Saturday, December 10, 2005

Honoring Dissent

The Left dissents from the war in Iraq. They snipe and complain and demand retreat on a timetable, assuring those of us who support the war that dissent such as theirs is highly patriotic.

I quibble with their spin on this situation, but let's let it stand for now just to observe the Left in action when somebody dissents from their line on Iraq. One, in fact, who ran on the Democratic ticket with Al Gore in 2000--Senator Joe Lieberman. Senator Lieberman supports the war:

Mr. Lieberman particularly infuriated his colleagues when he pointed out at a conference here that President Bush would be commander in chief for three more years and said that "it's time for Democrats who distrust President Bush to acknowledge that."

"We undermine the president's credibility at our nation's peril," Mr. Lieberman said.

His colleagues should be racing to honor a man for dissenting from their party's major position on the war. They should be hailing is patriotic credentials for his refusal to go along with the mood of his own party.

But you'd only think that if you know nothing of the modern Left. The leaders of the Left will not tolerate a lone dissenter and are attacking Senator Lieberman for his heresy:

Much of the open criticism has been from liberal groups and House members. But his comments have also rankled Democrats in the Senate. Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, phoned Mr. Lieberman this week to express concerns with his views, Mr. Reid's aide said. ...

"I completely disagree with Mr. Lieberman," Ms. Pelosi said at a news conference. "I believe that we have a responsibility to speak out if we think that the course of action that our country is on is not making the American people safer." ...

This week, for example, former Gov. Lowell P. Weicker Jr. criticized his continued support of the Iraq war and said that if no candidate challenged the senator on it next year, he would consider running. ...

Mr. Lieberman faces trouble in other quarters in his home state. Although few elected Democrats would criticize him publicly, several Democratic activists promised retaliation at the polls.

James H. Dean, brother of Howard Dean, chairman of the Democratic National Committee, lives in Connecticut and heads Democracy for America, a group that is gathering signatures on the Internet for a letter that criticizes the senator.

An aide to James Dean said he and others from the group would deliver the letter to Mr. Lieberman's office in Hartford on Tuesday. The aide said the letter had 30,000 signatures.

Other Democratic activists warned that they might try to organize a primary challenge against Mr. Lieberman, specifically because of his position on the war.

Tom Matzzie, the Washington director for MoveOn.org, a liberal advocacy group with 10,000 members in Connecticut, said it would consider a challenge if the right candidate came along.

"It's like a betrayal," Mr. Matzzie said of Mr. Lieberman's stand on the war. "He is cheering the Bush Iraq policy at a time when Republicans are running away from the president."

Senator Lieberman knows what he has done:

Mr. Lieberman, who remains immensely popular in his home state, is aware of the hornet's nest he has stirred.

"Some Democrats said I was being a traitor," he said in an interview on Friday, adding that he was not surprised by the reaction, "given the depth of feeling about the war."

When the only dissent you tolerate is the kind of dissent that supports our enemies rather than dissent that support our troops, isn't it time you hit the dictionary to see what that "dissent" word means?

Because I don't think it means what they think it means.