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Rich

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Bush Derangement Syndrome: A Diagnosis
« on: February 04, 2008, 04:07:19 PM »
Bush Derangement Syndrome: A Diagnosis

By Alan W. Dowd
FrontPageMagazine.com | 2/4/2008

Before and after President George W. Bush?s final State of the Union address, his critics hammered away at his record. For instance, in their ?pre-buttal,? delivered some four days before Monday?s State of the Union, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid took turns attacking Bush?s foreign policy, counterterrorism strategies, foreign-aid programs, education reforms and healthcare initiatives. Then, in her response to Bush?s address, Governor Kathleen Sebelius of Kansas declared, ?The last five years have cost us dearly?in lives lost; in thousands of wounded warriors whose futures may never be the same; in challenges not met here at home because our resources were committed elsewhere.? And just before noting that Americans ?have no more patience for divisive politics,? she added, ?If more Republicans in Congress stand with us this year, we won?t have to wait for a new president to restore America?s role in the world, and fight a more effective war on terror.?

All of this is to be expected, and none of it is out of bounds, especially in an election year. However, the Left?s deep-down disgust with George W. Bush continues to amaze. After all, this is the man who, according to Peggy Noonan, ?destroyed the Republican Party.? But even if Noonan has succumbed to a bit of rhetorical excess, there are other reasons the Left might, at least, appreciate the Bush presidency.

Take, for example, how he eschewed the realism embraced by the wise old men in his own party?the ones who bequeathed to him and his predecessor the radicalized chaos of Afghanistan, the ?stability? of Saddam Hussein?s Iraq, the open-ended occupation of Saudi Arabia, the Middle East ?peace process, the measured responses to the mass-murder of Marines in Beirut?and instead pursued a foreign policy that looked and sounded more like Woodrow Wilson?s than that of the elder Bush.

?The world has a clear interest in the spread of democratic values, because stable and free nations do not breed the ideologies of murder,? he declared. ?They encourage the peaceful pursuit of a better life.?

And there was more.

?The survival of liberty in our land increasingly depends on the success of liberty in other lands,? he intoned in 2005. ?America?s vital interests and our deepest beliefs are now one? So it is the policy of the United States to seek and support the growth of democratic movements and institutions in every nation and culture, with the ultimate goal of ending tyranny in our world.?

?It is presumptuous and insulting to suggest that a whole region of the world?or the one-fifth of humanity that is Muslim?is somehow untouched by the most basic aspirations of life,? he preached in the early days of his presidency, sounding positively Wilsonian.

But these weren?t mere words. There was action behind them: When the Left writes its history of the Bush presidency, there will be no mention that his was the first administration to officially call for the creation of a Palestinian state, long a cause championed by America?s Left. Of course, the tradeoff was that Bush refused to deal with Arafat and his terrorist brethren.

Bush launched genuine wars of liberation that freed women from a medieval monstrosity in Afghanistan and shut down a vast torture chamber in Iraq. In place of the Taliban and the Baathists, Bush propped up a pair of progressive, popular governments in the heart of the Muslim world, bolstering them with the sort of open-ended, nation-building efforts the Left once championed in places like Haiti and Bosnia and Kosovo. He created new aid programs to support pro-freedom elements behind Islam?s iron curtain. And he carried out a long-overdue withdrawal of troops from the theocratic thugocracy in Saudi Arabia.

His policies would be equally dramatic?and one would think, equally appealing to the Left?in the realm of arms control. The Left maintained that nuclear arms reductions would solve the world?s problems. President Bush set America on a path to slash its nuclear arsenal from 7,000 warheads to just over 2,000, and convinced Moscow to do the same. It?s the sort of disarmament program Bush?s predecessors could only imagine but dared not attempt. So why isn?t the Left celebrating Bush?s sweeping reductions?

Likewise, the president?s critics on the Left overlook the development programs he poured into the chronically undeveloped world. ?We must include every African, every Asian, every Latin American, every Muslim, in an expanding circle of development,? he explained. And then he increased and revitalized foreign aid with his Millennium Challenge Account program. He conceived and promoted huge new aid programs in Africa, devoting perhaps $45 billion to the global fight against AIDS.

Here at home, Bush supported something close to amnesty for illegal immigrants. The Right punished him for it, and the Left certainly didn?t applaud him personally.

