providence to be the unique fount of liberty and justice for mankind; others that our system of government is to serve as the best model for how societies should organize themselves; and still others that we have a unique responsibility to salve the major wounds – accidental and purposeful – that erupt around the world. However one defines it, there is no question that a vast majority of Americans, both now and in the past, consider the United States to be exceptional in an exceedingly positive way, and they take pride in being part of it.

But not all Americans! Tragically, the President of the United States is not counted among them. He is on record, having publicly stated that his belief in American exceptionalism is no more special than what Brits or Swedes believe about their countries. How representative is he? Does he herald a new trend in American self-identification? How influential has he been in converting Americans to a more vanilla sense of our nation’s worth?

We have witnessed an event recently, which highlights dramatically that the answer to the three preceding questions is a resounding “Not at all!” The event was Prime Minister Netanyahu’s address to a joint meeting of Congress. The rousing, overwhelmingly positive and tremendously supportive reception that he received from both sides of the aisle reflects an important manifestation of continued American exceptionalism. First, this is because Netanyahu’s reception in Congress is completely consistent with overall American attitudes toward Israel. Second, such a reception, channeling the people’s attitude, would be impossible anywhere else in the world. For, sad to say, a mere 66 years since the United States extinguished the Nazi menace, the nations of the world have reverted to a blatant and virulent anti-Semitism, which is reflected in the nearly universal condemnation of and discrimination against the Jewish State of Israel. Except in the United States!

The people of America continue to recognize in Israel a kindred spirit – a nation devoted to freedom, justice, the rule of law, religious tolerance, equal opportunity, economic growth and the finer aspects of Western Civilization. That such recognition brands us in the US as exceptional is a truly sad commentary on the state of the planet. That our dear President is among those who are blind to the kindred relationship is bitterly ironic. But it does not change the fact that the American people inhabit a truly exceptional nation – and our eagerness to stand with Israel is a testament to that fact.
_____
This article appeared in The American Thinker blog at

Middle East Convulsions: How Apprehensive Should an Israeli Be?

Think of the average beleaguered Israeli as he contemplates his environment during any period in recent times. On the north, south and east he is confronted by blood thirsty enemies (Hezbollah, Hamas, Iran) who make no secret of their intense desire to kill him, his family and his countrymen. Other neighbors (Syria, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Iraq) harbor the same thoughts but are more circumspect about expressing them. And of course there are the two neighbors (Egypt, Jordan) with whom he is “at peace”; but it is a frigid peace, not supported by those country’s citizens whose attitude, he believes, could easily blossom into hostility and belligerence.

When he casts his eye further abroad, he finds a European continent that – a mere 70 years after the Holocaust – has reverted to virulent anti-Semitism, now expressed openly as anti-Israel opinion and policy. He takes some solace that his country has established successful economic and political connections with distant, but important nations like India, Japan, Australia and even China. But these nations are unlikely to provide significant aid in any forthcoming conflagration. Worst of all, he is tortured by the thought that his long-time friend, benefactor and protector, the United States of America, is now led by a man and an administration that is hostile to his country and its interests. He senses that the people of the US are still with him, but it is the treacherous, Moslem-praising leader who will make the critical decision on any day that the Israeli Prime Minister has to call for help – God forbid!

Most demoralizing of all is the weak nature of his country’s leadership. Barak, Livni, Olmert and all the other left-wingers act as if they are ready to surrender and move to New Jersey. Even Netanyahu continues to disappoint. He talks the talk, but repeatedly fails to walk the walk. How he allowed himself and his nation to be completely humiliated by Obama was disgraceful. And Bibi seems to have bought into the Oslo delusion that has wreaked political havoc on his nation for 18 years. Where is King David? Israel needs him desperately.

Now, on top of all the above, the region has been racked by political convulsions whose origins are unclear, whose leadership is mysterious, whose meaning is uncertain and whose outcome for relations between Israel and its neighbors is unpredictable. Given the history of the Middle East, what little we know of what is transpiring and who is driving, it and with the proclivities of the Arab street as measured in recent polls, it is virtually impossible to be optimistic that any of these upheavals will prove beneficial to Israeli-Arab relations.

Furthermore, the situation is so confusing that it is difficult for Israel to prepare contingency plans. Will Egypt revert to a frontline state of military confrontation? Will Abdullah survive? If Assad falls, could what replaces him be even worse? How shall Israel deal with simultaneous attacks from Hamas, Hezbollah and perhaps Syria or Iran? Might Egypt or Jordan or even Saudi Arabia join the fray? What to do about nascent Iranian nuclear weapons? Can Israel hang on until the back-stabbing Obama administration is dismissed; and will a new US administration restore formerly friendly relations?

