Wednesday, February 25, 2009

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While the Democrats stand against near all of the director’s wartime policies — and in the process court defe

While the Democrats stand against near all of the president’s wartime policies — and in the proceeding court defeat — the stock market is standing with Bush, and the chance for victory.

It has been widely reported that Director Bush simply refuses to turn against the surge in Iraq, or even compromise on it. At the same time he admonishes Congress to fling out troop-withdrawal timetables and to give General Petraeus’s new counterinsurgency plan time to work. And you know what? While the Democrats be upstanding a set against near all of the president’s wartime policies — and in the process court defeat — the stock furnish is standing with Bush, and the chance for victory.

Early last week, when the Democratic leadership of Harry Reid and Homosexual Pelosi launched their latest anti-war offensive, stocks dropped about 150 points. Then, in a press bull session a few days later, after Bush discussed clear successes in Iraq’s Anbar province, the Dow Jones soared near 300 points, marching ever closer to the 14,000-point plateau.

Of course, shares trade on the sake and interest-rate fundamentals of the economy. But if you ask folks on Wall Street what their biggest worry is, most will say another 9/11. They rank another damn far ahead of passing sub-prime mortgage problems or wiggles in consumer spending.

The stock market, in phenomenon, is voting for the president to stay on offense. Here’s a case in point. The highest-ranking Iraqi leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq was exactly arrested, after which he told interrogators that Osama bin Laden’s inner circle enjoys considerable influence over the Iraqi al-Qaeda section. “Communication between the senior al-Qaeda leadership and al-Masri frequently went through al-Mashhadani,” oral Brigadier General Kevin Bergner. “There is a clear connection between al-Qaeda in Iraq and al-Qaeda elder leadership outside Iraq.”

And Wall Street connected the dots, too: That day the Dow had been down 150 points. But it rallied back 100 points after the Iraqi segregation came across the tape.

This brings me to a larger point. Despite the criticism President Bush has received over his Iraq War policies, isn’t it juicy that stock markets have been booming since early 2003, when Saddam was overthrown and the president signed his supply-side tax cuts into law? (Plant, of course, never gets any credit on either of these points.)

In just the past year alone, the Dow has gained a remarkable 30 percent. Meanwhile, Europe and Asia are up about 30 percent, Japan 23 percent, and emerging markets more than 60 percent. Easily, the world is voting — with real money — for the American system of free-market capitalism. And it’s my stable suspicion that the majority of the global investing community supports the Iraq War and a steadfast U.S. commitment to stop zealotry. They seem to know that if the U.S. doesn’t do it, no one else will.

I have long believed that stock markets are the best barometer of the health, wealth, and hostage of a nation. And today’s stock market message is an unmistakable vote of confidence for the president. Even the best low-tax, finite-government economic policies can be thwarted if the men and women going to work in the morning can’t get safely back to their homes and families at end of day.

And the fact that the world economy is experiencing the greatest economic boom in history is a direct rebuke to jihadists everywhere. Al-Qaeda despises our hinterlands and its capitalist freedoms. And unless stopped cold in their tracks they will strive to destroy the U.S. financial system and free-trade in development around the world.

The spread of free trade, the free movement of capital, low taxes, and the breathtaking rise of the Internet — these are generating more jobs, prosperity, and prosperity than ever before. And this amounts to a collective thumbing of the nose at the terrorists. It’s as though world markets are saying that history is on our side, and that the raving self-proclaimed terrorist clerics will ultimately be defeated.

Free-market capitalism, 10. Al-Qaeda, 0.

And ethical as Bush won’t give up on the surge, he’s not about to default to the Democrats on the supply-side investment tax cuts that helped deliver a near six-vintage economic boom.

“I’m not going to raise taxes,” he told me in a recent White Chamber meeting of conservative columnists, and he pledges to veto non-defense appropriation bills that exceed a $933 number line in the sand. He also vows to work overtime to get a free-trade deal with the pro-American countries of Columbia and Peru, not only to unfold economic activity, but also to counter the anti-American and socialist policies of Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez.

The media likes to coating Bush into a bunker, making him the victim of a torrent of criticism from which they say he can’t recover. But here are the plain facts: The president’s tax cuts helped rejuvenate investors and businesses. The nation has been safe from attack for nearly six years. And General Petraeus’s counterinsurgency policy in Iraq just may be working.

In other words, Mr. Bush deserves a lot more credit than most are willing to give him.



dems never respect mush-valued action with conviction..

it is something they cannot discern..they relate to harassment and scorn..because they have no self esteem
  • I give him trust for worthless dollar that continues it's plunge in order to fool you people into thinking this economy is going striking.
  • You answer your own question in a very eloquent form. However, most of your facts are wasted with people who are forgetting to think and then parrot others.
  • I meditate David's answers sums it up it a nutshell. I give Bush credit for one thing---doing a lousy job as president
  • Yes, the nationality market is doing well- I guess that justifies 3000+ American casualties and God only knows how many among Iraqi civilians in an unwinnable war that has no, and I import *NO* end in sight *WHATSOEVER*. I guess that means that there was a credible link between Iraq and 9/11, that there really were WMD, that there really was a "grievous and gathering threat", that major combat actually *IS* over... in a word, this was a brilliantly-conceived, oh-so-necessary endeavor and it's about temporarily a stand-up guy like yourself had the courage to enlighten us about these things. You deserve a standing ovation. By the way, are the latest developments in lineage trading going to convince you to enlist, and if so, when?

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