Under his administration, albeit partly as a result of the forces unleashed by 9/11, federal spending grew from $1.9 trillion to about $3 trillion. But government growth was also aide by new entitlements like Medicare Part D, the widely popular and costly prescription benefit Bush endorsed, and new education spending under No Child Left Behind, which Bush promoted. In fact, in his first five years in office, as USA Today reported, Bush increased K-12 education spending by an average of seven percent annually?more than double the increases his predecessor achieved.

So the question remains: Why do liberals despise this big-government, big-spending, humanitarian, nation-building, idealistic, internationalist, arms-cutting president? And why do so many conservatives still defend him?

Ironically, the two sides may have the same reasons for their divergent opinions of this polarizing president.

First and foremost, Bush defeated two of the Left?s standard-bearers in bitterly contested elections.

In 2000, he refused to back down during the Orwellian post-election campaign of Al Gore, author and chief adherent of the global-warming creed. That endeared Bush to the Right and enraged the Left.

Then, Bush played hardball in 2004, overcame incredibly high odds as an unpopular president presiding over an unpopular war, and defeated a leftist archetype in John Kerry.

These were Bush?s original?and unforgiveable?sins.

Speaking of sin, Bush openly talked about how Jesus changed his heart, how his evangelical faith shaped his decisions. Not coincidentally, he encouraged government agencies to make more room for faith-based groups. The Left?s reaction was predictable. A 2003 piece in The Nation condemned Bush?s ?heretical manipulation of religious language,? declaring that ?Bush?s discourse coincides with that of the false prophets of the Old Testament.?

In 2006, Kevin Phillips, who never fails to remind us that he was a Republican strategist, concluded that ?the White House is courting end-times theologians? and embracing ?a crusading, simplistic Christianity.? ?No leading world power in modern memory,? he inveighed, ?has become a captive of the sort of biblical inerrancy that dismisses modern knowledge and science.?

But it was more than Bush?s religiousness, alleged ?manipulation? of religion, or connection with the evangelical wing of Christianity that drove the Left to dislike him so much. It had to be.

After all, Jimmy Carter openly shared his born-again, evangelical faith with Americans. Likewise, Bill Clinton wore his faith on his sleeve. Indeed, in the post-Lewinsky era, he seemingly spent more time with evangelical pastors than he did with his cabinet and staff. As E.J. Dionne has observed, ?Bill Clinton could quote Scripture with the best of them. Bill Clinton could preach with the best of them. He gave some very powerful speeches at Notre Dame, where he sounded Catholic; at African-American churches, where he sounded (African Methodist Episcopal) or Baptist?He quoted Scripture at least as much, if not more than George W. Bush does.? And it should be recalled Bush?s faith-based programs have their roots in Clinton?s Charitable Choice reforms, which opened the way for religious charities to compete for federal grants and use federal resources to provide social services to those in need.

So what is it about Bush?s faith that provokes such venom? I would submit that much of it has to do with the way his faith informed his position on unborn life.

As a consequence, he would veto a bill that used tax dollars to fund the deliberate destruction of human embryos in support of stem-cell research. ?Our conscience calls us to pursue the possibilities of science in a manner that respects human dignity and upholds our moral values,? he observed, reminding Congress of a timeless truth: Just because we can do something, just because science makes something possible, doesn?t mean we should do it.

Plus, Bush would appoint judges and justices that seemed open to pulling the plug on Roe. He would reinstate the ban on federal assistance to international abortion providers. His administration would notify states that Medicaid would no longer cover abortion pill RU486?and that states could provide medical coverage under the Children?s Health Insurance Program to ?unborn children.? His administration would promote ?embryo adoption.?

As others have observed, Roe is the Left?s Holy of Holies. To undermine it is to commit blasphemy, heresy, and the abomination of desolation. 

Finally, the Left?s hatred of Bush has been propelled by his stalwart stance on what one observer shrewdly calls ?the wars of 9/11??the military operations that inevitably followed and will continue to follow the attacks on America?s homeland.

Again, the Left?s reaction was predictable. Since the 1960s, the Left has grown increasingly opposed to the use of American power. Viewing everything through the prism of Vietnam, the Left distrusts American power and sees war itself as the enemy.

In addition, the wars of 9/11 served as fuel for Bush?s black-and-white view of the world?even George Will calls him ?our Manichean president??which view further alienated Bush from the Left. In this regard, it pays to recall that the postmodernism which captivates and animates much of the Left assures us that there are no differences between evil and good, no objective truth, no absolutes?except, of course, the absolute that claims there are no absolutes. Thus, someone who uses phrases like ?Axis of Evil? and ?evil doers? and ?monumental struggle of good versus evil? and, as he did during his final State of the Union, ?evil men who despise freedom,? is not likely to be embraced by those who see the world in shades of grey.