In light of all this, it would not be surprising if the state of apprehension of our beleaguered Israeli were indeed very high. And yet, Israel and its citizens appear to go about their affairs seemingly almost oblivious to the sea of troubles that engulfs them. Business is humming – especially in the technology sector. The arts are flourishing. Social life is vibrant. The IDF exudes confidence. Immigration continues at a modest, but steady pace. Morale has not plunged. Are their heads up their derrieres? Or is there some reasonable explanation?

I believe that there is, and I will attempt to provide it – although in the end, the reader may wonder about its reasonableness. Yes, there are grave causes for concern. The threats are real, exigent and existential. The ability to meet them demands wisdom and courage – qualities that have not always been present in sufficient quantities among Israel’s leaders. The consequences of a failure to deal with any of the threats that might materialize could be cataclysmic.

So what! What’s new! Our average Israeli responds: “We’ll deal with it. Ain Breira!” In short, the more things change, the more they stay the same. From before its birth, Israel has constantly faced overwhelmingly negative odds and insurmountable obstacles:

  • In the 30s and 40s, while millions of its potential citizens were slaughtered in Europe, a rag-tag bunch of settlers had to cope with murderous Arab raids and pogroms, a hostile British administration, a fragile economy, severe internal political schisms and a lack of international support. Yet the State was created.
  • In the 50s, the young nation faced marauding fedayeen, the absorbtion of more than a million extremely poor and unsophisticated immigrants, a socialist economy and the extreme enmity of its neighbors. Yet the foundation of the State was laid, the Army was formed and the desert began to bloom.
  • In the 60s, the crises were Pan-Arab nationalism, betrayal by their French benefactor, an indifferent world grown Holocaust weary, Nasser and another betrayal – this time by Lyndon Johnson. Yet Israel triumphed in the Six Day War and emerged a regional power.
  • The 70s brought the devastating Yom Kippur War, a UN resolution declaring Israel to be a racist entity, an even more socialist economy and hyperinflation. Yet Israel underwent its first peaceful transition of power to a political party other than Labor and the Sephardic community was nearly completely integrated into society.
  • In the 80s and 90s, Israel had the misfortune of the first intifada, the first Lebanon debacle and the Oslo calamity. Yet Netanyahu (as Prime Minister and later as Finance Minister) broke the socialist yoke and opened Israel to free markets and entrepreneurial activity befitting its populace, and the results have been spectacular.

Now the 00s and 10s bring all that was mentioned earlier. But in fact throughout the entire 80-year scenario: the enmity of the Arab/Moslem world has been constant; the support of the rest of the world has been tepid at best and totally absent at worst; and existential threats have been ever present. Yet Israel and its people have survived – even prospered. As if to highlight that assessment, after a century of Jews bemoaning the fact that Moses selected the one parcel of land in the Middle East devoid of oil, Israel has recently discovered abundant quantities of natural gas in its offshore environs.

The re-creation of the nation of Israel after nearly two millennia of statelessness is one of the greatest historical events of the last 500 years. Whether this happened through the grace of God, the power of faith by an ancient people or the fickle whim of chance, the people of Israel are keenly aware of their special place in history. Neither they, nor their God are about to let the advent of such a miracle be washed away in less than a century.
_______
This article appeared both in The American Thinker at

Is Death an Unintended Consequence of Liberalism?

A Review of J.R. Dunn’s “Death by Liberalism”

It has taken a long time for the American people to catch on, but it is now widely recognized that when well-intentioned liberal policies are implemented, the consequences – both intended and unintended – are hardly beneficial. Representative examples include: the aggressive promotion of ethanol, which has resulted in higher corn prices and the removal of arable land from food production; boosts in minimum wage rates, which have repeatedly caused higher unemployment among teens and lower income workers; and an obsessive emphasis on removing religion from the public square, which has contributed to increased teen pregnancy, drug use and other forms of moral decay. And these are some of the more benign consequences of liberal governance run amok.

It’s not like these deleterious outcomes of core liberal principles had not been predicted; but neither the predictions nor the outcomes have diminished liberal enthusiasm for these harmful policies. In fact, this is a well-known story that has been told many times. But in his book, Death by Liberalism: The Fatal Outcome of Well-Meaning Liberal Policies, J.R. Dunn raises the level on the nature of the accusation to a height that is far above the usual critiques. In his study of the effects of liberal social and fiscal policy, Dunn seeks to establish that the ultimate product of most core liberal policies easily eclipses negative agricultural, monetary or social consequences; he claims that the ultimate result of supposedly benignly intentioned, but misguided liberal programs is in fact death. In a passionate and scathing description of how liberalism leads directly and indirectly to the death of scores of its beneficiaries, i.e., US citizens, Dunn charges that the actualization of numerous liberal policies amounts to democide – the murder of a nation’s citizens by its own government.

