Wednesday, May 27, 2009 - 6:04 PM

For those of you who have followed this blog from its tortured beginnings in a small reed basket floating down the Nile, you are aware that I have struggled mightily with the idea that an American minority group with strong ties to a foreign state has gained control of the mechanisms of power in Washington. On the one hand I find the idea almost irresistible given that it is supported by leading academics from important American universities. Academics, after all, are seldom wrong (because they are very smart people) and are always scrupulously objective. On the other, how can it be that the few can muscle around the many, particularly when the few have historically been systematically and often cruelly discriminated against throughout our history as a nation and even before that? After all, Madison notwithstanding, isn't this a country based on the idea that the majority can muscle around the minorities?
But as a part-time academic myself, I am also capable of being objective and, on occasion, when my children are not present, even right. The only difference is that for me, it happens for just a couple hours a week during years when I am teaching or at those other times I am visiting my office at the Carnegie Endowment (which is what, after all, a "visiting scholar" is supposed to do.) So it was today that I had a minor epiphany as I walked through the Carnegie Endowment parking lot. There, wending my way among the rows and rows of aging Priuses with their regulation assortment of Obama, ACK, and "Commit Random Acts of Kindness" stickers, I finally found myself forced to accept the hard truth that the vaunted, controversial, hard-to-acknowledge lobby was real...try as my skeptical Semitic brain did to deny the obvious truth.
Recognition finally came because today's newspapers were full of evidence I could no longer ignore. It was absolutely clear that a minority group for whom the words of foreign leaders had the weight of law on some of the most basic of life's issues had achieved stunning power in Washington. The disproportion between their numbers and their influence was mind-boggling. Further, it was also clear that most Americans, blinded by decades of propaganda and smooth talking champions in America's media and political classes, were oblivious to the often inflexible, sometimes confrontational attitudes of their overseas mentors. Those mentors, inhabiting a small state created to meet the needs of just one religious group, had been battling other such groups for thousands of years at a cost of countless lives, and yet these American hyphenates remained committed to their ancient traditions.
No, I had to accept the reality that The Lobby existed exactly as described in best-selling literature and on well-respected blogs. After all, these clearly well-organized, crafty Catholic-Americans were -- despite representing only a quarter of the American people -- on the verge of augmenting their already defining majority on the U.S. Supreme Court. It was striking in fact that every single member of the Court's conservative wing, including the Chief Justice, are Catholics as is the court's noted swing-vote, Anthony Kennedy. And now, this lobby's latest puppet, Barack Obama, has played right into their hands with his nomination of Sonia Sotomayor, a woman whose confirmation would give the Catholics two-thirds of the votes on the nation's highest court.
Admittedly, Sotomayor would bring to the court more federal court experience than any justice in three-quarters of a century, a distinguished record as justice, and a story that was movingly and inspiringly American (despite her parents birth in a long-disputed territorial remnant of a fallen empire.) Admittedly, as the first Hispanic nominee and a legal centrist nominated for her first federal job by President George H.W. Bush, she was also a brilliant choice for a political perspective. In fact, even walking through that garage full of low-emissions, high mileage vehicles with "Pray for Whirled Peas" bumper stickers, it was clear to me that she was a truly first class selection. And so it was, ironically, that in the very first moments I had come to accept the existence of The Lobby I found myself no longer concerned about it because it was hard to dispute the qualifications of its latest representative to the court...or, for that matter, despite my ideological differences with some of her Catholic brethren, with any of their qualifications either. (Well, most of them, anyway.) Either it was that or the fact that moments later I had to leap aside to avoid the stealthy approach from behind me of yet another Prius which, when running quietly on electric power in places like parking lots, are the real silent killers of America's vital think tank population. (Now there is a group with hugely disproportionate and frightening influence on Washington...talk about your revenge of the nerds.)
(On a vaguely related note: I thought it was interesting that the same CQ journalist who broke the story of Jane Harman's interventions on behalf of AIPAC, today broke a story indicating the CIA regularly lied to Congress. Hmmmm. And who was served by both these stories? I wonder if anyone in Speaker Pelosi's office has any ideas.)
SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images
Well, Obama's managing to turn our economy into that of Zimbabwe's (the rise in the cost of capital due to the massive debt, and the skyrocketing oil prices due to his energy policies are things obviously none of you Obamaphiles want to talk about, but the hyperinflation is coming), so why not have tribalism-based political appointments and finish the job of turning the country into a 3rd-world craphole?
That would be the only explanation for such a non-sensical post. While you can argue there is a Catholic vote, that is not the same as a Catholic lobby. If there were, wouldn't the matter of illegal immigration be settled, since the Catholic Church is for amnesty? Abortion would be illegal, and the death penalty would be gone. Given that nothing of the sort has happened, the idea of a Catholic lobby is an amusing, if poorly written attempt to satirize Walt-Mearsheimer.
On an unrelated matter, the Israelis just told Secretary Clinton to take a flying leap with regard to its colonies, I mean, settlements on the West Bank. I wonder what gives them so much confidence. It couldn't possibly because AIPAC is a black belt in the lobbying biz, could it. No, no. Never mind that.
Er...um...it's not too much time at sea. I just sold my boat. Thank goodness. Proved to myself that old adage that the two best days in a boat-owners life are the day he buys the boat and the day he sells it. Well, come to think of it, maybe not. Selling it was much better. As for your comment about my post...sorry, but irony alert. This wasn't really a post about genuine concerns about a "catholic lobby"...it was more of a comment on the lobby obsessed. Or those who attribute some moves (those they disagree with) to the power of lobbyists and others (those they agree with) to sound policy judgement.
Glad to hear you were able to sell your boat. In this economy, I would think selling such large-ticket items would be a huge headache. As for the faulty irony-detector, that is what happens when I don't follow my own advice, which is to wait at least 2 hours before responding to a blog post. An immediate response almost always leads to such confusion.
Your instincts about boat sales in the current economy are absolutely correct. It took three years and in the end, we lost massive amounts of money. When they sell you the boat, they talk about great resale value...what they neglect to tell you is that it is almost impossible to resell a boat. Which is why people have taken to just letting them go, floating off into America's waterways...
In any event, I don't know what I was thinking in the first place,a Jewish boy from New Jersey on a boat! Ridiculous.
. . . and I think maybe both of you have missed the boat, and discounted the likelihood that the Catholics have been slow to push their peculiar agenda because it's their strategy to lull us into indifference. Once they have the beltway locked up, watch out. We'll all be wearing plaid skirts and knee socks.
is what it is. No one's denying that.
Remarkable post, in any case.
David Rothkopf is the CEO and Editor-at-Large of Foreign Policy. His new book, "Power, Inc.: The Epic Rivalry Between Big Business and Government and the Reckoning that Lies Ahead" is due out from Farrar, Straus & Giroux on March 1.
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