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I knew we should never elect a drunk driver as POTUS.
« on: October 27, 2006, 02:04:29 PM »

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-brooks27oct27,0,6288086.column?coll=la-opinion-center
ROSA BROOKS

Rosa Brooks: The Google Catches Bush
Exposing the administration's folly on Iraq with a three-second Internet search.
Rosa Brooks

October 27, 2006

UNLIKE HIS DAD, whose apparent befuddlement over a supermarket checkout scanner helped lose him the presidency, George W. Bush is one tech-savvy guy. He told CNBC this week that he sometimes goes "on the Google … to pull up maps like, I kinda like to look at the ranch. It remind me of where I wanna be sometimes."

Who can fault Bush for wishing to be back at the ranch? He's had a rotten week — and it's partly thanks to The Google.

As the president discovered this week, The Google — along with The Yahoo, The AltaVista and all the other Internet search engines — have made it infinitely harder for politicians to contradict themselves without getting caught.

It started on Sunday. On ABC-TV's "This Week," Bush insisted to George Stephanopoulos that when it comes to Iraq policy, "we've never been 'stay the course,' George!" Stephanopoulos looked astonished by this, since it's not exactly a state secret that Bush has promised to "stay the course" in Iraq on about 10,000 separate occasions.

OK, I exaggerate, but he's definitely promised to "stay the course" on at least several dozen occasions, a fact that you and I and a million bloggers can prove in about three seconds flat … thanks to The Google. Try it! On the White House website, plug "stay the course" into the search toolbar. I got 181 hits. Gotcha, W! The Google comes back to bite you!

But let's be fair. At least two or three of the White House references to "stay the course" have come in the context of this week's White House denials that anyone in the administration ever suggested that staying the course was a good idea. With the midterm elections only 10 days away, the Rovean masterminds on Pennsylvania Avenue have decided to cut and run from "stay the course."

Instead, we're now going to be "constantly adjusting to tactics. Constantly," Bush explained to Stephanopoulos. That's because — as White House spokesman Tony Snow admitted in a rare moment of candor — the phrase "stay the course" sort of "left the wrong impression." Specifically, it left the impression that the administration wasn't facing reality.

Judging from the last few days, "constantly adjusting" is a new euphemism for "coming completely unglued," a phrase that lately seems to characterize both the administration's message machine and its failed Iraq strategy. On Monday, White House counselor Dan Bartlett was dutifully telling CNN that "it's never been a stay-the-course strategy"; but on Tuesday, when talk show host Sean Hannity asked Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld if Bush was "backing away from staying the course," Rumsfeld responded tartly, "That's nonsense…. Of course not."

Who's in charge over there?

To find more evidence of the administration's … constant adjustments, Google away and have a good giggle. We might as well enjoy this latest Washington farce because, after all, if we don't get a good chuckle out of the White House's desperate flailing around on Iraq, who will?

Not the Iraqis, that's for sure. Apparently, the Iraqis now consider the Bush administration's Iraq policies so very unfunny that in a September poll, 61% of them say they "approve" of attacks on U.S.-led forces.

This tends to make things kind of unfunny for the U.S. troops on the ground too. October has been the deadliest for U.S. troops in Iraq since January 2005: 96 have been killed so far this month, and 2,809 have been killed and 44,779 wounded since the war began. It's a good thing our troops have The Google over there — like Bush, they can use Google maps to recall how their hometowns look and wonder if they're going to make it back before this administration sends them on any more misconceived missions.

Do the Democrats have a better strategy for "winning" in Iraq? No, they don't — because with so many thousands dead, and so many thousands more embittered, "winning" isn't really on the table anymore. The only question now is whether we can mitigate the damage.

There's only one way to do that. As Maj. Gen. John Batiste, who commanded the Army's 1st Infantry Division in Iraq until 2005, put it, "The best thing that can happen right now is for one or both of our houses to go Democratic so we can have some oversight." Batiste — a "lifelong Republican" — now insists that "it is time for a change."

When it comes to Iraq, being a citizen in George W. Bush's America is like being a passenger in a car driven by a drunk driver. Drunk on power, the administration has spent years driving resolutely into brick walls. To compensate, they've now adopted a policy of swerving all over the place.

It's time to take away the car keys.



http://youtube.com/watch?v=6Jq0j80UB_c
   

BT

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Re: I knew we should never elect a drunk driver as POTUS.
« Reply #1 on: October 27, 2006, 02:14:03 PM »
They Can't Even Win a War of Words
Democrats are mired in smallness. How hard can it be to craft a message of passion?
 
by Rosa Brooks 
 
"Together, America can do better." When you hear that, do you feel inspired?

