Upon first meeting Bill Zachary and Dan Oliver, one might
consider writing them off as preppy, button-down conservatives.
Well, the clothes may fit that bill, but these two have the type
of esprit de corps that molded our Founding Fathers. They are
radicals, wickedly anti-establishment. Of course, in the 21st
century that means they have a diabolical sense of humor toward
political correctness.
In 2004, during the presidential run of Senator Kerry, who is
married to the Heinz heiress Teresa, Messrs. Zachary and Oliver
founded the W Ketchup company. Their entrepreneurial spirit
allowed the members of the vast right wing conspiracy to enjoy
their favorite condiment without contributing, however minutely,
to the Kerry coffers.
Naturally, I ordered a case of W ketchup, and later a W cap,
bumper stickers, and decals. It was just a gesture of support for
President Bush's reelection, but the ketchup was a real surprise
that was enjoyed by everybody in my family. I had no idea it was
made by a local company until I received a press release with a
Manhattan address commenting on Mr. Kerry's slip-up regarding the
intelligence of members of the military.
In the release, Mr. Oliver, W Ketchup's CEO, stated:
"Throughout the 2004 election Senator Kerry claimed he was a
war hero and a patriot notwithstanding his condemnation of our
troops in Vietnam. Now he displays his elitist arrogance by
insulting our brave soldiers, in his unwillingness to apologize,
and through his vindictive instinct to place the blame on someone
else. It gives us pause that this man was nearly
commander-in-chief and sheds light on the true sentiments of the
Democratic Party."
I was delighted to find that this company was still alive and
knew I had to meet those whom I intuited were kindred spirits. I
contacted Mr. Zachary, Mr. Oliver's partner, who suggested we
meet at the Harvard Club at 44th Street. Mr. Zachary confirmed
that he did at times find Harvard University to be frustrating, a
changed institution from the one that spawned pioneer
conservatives like William F. Buckley. In my humble opinion, the
conservatives who do manage to emerge from the Ivy-covered halls
with their principles intact are the true blue conservatives who
mischievously wreak havoc on the establishment.
Mr. Oliver, whose father was chairman of the Federal Trade
Commission during the Reagan administration, admits that W
ketchup was first started in fun. The 2004 presidential campaign
also inspired a number of tongue-in-cheek operations that tweaked
the biases of the major news organization. One group, called
Communists for Kerry, marched in an anti-war parade and its
members were interviewed by a CBS reporter who actually took it
seriously. Its Web site www.communistsforkerry.com, condemned W
ketchup as a "Capitalist condiment." Only mindless
ideologues do not quite get the jokes on this hilarious site,
which recently endorsed Senator Clinton.
Mr. Oliver is not a Republican, but a registered Conservative. He
told me of a meeting with President Clinton at a miniature golf
course in Hyannis Port several years ago. Mr. Oliver suggested
that our loss of freedom began sometime after the New Deal. Mr.
Clinton countered that our standard of living is much higher now
than back then. After Mr. Oliver said, "Yes, but we are less
free," he said Mr. Clinton seemed genuinely taken aback.
The concept of freedom before wealth is hard for Democrats to
understand, but it is this principle that defines conservatism.
Smaller government, less regulation, strong defense, and civil
rights for all - these are radical concepts today, but one
forgets that the original Republican Party members were radicals.
Abraham Lincoln was hated just as much as Mr. Bush, only his vice
president was a Democrat, Andrew Johnson. Maybe having Vice
President Cheney around is keeping the president out of harm's
way. After Lincoln was assassinated, the Democrats did all they
could to unravel his Emancipation Proclamation. Not many blacks
know that it was the Democrats who formed the KKK, and Jesse
Jackson sure isn't going to clue them in.
Sitting in the members-only lounge at the Harvard Club with these
modern rebels, I cheekily suggested that perhaps their product
was so successful because it was Heinz inside a W bottle. No way,
I was told, W ketchup is way better, made in America with only
American ingredients and sold only in America. Also, unlike that
other company, W ketchup does not donate to political groups or
politicians. It donates only to the Freedom Alliance Scholarship
Fund, which provides college scholarships for the children of our
brave heroes killed in action.
As for the 2008 prospects, New Yorkers Dan Oliver and Bill
Zachary know who they're rooting for to run. They both say,
"John Kerry - bad for president. Good for Ketchup.