But those who believe there is good and evil, that force is not inherently evil, that there is even a time for war, would rally around such a president, which may explain why many conservatives still support the president and many leftists never did.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alan W. Dowd is a senior fellow at Sagamore Institute for Policy Research.

Lanya

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Re: Bush Derangement Syndrome: A Diagnosis
« Reply #1 on: February 04, 2008, 06:59:21 PM »
[Yeah, it's so much better than before we went in...oh wait.  No, it's not.]

Sentenced to death: Afghan who dared to read about women's rights
 
     
By Kim Sengupta
Thursday, 31 January 2008

A young man, a student of journalism, is sentenced to death by an Islamic court for downloading a report from the internet. The sentence is then upheld by the country's rulers. This is Afghanistan ? not in Taliban times but six years after "liberation" and under the democratic rule of the West's ally Hamid Karzai.

The fate of Sayed Pervez Kambaksh has led to domestic and international protests, and deepening concern about erosion of civil liberties in Afghanistan. He was accused of blasphemy after he downloaded a report from a Farsi website which stated that Muslim fundamentalists who claimed the Koran justified the oppression of women had misrepresented the views of the prophet Mohamed.

Mr Kambaksh, 23, distributed the tract to fellow students and teachers at Balkh University with the aim, he said, of provoking a debate on the matter. But a complaint was made against him and he was arrested, tried by religious judges without ? say his friends and family ? being allowed legal representation and sentenced to death.

The Independent is launching a campaign today to secure justice for Mr Kambaksh. The UN, human rights groups, journalists' organisations and Western diplomats have urged Mr Karzai's government to intervene and free him. But the Afghan Senate passed a motion yesterday confirming the death sentence.

The MP who proposed the ruling condemning Mr Kambaksh was Sibghatullah Mojaddedi, a key ally of Mr Karzai. The Senate also attacked the international community for putting pressure on the Afghan government and urged Mr Karzai not to be influenced by outside un-Islamic views.

The case of Mr Kambaksh, who also worked a s reporter for the Jahan-i-Naw (New World) newspaper, is seen in Afghanistan as yet another chapter in the escalation in the confrontation between Afghanistan and the West.

It comes in the wake of Mr Karzai accusing the British of actually worsening the situation in Helmand province by their actions and his subsequent blocking of the appointment of Lord Ashdown as the UN envoy and expelling a British and an Irish diplomat.

Demonstrations, organised by clerics, against the alleged foreign interference have been held in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif, where Mr Kambaksh was arrested. Aminuddin Muzafari, the first secretary of the houses of parliament, said: "People should realise that as we are representatives of an Islamic country therefore we can never tolerate insults to reverences of Islamic religion."

At a gathering in Takhar province, Maulavi Ghulam Rabbani Rahmani, the heads of the Ulema council, said: "We want the government and the courts to execute the court verdict on Kambaksh as soon as possible." In Parwan province, another senior cleric, Maulavi Muhammad Asif, said: "This decision is for disrespecting the holy Koran and the government should enforce the decision before it came under more pressure from foreigners."

UK officials say they are particularly concerned about such draconian action being taken against a journalist. The Foreign Office and Department for International Development has donated large sums to the training of media workers in the country. The Government funds the Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR) in the Helmand capital, Lashkar Gar.

Mr Kambaksh's brother, Sayed Yaqub Ibrahimi, is also a journalist and has written articles for IWPR in which he accused senior public figures, including an MP, of atrocities, including murders. He said: "Of course we are all very worried about my brother. What has happened to him is very unjust. He has not committed blasphemy and he was not even allowed to have a legal defence. and what took place was a secret trial."

Qayoum Baabak, the editor of Jahan-i-Naw, said a senior prosecutor in Mazar-i-Sharif, Hafiz Khaliqyar, had warned journalists that they would be punished if they protested against the death sentence passed on Mr Kambaksh.

Jean MacKenzie, country director for IWPR, said: "We feel very strongly that this is designed to put pressure on Pervez's brother, Yaqub, who has done some of the hardest-hitting pieces outlining abuses by some very powerful commanders."

Rahimullah Samander, the president of the Afghan Independent Journalists' Association, said: "This is unfair, this is illegal. He just printed a copy of something and looked at it and read it. How can we believe in this 'democracy' if we can't even read, we can't even study? We are asking Mr Karzai to quash the death sentence before it is too late."

