Rod Dreher writes on NRO:
I don’t at all get this attitude among many on the right that our sworn duty is to back anything President Bush and the GOP choose to do. We are conservatives before we are Republicans, are we not? Facts are better than dreams, and the fact is, the president is acting like the second coming of Lyndon B. Johnson with his spending proposals on Katrina thing, and it is past time for the grassroots to have hit the wall on the spendthrift Republican president and the spendthrift Republican Congress. What is the point of electing Republicans if they’re going to spend worse than Democrats? Moreover, I’m absolutely with Michelle Malkin on this outrageous Bush cronyism regarding the new Immigration and Customs Enforcement chief over at the Department of Homeland Security. I find it impossible to believe that this administration or their GOP Congressional enablers care about enforcing the immigration laws of this country. And I find it impossible to believe that this doesn’t matter. A lot.
At some point, we conservatives have got to ask ourselves if we stand for principles, or merely maintaining power. We have got to ask ourselves just which conservative goals are being served by the Republican governing status quo. We have got to ask ourselves if our conservatism stands for much more than The Democrats Must Lose. I was having a beer with a fellow religious and social conservative that first Friday after Katrina, and we were both just livid about the administration’s response. We both agreed that we’d vote in a heartbeat in 2008 for a social liberal like Rudy Giuliani, who inspires confidence in his competence and judgment, over the present crowd that we both helped vote into power. I hope next year brings forth a raft of primary challengers to GOP Congressional incumbents. If we go on like this for much longer, it will be a long time before the American people trust the government to our side again. The Democrats aren’t going to remain more hapless than the Republicans forever, and the denial in which too many Republicans wish to live in right now does the cause of conservatism no good.
Now, I’ve long suspected that Jon Podhoretz was actually a pen name for a liberal woman and this would tend to support that notion. “His” response to Dreher is long on emotion and assertions and short to the point of nonexistent on facts to back them up.
No question that conservatives shouldn’t offer blind support to Republican politicians, but I have to dissent strongly from my dear friend Rod Dreher’s post, which is hysterical and unjust, and does the president a profound disservice.
Translation: You may be my friend, but you’re being mean and unfair to someone I like. I think what you said is wrong because I don’t like it, but I’m not going to tell you why because my position is based on feelings which I do not understand and cannot explain.