Holman W. Jenkins, Jr. in OpinionJournal Political Diary (subscription only, a mere $3.95 a month for lots of writing like this):
It tells you something that the biggest voting bloc in support of the Iraq war is the families of soldiers fighting it (as every poll of military families shows, never mind the media’s fascination with parents who’ve become ex-Bush supporters because they want to “bring our sons homes”). Those families are the voters for whom everything changed and who are living in a new reality since Sept. 11, a reality that has barely touched the average American.
Forget terrorism. Forget the babble of John Edwards, who’s been peddling voters an image of themselves as Hooverville residents in the depths of another Great Depression. Some Americans naturally eat up the idea of themselves as victims. They’re used to having it easy (by historical standards) and want it easier. We consume so much health care that it has become a menace to our jobs and incomes, but how many Americans are even willing to be inconvenienced to fix this? Or take the nonsense about a middle class withering in the face of stagnant wages. Remove the steady influx of immigrants from the equation and household incomes have risen across the spectrum.
In World War Two, more than 10% of the U.S. population served in uniform. Today, barely one household in 700 has a member serving in Iraq or Afghanistan. Americans have just experienced the two greatest economic booms in the country’s history, the 1980s and the 1990s, interspersed by two of the shallowest, shortest recessions in the country’s history. This is not an America bestirred to face challenges and “pay any price” etc.
A certain Democratic pundit [sc. Mr. Jenkins’ Wall Street Journal colleague Al Hunt] routinely accuses Mr. Bush of failing to ask Americans to “sacrifice anything.” Notice that every Kerry attack line, however, seems to suggest President Bush is asking Americans to risk and sacrifice too much. Yet the pundit may be right. Mr. Bush’s biggest problem is that he’s prodding America to rise to an occasion at a time when the country feels little natural inclination to get off the couch.
“The biggest voting bloc in support of the Iraq war is the families of the soldiers fighting it” ought to be the opening line of a Bush ad.
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