While the underlying thesis of Dunn’s book is rather unappetizing, the presentation is quite compelling. His research is thorough, his grasp of detail is encyclopedic and his command of economics, sociology and political theory is impressive. He is at ease discussing a wide variety of topics: from nuclear power to illegal immigration, from crime prevention to lustration, from social security to DDT. He marshals a far-reaching roster of “crimes” for which he indicts liberalism as the primary culprit. Many of these are well-known and a few reflect new insights on his part. Together, they comprise a damning indictment of twentieth century liberalism for crimes against humanity.

To give a flavor of the indictment, I supply here a few of the grenades that Dunn lobs at liberals, their beliefs, policies and “achievements.”

  • Totalitarian Mass Murder. Dunn first reminds us that in the past century, democide in the form of mass murder was committed by Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union, Mao’s China and by Pol Pot in Cambodia. In the first three, the deaths numbered in the tens of millions. Of course, the victims were not US citizens, but Dunn emphasizes that the brutal statist policies imposed by those regimes were extreme versions of domestic liberal inclinations.
  • Silent Spring. The only other modern mass murderer with tens of millions of victims notched on her belt is Rachel Carson – although again the slaughter occurred overseas. The ban on DDT that resulted almost exclusively from Carson’s work allowed the resurgence of malaria, which had been nearly eradicated worldwide. The governments that acceded to the demands of various, leftist-oriented international health organizations are responsible for the deaths of millions of their citizens – but the source for the tragedy is Rachel Carson.

With these as preamble, Dunn goes on to describe numerous domestic liberal programs that resulted in American deaths.

·        Crime. Liberal policies intended to alter how our society deals with crime gained preeminence in the 1960s. By emphasizing rehabilitation over punishment; by ascribing criminal behavior to a reaction against social injustice in lieu of evil impulses; by enhancing criminal rights over police responsibilities; liberal policies spawned a 30-year crime spree that resulted in needless death and injury. Says Dunn: “The great crime wave of the late twentieth century is a disaster that did not have to happen. For three decades, this nation’s criminal element…held the country hostage. Crime rates skyrocketed, increasing several hundred percent across the board. Criminals ran law-abiding citizens off their own streets, gained effective control of many neighborhoods, and violated the peace of many cities. The number of victims is incalculable, the amount of damage – financial, social, and personal – beyond reckoning…As a frontier culture, Americans knew how to handle crime. Justice was swift, punishment was certain, and if formal law enforcement faltered, the citizenry was prepared to act. Each of those elements failed during the great crime explosion. The criminal justice system broke down completely. The police were constantly undermined. The citizenry were actively restrained and threatened with legal sanctions if they made the most basic effort to defend themselves or their property… the crime explosion didn’t just happen. Like urban renewal and welfare, it was the result of policy, a deliberate attempt to remake the criminal justice system in the image of an ideal.”

·        Abortion. Once again, I let Dunn speak for himself: “Liberals have long claimed a monopoly over compassion in the public sphere. Self-styled empathy is basic to liberal identity. Liberals are the Good Samaritans of American political life. No opportunity to display humanity is too small, no effort too great. They nest in trees for months to checkmate the logger. They travel to northern Labrador to defend baby seals. They walk the meanest streets to hand out clean needles. Threatened species, ethnic minorities, the homeless, refugees, migrants, professional criminals…virtually no outcast group finds itself beyond liberal protection. With one exception: the millions of unborn children aborted over the past four decades. They alone fail to qualify. They alone found themselves outside the circle of liberal compassion. How can this be explained? …A major flaw of liberal thinking…lies in what G.K. Chesterton termed ‘chronological snobbery,’ the contention that the more ancient the concept, the more it is based on irrationality and ignorance, and the easier it can be set aside. Nothing could be further from the truth. A precept with millennia of practice behind it is one based on the firmest foundation imaginable. You meddle with it at your peril, and with due regard for the consequences. Roe v. Wade challenged exactly such a precept, and the consequences were dramatic. There is not a single aspect of American life that does not bear its mark. Roe distorted the relationships between men and women, husbands and wives, parents and children, politician and voter, clergy and worshippers, government and people… Roe set a blaze that to this day still ravages our culture.”

·        Gun Control. The communities in America that have the least restrictive carry laws enjoy significantly lower crime rates than those with the most severe restrictions. As John Lott has demonstrated in numerous studies, gun control laws – a favorite of liberal politicians – needlessly get people killed or maimed.

