Tuesday, September 4, 2007

From 'Sex and The City' to the White House

I'm not the best at keeping out of political discussions.

As much as I like to sit back, listen and absorb everything around me, it's hard not to get involved sometimes.

This was the case last week concerning Fred Thompson.

I seem to run in circles that don't understand how a former lobbyist and TV character actor has a snowball's chance in a bid for the White House.

Sure, you won't see me campaigning for him, but Fred Thompson seems to have the pedigree of a GOP presidential hopeful.

First and foremost, Fred Thompson makes a number of conservatives feel good, in much the same way George W. Bush makes them feel good about having a good-old boy type leading the country. It's also very similar to the way Ronald Reagan made conservatives feel good about America in the throes of the Cold War.

Take this recent write-up from the Mortimer Zuckerman-owned New York Daily News as evidence of the perception Thompson has built about himself:



"Thompson is absolutely pro-life, period, no waffling about it... He is solidly pro-Second Amendment, period, no dithering... He's a gung-ho war on terror man, a no-nonsense border security man."

In a race where Mitt Romney has been the toast of the anti-rights abortion crowd -- might I remind you Romney, until 2004, was at least somewhat pro-rights -- Thompson helps the populace paint the political portrait of America with generous amounts of black, white and nothing else.

Don't forget: Thompson has had his persona on display for TV viewers as varied as the millions who have watched "Matlock" to the devotees of HBO's "Sex and The City."

Let's examine some of Thompson's credentials with specificity:

-- Thompson, only a year ago, was a fill-in for radio wunderalt Paul Harvey. Short of going golfing with broadcast behemoths Sean Hannity, Bill O'Reilly and Hugh Hewitt, there are few ways to win over Middle America via association than helping deliver The Rest of the Story.

-- After serving as campaign manager for former Senator Howard Baker, Thompson was added as minority counsel for the Watergate hearing, doing his best to seem like he wasn't a lapdog for Richard Nixon. Well, maybe lapdog isn't the right phrase.



Examinations of Thompson's book on the subject, as well as testimonials from those involved, seem to point to Fred being an outright mole for the Nixon White House, letting the president's lawyers know when the committee obtained potentially damning evidence. Believe it or not, there are still people in love with Nixon, and when they hear this about Thompson, I can only imagine this tidbit has an effect similar to Cupid's arrow.

-- In modern times, Thompson has continued his defense of the undeservingly defensible with his push for pardoning I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, former chief of staff to Vice President Dick Cheney.

-- Thompson says immigration reform begins with "securing our nation's borders," as he stated earlier this year in a speech before the Lincoln Club of Orange County.

Thompson's had plenty of practice, playing everyone from himself to (shock) the President of the United States on film and television. After a few years of playing essentially the same character over and over, I imagine Thompson can convey (or fake) the needed gravitas one usually garners through decades of public service (or from having scriptwriters pen every word that comes out of your mouth).

I will not be the first to defend Fred Thompson, but I certainly see how his credentials have a lot of people happy they don't have to settle for the likes of Mitt Romney or Rudy Giuliani, or support a second-tier candidate like Ron Paul or Mike Huckabee.

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The once and future savage outpost for my semi-meaningful thoughts and monologues that are too long for Twitter and not good enough to be sprawled across the front page of every major metropolitan newspaper in America with 120-pt. headlines. Also, the occasional diversion via YouTube.

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Most of the great artists never live to see their work truly appreciated on a global scale... Vincent van Gogh. Johann Sebastian Bach. Keyboard Cat.

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