For example, look at this code-laden excerpt from Amy Sullivan (emphasis mine):
This doesn't mean Democrats have to make their campaigns all about national security and culture. Far from it. But they do need to suck it up and accept something Republicans realized a long time ago: You can't tell Americans they must care about what you want to discuss; you must discuss what they care about.
Moving on in the excerpt from Sullivan, we find what I find to be the most mind-blowing and frustrating contradictions of the Democratic hawk position revealed. That basic argument of the "credibility on national security" code is that Democrats are losing elections because they hold unpopular positions on the use of military force. This is evidenced by Sullivan simply telling liberals to "suck it up and accept" that they hold unpopular positions, because "you can't tell Americans they care most about what you want to discuss," because, presumably, America is against Democrats when it comes to the use of military force in general and what to do in Iraq in particular. However, the fact of the matter is that right now, Democrats in general and Democratic hawks in particular are the ones who need to do the sucking up and accepting. Look at these poll numbers:
"Do you think that the United States should maintain its current troop level in Iraq to help secure peace and stability, or should the United States reduce its number of troops once new elections have been held?"
Maintain Level Reduce Level
34 58
Sullivan is right that "you can't tell Americans they must care about what you want to discuss; you must discuss what they care about," but right now people doing the avoiding are the Democratic hawks. What the country wants to talk about is withdrawal. What the country is overwhelmingly in favor of is withdrawal. However, the Democratic leadership isn't talking about it at all. This is because, as their code tells us, they are petrified of losing "credibility on national security." However, it strikes me that one sure way to never achieve "credibility on national security" is to stare failure in its face, and argue that we must stay the course. It strikes me that another way to lose "credibility on national security," is to side with the current governing party and its very minority position on Iraq, when by nearly 2-1 margins the country is calling for a change. The Iraq war is fast becoming as unpopular as gay marriage, but while Democratic hawks happily aruge that we need to throw the GLBT commuity overboard in order to achieve electoral victory, they strangely seem unable to ever realize just how extremely unpopular their own hawksih positions have become.
If you are unable to realize that the current way the military is being used in Iraq is mistaken and destructive, like the vast majority of the nation already has, you have no credibility on national security. And if you can't realize that simply avoiding the issue will compound this problem even further, then whatever credibility on national security you once had will erode away entirely. If national security is one of the two thresholds that political parties must meet before voters will even listen to them, then right now the only group of people meeting the national security threshold are those in favor of withdrawal. And if you can't recognize that by now, then, at long last, it is time that you just suck it up and accept it.
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