In a book-report that focuses on our current Vice-President; Dick Cheney, Mondale remembers the days of the Carter administration with fondness.
“I remain enormously proud of what we did in those four years, especially that we told the truth, obeyed the law and kept the peace.”
That’s a pretty strong statement for the Vice-President of an administration that allowed Islamic fanatics to overthrow the Shah of Iran. Did the Carter administration fight back like Reagan or Bush or Cheney would have? I seem to remember an embrace of the new Iranian government by the United States (led by Jimmy Carter and Walter Mondale). After that diplomatic and peace-loving decision was executed, Carter couldn’t even retain the backbone to cut off all ties to the Shah when he let him back into our country to get treatment for the Carter/Mondale- knife he had in his back cancer at the Mayo Clinic in 1979, which of course led to the hostage crisis in Tehran that lasted 444 days.
Apparently, Carter and Mondale were such “peace” activists, they still couldn’t figure out which team they were batting for.
Carter then decided it was time to toughen things up a bit by executing Operation Eagle Claw on April 24, 1980. In this attempt to end the crisis that Carter was initially responsible for, five USAF Airmen and three U.S. Marines were tragically killed.
This was the first major Jihadist-association-happening in U.S. history that demonstrated the left’s “be nice to our enemies” plan by exercising the kind of “diplomacy” that Barack Obama is campaigning on now.
Mondale continues his fond recollections of his special relationship with Carter.
“Every Monday the two of us met privately for lunch; we could, and did, talk candidly about virtually anything.”
Apparently, devising clever military strategies was not part of their happy-meal repartee. Come to think of it, clever economic and unemployment strategies were not part of it either.
To their credit, they did manage to drum up a nomination and confirmation of Judge Anna Diggs Taylor (a left-winger), who last year struck down Bush’s NSA Spying program (with the help of the ACLU). Thankfully, just a few short weeks ago, her enemy-helping ruling was overturned.
It is apparent to me that whenever any liberal talks about “peace” or “law”, it’s just a shifty way of advocating the far stretches of both desired elements. Every decision made during their administration along with current decisions made by their judicial appointees boil down to one ideal: help the enemies escape, be nice to them, and hope they don’t hit us while our necks are buried in the sand.
Mondale might want to think back to 1984 when he decided to run against Reagan and lost in 49 out of the 50 states in this country. The only state he managed to pick up was his own of Minnesota; where even there, he only won by 3,200 votes. America remembered the backlash of thoughtless and irresponsible “be nice” policies of Democratic politicians. Either Mondale (along with left-wing blogs, front-running Democratic-Presidential candidates, and all of the mainstream media) is suffering from major political amnesia or he really does wish for the destruction of America.
What more proof do we need than the facts of Democratic policies along with Mondale’s charge of criminality against the current Vice-President?
“It was Cheney who persuaded President Bush to sign an order that denied access to any court by foreign terrorism suspects and Cheney who determined that the Geneva Conventions did not apply to enemy combatants captured in Afghanistan and Iraq.”
To begin with, it is not only Dick Cheney that understands the fact that terrorists are not uniformed combatants represented by a formal military. Moreover; if Carter and Mondale would have decided to take our enemies seriously back when they were showing the warning signs, it would have never progressed to the level that is has to today.
Forgive Bush and Cheney; sir, for attempting the clean up the mess that you and Carter made 28 years ago.






Comments
Bravo!
I recently took a trip to Simi Valley, CA to see the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library.
I thought that I might stay for about two hours, but it takes you almost four hours to go through the whole library.
Anyway, to my point.
In the recently released book, “The Reagan Diaries”, he has an entry as follows:
“Monday, May 18 [1981]
Met with [Paul] Volcker of the Fed. Reserve. Int. prime rate went to 20 today. This is “chicken little” stuff in the money mkt. based on pessimism that Cong. won’t give us what we’re asking so inflation will go up.”
20? 20?
Even if you take into account that Reagan was in office for only five months, please remember that the number “20″ didn’t surface overnight.
Yeah, I guess Mondale and Carter have a lot to be proud of during their tenures.
Tough when a boring man tries to make a 4 year yawn memorable. Then again, that period of the “National Malaise” lulled the country into a devastating toboggan slide downhill. We should enforce it in our memory for that alone.