The circumstances surrounding the conviction of Mr Kambaksh are also being viewed as a further attempt to claw back the rights gained by women since the overthrow of the Taliban. The most prominent female MP, Malalai Joya, has been suspended after criticising her male colleagues.

Under the Afghan constitution, say legal experts, Mr Kambaksh has the right to appeal to the country's supreme court. Some senior clerics maintain, however, that since he has been convicted under religious laws, the supreme court should not bring secular interpretations to the case.

Mr Karzai has the right to intervene and pardon Mr Kambaksh. However, even if he is freed, it would be hard for the student to escape retribution in a country where fundamentalists and warlords are increasingly in the ascendancy.

How you can save Pervez

Sayed Pervez Kambaksh's imminent execution is an affront to civilised values. It is not, however, a foregone conclusion. If enough international pressure is brought to bear on President Karzai's government, his sentence may yet be overturned. Add your weight to the campaign by urging the Foreign Office to demand that his life be spared. Sign our e-petition at www.independent.co.uk/petition

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/sentenced-to-death-afghan-who-dared-to-read-about-womens-rights-775972.html
« Last Edit: February 04, 2008, 07:08:54 PM by Lanya »
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sirs

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Re: Bush Derangement Syndrome: A Diagnosis
« Reply #2 on: February 04, 2008, 07:04:02 PM »
Lanya again demonstrates the false notion of why we went in (to Afghanistan & Iraq), to supposedly liberate the masses and bring western style governing to the Muslims.

Hint......No, it's not

Also nice to know that Lanya apparently didn't support our initial post 911 effort to go after AlQeada in Afghanistan
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Lanya

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Re: Bush Derangement Syndrome: A Diagnosis
« Reply #3 on: February 04, 2008, 07:15:19 PM »
Also nice to know that Lanya apparently didn't support our initial post 911 effort to go after AlQeada in Afghanistan

I did support it.  Everything I've read about it says it was too few men, over too vast a territory, and it was bungled. 

I support a real effort to go after Al Qaeda.  They attacked us.

President Bush evidently did not give a damn.  You don't start a war in a 2nd country without finishing off your enemy.   I thought that was pretty basic. 

Osama who? 

Bush Tells Barnes Capturing Bin Laden Is ?Not A Top Priority Use of American Resources?

Weekly Standard editor Fred Barnes appeared on Fox this morning to discuss his recent meeting with President Bush in the Oval Office. The key takeaway for Barnes was that ?bin Laden doesn?t fit with the administration?s strategy for combating terrorism.? Barnes said that Bush told him capturing bin Laden is ?not a top priority use of American resources.? Watch it.
Screenshot

Bush?s priorities have always been skewed. Just months after declaring he wanted bin Laden ?dead or alive,? Bush said, ?I truly am not that concerned about him.? Turning his attention away from bin Laden, Bush trained his focus on Iraq ? a country he now admits had ?nothing? to do with 9/11.


http://thinkprogress.org/2006/09/14/barnes-osama/
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BT

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Re: Bush Derangement Syndrome: A Diagnosis
« Reply #4 on: February 04, 2008, 07:24:45 PM »
Did you ever answer the question as to how many pakistani deaths would be worth it to have the head of Osama? What's the collateral damage equation?



sirs

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Re: Bush Derangement Syndrome: A Diagnosis
« Reply #5 on: February 04, 2008, 07:35:07 PM »
Also nice to know that Lanya apparently didn't support our initial post 911 effort to go after AlQeada in Afghanistan

I did support it.  Everything I've read about it says it was too few men, over too vast a territory, and it was bungled. 


Lanya, with all due respect, any and EVERYTHING under Bush you've considered "bungled".  Point of fact is, we took down AlQeada in Afghanistan, sent them hiding into little holes, unable to train or organize with any effective country's defense around them, what-so-ever.  What are you now advocating?  That we go much further and dictate to the Afghanis how they're to run things....or else?? 

I'm not sure you're grasping your current disconnect.  You're so fast to point at anything bad as being Bush's & America's fault, now completely debunking what you've been condemning Bush for doing everywhere else, especially in Iraq

"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Lanya

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Re: Bush Derangement Syndrome: A Diagnosis
« Reply #6 on: February 04, 2008, 09:54:25 PM »
Excuse me....did you say MY disconnect? 