·        Homelessness. The 1970-1980s combination of the emptying of the nation’s mental hospitals together with irresponsible urban renewal projects that destroyed lower income neighborhoods has rendered the mentally challenged of America prey to disease, crime and weather.

·        Environmentalism. From CAFE standards that force Americans into tiny, unsafe cars to the banning of fluorocarbons that has condemned asthma patients to needless suffering, the pursuit of mindless environmentalism has resulted in unintended harm and death.

·        Child Welfare. Child Protective Services are unresponsive and unaccountable bureaucracies that lose children when they are not placing them in environments that prove dangerous – and often lethal.

·        Illegal Immigration. The refusal to enforce immigration laws has resulted in crimes – often murder – that would not have occurred if liberal attitudes on “undocumented workers” had not prevailed.

·        FDA. Dunn recounts a familiar story in which FDA incompetence and delay led to the tragic death of an afflicted individual. It is impossible to estimate the number of patient deaths caused by FDA ineptitude and adherence to bureaucratic rules.

·        Euthanasia. Liberal pursuit of a “right to death” and “death with dignity” has fostered the occurrence of predictable deaths – e.g., in the back of Kevorkian’s van.

·        Health Care. Not surprisingly, Dunn believes that Obamacare will lead to rationing of health care and the premature death of seniors who are short changed.

Here’s how Dunn wraps it up: “In the final half of the twentieth century, up to 262,000 Americans died of crimes that would not have been committed but for liberal interference with the criminal justice system. Up to 121,000 died in automobile accidents directly attributable to the CAFE standards. Unknown thousands have perished due to the failure of other forms of government activity. (It would be a surprise if the numbers weren’t somewhat murky – it’s not as if we can find this information on a USA.gov website.) A large number of children have died under the ’protection’ of DYS and similar agencies. Many of the ‘homeless’ – the chronic mentally ill thrust out into the streets – have died in miserable circumstances. Individuals from all social levels have died due to various forms of environmental legislation. Others have been killed by rogue illegal immigrants. Many sick individuals have suffered premature death from being denied necessary medical drugs thanks to the FDA’s convoluted certification process…We scarcely know how to even estimate the total [number of deaths]. The best we can say is that between 400,000 and 500,000 Americans have in the past century died prematurely thanks to government policies, victims of the American democide. That number is a match for all our fatalities in the past century’s wars. It is greater than all American deaths from epidemic disease. [But] the total doesn’t amount to much in the blood-soaked history of the Age of Massacre. It scarcely compares to the numbers achieved by Nazi Germany, the USSR, Red China, or any of the other champions of extermination. It has required half a century for the US to achieve that figure. The Hutu mobs of Rwanda, using only machetes, surpassed it within weeks. It scarcely rates an asterisk in the past century’s long record of atrocity. But it happened in our country. It happened in America [emphasis added].”

Wow! Now readers of this journal will know that I am as fervent as Dunn in my assessment of the harm that the liberal hegemony has inflicted on our country over the last century. But murder? Normally, the dastardly deed manifests in two varieties – premeditated or spontaneous (i.e., 1st or 2nd degree). In both cases, an element of malice must be present. Failing that, the taking of a human life is usually classified as manslaughter. That too comes in two flavors – voluntary and involuntary. The distinction is whether the deed followed a purposeful act by the perpetrator or whether it occurred incidental to an act by the killer.

It seems to me that it is incorrect to call any of FDR, LBJ, Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton or Barack Obama a murderer. That would imply that they pursued their mad dash to liberal nirvana completely cognizant of the fact that their policies would inevitably result in the death of US citizens – i.e., of those whom they were sworn to protect. I doubt for an instant that any of the fab five that I identified would accept any of Dunn’s list of horrors as being caused by any of their programs – and even if by some miracle they did, they would surely plead surprise rather than malignant intent.

Manslaughter is a more makeable case – especially of the involuntary kind. Even voluntary manslaughter is a bit of a stretch. It implies a purposefulness that is difficult to discern. In their utopian myopia, it is inconceivable to hard core liberals that their well-intentioned policies could cause harm to unintended beneficiaries – much less their death.

The arguments in Dunn’s book are persuasive; they trace a plausible trajectory from liberal programs to the death of innocents. But labeling these deaths as democide – the murder of people by their government – is exceedingly inflammatory and not justified. If I must coin a term, I’ll say incidentalcide – the death of citizens from unintended consequences of their government’s actions. Of course, that does not mean that it shouldn’t stop. However, the effort to bring about its cessation is not aided by overly flagrant accusations that cannot be substantiated.
______
This review also appeared in The Intellecrual Conservative at