| Republicans
for Humility Keeping the Faith |
"....It
really depends upon how our nation
conducts itself in foreign policy. If we're an arrogant nation, they'll
resent us.....but if we're a
humble nation they'll respect us." George W. Bush,
October 11, 2000
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Statement
of Principles
As Americans, conservatives,
and
Republicans, we believe in the principles
espoused by George W. Bush as
the candidate we supported in the 2000 election. These principles
include a
belief in individual liberty, a free society, limited government,
fiscal responsibility, and a foreign policy based upon both strength
(while avoiding "nation
building", overextension,
or injudicious
intervention around the world) and humility
in dealing with our allies
and other nations.
We believe that in several vital areas that President Bush's policies have not reflected these values:
While we admire the President's determination and intent, we believe he erred in replacing the conservative, non-interventionist, limited government values, with which he campaigned and was elected, with an ideology and policies of total global dominance and preemptive invasion.
Not only do the majority of Americans believe the invasion of Iraq to be a mistake, but this view is now shared by many conservatives and Republicans who supported the invasion at the time. Continued
denial of
the realities of Iraq is particularly relevant, as key policy-makers
who were influential in making the decision to preemptively invade
Iraq, and who remain advocates of similar regime change in Syria, Iran,
and elsewhere, remain
in their positions of power. It
is not by
accident that
historical observers have noted the incompatibility of
the policing of
a wide-ranging empire with the preservation of the individual liberties
which are the basis upon which our republic was founded. If we choose
to
preserve our liberties, we must re-commit to the values candidate Bush
professed before his election, values of individual liberty, limited
government, and a foreign policy of strength which avoids "nation
building", grandiose restructuring of world society with multiple
regime changes imposed by a foreign power, overextension of troops,
injudicious intervention, unilateralism and preemptive
invasions. We must realize that the promise of a security
achieved by total dominance is a chimera. We cannot expect allies or
foes to ever acquiesce, to ever rest, for insurgencies to ever be
suppressed, while the world is dominated by one nation which, however
benevolent, alone retains the power and right of preemptive invasion. We must commit to a strategy with less grandiose goals, which accepts a world in which we are less than omnipotent. While each nation has the right to act unilaterally to protect its own shores, we must more effectively nurture alliances with allies we truly regard as peers in seeking to solutions to the world's problems. We must
acknowledge
the arrogance of failing to recognize that there are those who hate us
for our policies - for what we do, not just for who we are. We
must recognize that even a great and wonderful nation can err, and we
must be willing
to re-evaluate our policies, and must be willing to change when
that is the just and proper thing to do. In a world in
which
terrorists have the capacity to acquire and utilize a nuclear "dirty
bomb", it is frightening to contemplate accepting any role other than
that of total dominance, of accepting any degree of insecurity. But total
security is
an illusion, and is not truly a option open to us. Rather, the
choice we
face is whether or not it is wise to pursue this illusive goal of
global dominance, this mirage of total security, even when the pursuit
of this goal alienates our friends, inflames our enemies, and causes
ongoing escalating losses of the civil liberties we so cherish.
We must consider if our actions actually decrease the likelihood of an
unthinkable outcome, or make such an outcome more probable. Perhaps words
of the
leader who led, as supreme commander of Allied military forces in
Europe,
through the dark days of
World War II, and who, as President, guided the nation through the
nuclear terrors of
the Cold War, Dwight D. Eisenhower,
spoken in reference to the nuclear
arms race, might have meaning when applied to the war on terrorism: “There is no way in which a
country can satisfy the craving for absolute security, but it can
bankrupt itself morally and economically in attempting to reach that
illusory goal through arms alone.”
“The problem in defense is how far you can go without destroying from within what you are trying to defend from without.”
The policies
of the
Bush Administration, which brought us into a war for the purpose of
disarming
a tyrant, promoted with cherry-picked and misinterpreted intelligence,
now threaten to embroil us in an unending quest to democratize the
entire
Middle East with military force, in the name of "expanding
freedom". Bush Administration policies continue to increase the
size of government and of entitlements, financed with deficit
financing, while falsely claiming this to be "conservatism".
Bush
Administration policies continue to increase the Orwellian intrusion
of government into our lives, with erosion of our civil liberties, in
the name of "security", all the while pursuing foreign policies which
increase terrorist recruitment, and diminish our safety and
security. We believe the
misguided policies of the Bush Administration, in contrast to the
values espoused by candidate George W. Bush, have damaged our foreign
relations,
distorted and abused conservative principles, and endanger the American
people. For
conservatives and
Republicans, it would be far better to lose one election, than to
enable the further consolidation of power by those who distort and
compromise American values, who discredit the conservatism they claim
to represent, and are committed to an ideology leading to reckless
foreign policy, expansion of government, and diminution of individual
liberties. Perhaps
counter-intuitively, history has shown that true conservative values
have faired better, that the growth in the size
and budget of the
federal government has been less,
under a divided
government, with
Republicans in control of Congress and a Democratic President, than
under a government in which Republicans control both the
Presidency and Congress. History has also shown that a
political party and movement best regains its moral bearings, and
experiences regenerative
growth, when it does not control the
Presidency. We believe that America, the Republican Party, and the conservative movement would be well served by the defeat of George W. Bush in November. August 20, 2004 ![]() |
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"To
announce that there should be no criticism of the president, or that we
are to stand by the president, right or wrong, it is not only
unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American
people."Theodore Roosevelt |
| Statement of Principles |
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