LOLOLOL

Thanks, I needed a laugh!
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Xavier_Onassis

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Re: Bush Derangement Syndrome: A Diagnosis
« Reply #7 on: February 04, 2008, 11:50:45 PM »
Point of fact is, we took down AlQeada in Afghanistan, sent them hiding into little holes, unable to train or organize with any effective country's defense around them, what-so-ever.  What are you now advocating?  That we go much further and dictate to the Afghanis how they're to run things....or else??

============================================
The Taliban is back in control of huge areas in Afghanistan. Bin Laden is still at large, and the US has so many troops in Iraq that it can't get anything done to stop the opium trade in Afghanistan or enable the Kurzai government to actually run the country.

You appear to have taken up residence on some distant planet, perhaps in the Koozbane system, judging from your uter lack of knowledge as to what has been happening n Afghanistan.
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Plane

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Re: Bush Derangement Syndrome: A Diagnosis
« Reply #8 on: February 05, 2008, 12:01:12 AM »
[Yeah, it's so much better than before we went in...oh wait.  No, it's not.]



Better is relative , Afghans seem to include a lot of intolerant sorts , would it be better if we shot all of the intolerant ones?

I don't think we can make heaven out of Afghanistan , if it is better at all President Bush deserves some credit.
« Last Edit: February 05, 2008, 08:22:23 PM by Plane »

Lanya

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Re: Bush Derangement Syndrome: A Diagnosis
« Reply #9 on: February 05, 2008, 01:38:35 AM »
What was our purpose in going in to Afghanistan? 

We did have a military purpose, didn't we?



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Xavier_Onassis

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Re: Bush Derangement Syndrome: A Diagnosis
« Reply #10 on: February 05, 2008, 07:34:56 AM »
Juniorbush does not deserve credit. He deserves prison, as does his cellmate Dick Cheney.
"Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana."

hnumpah

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Re: Bush Derangement Syndrome: A Diagnosis
« Reply #11 on: February 05, 2008, 10:20:41 AM »
Quote
Did you ever answer the question as to how many pakistani deaths would be worth it to have the head of Osama? What's the collateral damage equation?

I believe that question was directed at me, in another thread. I answered it.
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The_Professor

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Re: Bush Derangement Syndrome: A Diagnosis
« Reply #12 on: February 05, 2008, 01:16:29 PM »
Did you ever answer the question as to how many pakistani deaths would be worth it to have the head of Osama? What's the collateral damage equation?



Does it matter?
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The_Professor

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Re: Bush Derangement Syndrome: A Diagnosis
« Reply #13 on: February 05, 2008, 01:18:55 PM »
Also nice to know that Lanya apparently didn't support our initial post 911 effort to go after AlQeada in Afghanistan

I did support it.  Everything I've read about it says it was too few men, over too vast a territory, and it was bungled. 

I support a real effort to go after Al Qaeda.  They attacked us.

President Bush evidently did not give a damn.  You don't start a war in a 2nd country without finishing off your enemy.   I thought that was pretty basic. 

Osama who? 

Bush Tells Barnes Capturing Bin Laden Is ?Not A Top Priority Use of American Resources?

Weekly Standard editor Fred Barnes appeared on Fox this morning to discuss his recent meeting with President Bush in the Oval Office. The key takeaway for Barnes was that ?bin Laden doesn?t fit with the administration?s strategy for combating terrorism.? Barnes said that Bush told him capturing bin Laden is ?not a top priority use of American resources.? Watch it.
Screenshot

Bush?s priorities have always been skewed. Just months after declaring he wanted bin Laden ?dead or alive,? Bush said, ?I truly am not that concerned about him.? Turning his attention away from bin Laden, Bush trained his focus on Iraq ? a country he now admits had ?nothing? to do with 9/11.


http://thinkprogress.org/2006/09/14/barnes-osama/


Sirs, she has a point. We will end up losing what minimal progress we have made in Afghanistan because we are short-shrifting it due to the "necessary" resources in Iraq. Poor Karzai. I expect we will find him either assassinated or leaving quickly on a Plane to the U.S. , one step ahead of the Taliban. And women in Afghanistan will be treated as less than human yet again in Afghanistan.
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BT

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Re: Bush Derangement Syndrome: A Diagnosis
« Reply #14 on: February 05, 2008, 01:19:24 PM »
Quote
I believe that question was directed at me, in another thread. I answered it.

The question is now redirected to Lanya and her bloodlust for Osama's head.

Wasn't there a Peckinpah movie in the same vein?