Had Enough?
I've have long passed my breaking point with the Bush Administration
(and the Republican leadership and right-wing pundit class that enables
this President). Although the faith in my party has been
shaken severely, there have been some rational voices that were speaking
out against President Bush and this Administration's insane policies
from the very beginning... these include
Bob Barr,
Bruce
Bartlett, Pat Buchanan, and
a few others.
Lately however, with the incredible failure in Iraq looming large,
many conservative heavyweights are attempting to put President Bush at
arm's length... albeit without acknowledging that it wasn't so much that
the policies that President Bush embraces are bad, but only the Bush
Administration's implementation of the policies is flawed. For example,
William F. Buckley
writes:
"One can't doubt that the American objective in Iraq has failed."
But the failure wasn't because the cause itself wasn't "reasonable" as
Mr. Buckley puts it (the cause he is referring to is conveniently
not ridding Saddam of his mythical WMDs),
but it was just that President Bush and his staff
weren't up to the task of democratizing the stubborn Iraqis who would
not "suspend internal divisions in order to get on with life in a
political structure that guaranteed them religious freedom." Yes,
if only the Iraqis had bought into the vision of democracy at gunpoint!
I guess when your family members are
being blown apart and tortured
by an occupying army, you kind of lose sight of the "reasonable
postulates" to which Mr. Buckley alludes. Yes, their bad Bill.
Not surprisingly, Mr. Buckley is
now arguing
for an armed intervention in Iran and wondering aloud:
"Is [military intervention] something Mr. Bush is going to handle
before the end of his term in office?"
Brilliant, Bill... just brilliant. You have learned nothing.
I was reading some news just now
and stumbled on an article in TIME magazine posted today. It gave me
just a wee bit of hope (but it's still early):
Republicans On The Run
[...]
As the campaign season kicks into gear, Republican incumbents are having
a hard time figuring out how close they want to be to the White House.
Voters have plenty to take out on Republican candidates this
year--ethics scandals, the G.O.P.'S failure to curb spending, the
government's inept response to Hurricane Katrina, a confusing new
prescription-drug program for seniors and, more than anything else, an
unpopular President who is fighting an unpopular war. Iraq could make a
vulnerability of the Republicans' greatest asset, the security issue.
The midterm contests in a President's second term are almost always
treacherous, but this time around, Republicans thought it would be
different. The 2006 elections, coming on top of their gains in 2002 and
2004, would make history and perhaps even cement a G.O.P. majority in
Congress for a generation. George W. Bush's credibility on national
security and the states' aggressive gerrymandering, they believed, had
turned the vast majority of districts into fortresses for incumbents.
But that's not turning out to be the case. In recent weeks, a startling
realization has begun to take hold: if the elections were held today,
top strategists of both parties say privately, the Republicans would
probably lose the 15 seats they need to keep control of the House of
Representatives and could come within a seat or two of losing the Senate
as well. Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, who masterminded the
1994 elections that brought Republicans to power on promises of
revolutionizing the way Washington is run, told TIME that his party has
so bungled the job of governing that the best campaign slogan for
Democrats today could be boiled down to just two words: "Had enough?"
[...]
I know many of my blog faithful don't see eye-to-eye on me with respect
to President Bush and his inept handling of our foreign policy (and
don't get Bruce Bartlett started about how President Bush bankrupted
America and betrayed the Reagan legacy... er, wait, nevermind, he
already wrote a
book about
it) - but my question to you is this, when have you had enough?!
I made a friendly wager with my friend
Dan that
there would be U.S. soldiers in Tehran by November of 2008 and I fully
expect to collect on that bet. If the U.S. populace writ large can
swallow all of the lies the Bush Administration told about Iraq and not
really blink an eye... President Bush was re-elected after all... then
I don't see what is going to stop the Bush Administration (and his
willing enablers) from committing US forces to an
Iran invasion in order to mitigate would will be sold as a "grave and
gathering threat" to US security. It really is nothing more than a
matter of selling the same crap, just on a different day. The US
public will buy it... again... hook, line, and sinker.
(Update Mon Mar 27 16:27:27 PST 2006 // fixed a spelling error)
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