| LeftOut
by Daryl Moore
MIGHTY REAL
Gen. Wesley Clark stands out in the Democratic
field
Generally, I don’t fawn over candidates
who supported Nixon and Reagan. And, generally,
I don’t find myself supporting a candidate
who praised George W. Bush at any Republican fundraisers.
But, generally, there’s not a general who
is running as a Democrat for the presidency. This
time there is. And I’m a huge Wesley Clark
fan.
What’s not to like? No candidate—Democrat
or Republican—has a more impressive biography.
Born in Chicago in 1944, Clark lost his father
when he was young, so Clark and his mother moved
to Little Rock, Arkansas, to live with his grandparents.
He was a star swimmer and top high school student
in Little Rock.
Clark received an appointment to West Point, where
he graduated first in his class. He was a Rhodes
scholar. He served in Vietnam, was wounded in
combat, and received two Bronze Stars, the Purple
Heart, and the Silver Star. (During this time,
Dubya was hiding out in the National Guard to
avoid combat, and Howard Dean was snow skiing
in Aspen—on a medical deferment.) After
obtaining the rank of four-star general, and after
serving as NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander,
General Clark received the Presidential Medal
of Freedom.
Running as a Democrat, Clark provides the party
an opportunity to nominate a candidate who is
untouchable on national security. Running from
the South, Clark provides the party an opportunity
to carry some Southern states, which is necessary
if the Democrats are to reclaim the White House.
Still, many of the Democratic faithful are afraid
of Clark. They say he’s not a “real”
Democrat, as reflected by his voting for Nixon
and Reagan. Who in the Democratic primary is a
“real” Democrat? Kerry, Gephardt,
and Edwards, who supported the resolution for
invading Iraq in a pre-emptive strike? Dr. Dean,
who called Medicare “one of the worst federal
programs ever”? Joseph Lieberman, the Republican-lite
candidate who is politically dead and doesn’t
yet know it? That leaves Al Sharpton, Carol Mosely
Braun, and Dennis Kucinich. And even if they are
“real” Democrats, none of them is
polling 1 percent.
I’ve attended two Wesley Clark events and
he sounds like a “real” Democrat to
me. He disdains John Ashcroft, who he calls “unpatriotic”
for erasing individual freedoms that Clark fought
for. He blasts the Bush administration for “deceiving
the American public” into supporting a premature
invasion into Iraq, even though there was no “causal
nexus” between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda,
or Iraq and September 11. He talks about tax relief
for the real middle class—not just for those
who earn more than $200,000/year, which seems
middle class to King George and Vice President
Halliburton.
And General Clark is vocally pro-choice, pro-affirmative
action, and pro-gay rights.
Choice. “It’s a decision the woman
has to make … It’s her choice.”
Affirmative action. “I know this firsthand
from my 34 years in the United States military:
Affirmative action was essential to creating the
diverse officer corps we need to defend our country.
Throughout my career, I have seen the benefits
of seeking out qualified minority candidates for
leadership positions—and I am a beneficiary
of their leadership.”
Gay rights. “It’s not right that people
should hide their sexuality. Don’t Ask,
Don’t Tell violates the principles of honesty,
candor, and full development of the human potential
that have been secrets of the military’s
success.”
As General Clark himself has said, if he were
a Republican, these positions would “make
him the loneliest Republican in politics.”
I don’t care whom Clark voted for in 1972
or 1980. He seems like a real Democrat now. And
he seems like he has a real chance of taking the
White House away from Bush.
In fact, he reminds me of another Democrat who
grew up in Little Rock, left Arkansas, and became
a Rhodes scholar, entered politics, and ended
up defeating an incumbent named George Bush.
Except the general has something Clinton lacks:
self-discipline. And that makes me a real Wesley
Clark disciple, because he’s real enough
for me.
Writing from the liberal end of the spectrum,
Houston attorney Daryl Moore has a general practice
and is board certified in civil and appellate
law.
If you have any comments about this article,
please email them to letters@outsmartmagazine.com.
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