I didn't think so.

The Democratic Party's current slogan seems to be leaving most people cold. It apparently went down well in focus groups, but that's only because the focus groups probably consisted of the recently embalmed and the alternative slogan was "Together, America can achieve mediocrity."

Watching the Democrats stumbling around in search of a "message" is the only thing more agonizing than watching the Republicans destroy this country. Five years of Republican-controlled government have brought us an unwinnable war, a global reputation in tatters, incomprehensibly irresponsible fiscal policies, shameful neglect of our neediest citizens and a government incapable of coping with either natural disaster or terrorist threats.

Yet somehow the Democratic Party still can't do any better than "America can do better."

"You can do better" is what you say to a dim child whose grades were even worse than expected. Is this really the Democrats' message to the nation: that we don't need to be quite as pathetic as we now are, though excellence is certainly beyond our reach?

This slogan speaks not of hope but of hopelessness, of scaled-down ambitions, of dreams deferred and dreams denied.

It's the smallness of it that kills me. This nation began with a dream — a crazy, risky, breathtaking dream of freedom, justice and equality. Sure, we've never truly achieved that dream, but for much of the last century, it's been the Democratic Party that has helped keep that dream alive. So how can it be that, today, Democrats don't seem to stand for anything at all?

Part of the problem is ambition and cowardice, which together make a lethal combination. Too many would-be Democratic leaders think that "playing it safe" is the way to go. They're fine with criticizing the administration, but the minute they take any flak themselves, they go scurrying back into their holes. In place of a willingness to take risks and speak from the heart, they offer a craven and misguided dependence on polls, focus groups and "expert strategists."

Exhibit A for this was John Kerry's astonishing campaign-trail failure to stand up for his own anti-Vietnam War beliefs. As far as his campaign strategists were concerned, the only permissible references to Kerry and Vietnam were those lauding his military valor. But Kerry's worrisome inability to own his own past beliefs left even many Democrats queasy about his candidacy and rendered him vulnerable to Republican charges of hypocrisy and disingenuousness.

Had Kerry spoken out honestly and courageously instead of just playing games with flags and staged salutes at the convention, the smear campaign of Swift Boat Veterans for Truth would have gotten no traction and Kerry might be president.

So far, the Democratic Party seems to have learned little from Kerry's defeat. Hillary Clinton continues to parse her words on Iraq while saving her carefully calibrated enthusiasm for a ban on flag burning.

If Democrats really want a better message, they've got to stop being so technocratic and careful and learn how to be passionate and brave. Of course, they need policies, but they also need a little poetry.

The irony is that for a brief moment in the summer of 2004, Kerry actually hit upon a decent campaign slogan: "Let America be America again," a phrase inspired by Langston Hughes' poem of the same name. But the right quickly attacked, using Hughes' 1930s flirtation with communism to discredit the poet, the poem and any phrases or sentiments inspired by it. The result? Kerry disowned the slogan as quickly as he had disowned his own past antiwar convictions.

But if the Democrats want a new slogan for 2006, they could do worse than rescue Hughes' poem from the scrapheap:

Let [America] be that great strong land of love….

O, let my land be a land where Liberty

Is crowned with no false patriotic wreath,

But opportunity is real, and life is free,

Equality is in the air we breathe….

O, let America be America again —
The land that never has been yet
—

And yet must be
You don't need to share all of Hughes' youthful opinions to find that his poem captures the sorrow and the hope we should all feel and reminds us that the dream is still ours to reclaim.

And as a message, "Let America be America again" sure beats "Hello, you've reached the Democratic Party. We're not home right now."   

http://www.commondreams.org/views06/0310-21.htm

Mucho

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Re: I knew we should never elect a drunk driver as POTUS.
« Reply #2 on: October 27, 2006, 02:18:47 PM »
Great article BT. I cant believe I missed it before. Rosa is great , isnt she?

sirs

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Re: I knew we should never elect a drunk driver as POTUS.
« Reply #3 on: October 27, 2006, 02:20:27 PM »
You don't need to share all of Hughes' youthful opinions to find that his poem captures the sorrow and the hope we should all feel and reminds us that the dream is still ours to reclaim.  And as a message, "Let America be America again" sure beats "Hello, you've reached the Democratic Party. We're not home right now." 

Ain't that the truth
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

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Re: I knew we should never elect a drunk driver as POTUS.
« Reply #4 on: October 27, 2006, 02:43:47 PM »
You don't need to share all of Hughes' youthful opinions to find that his poem captures the sorrow and the hope we should all feel and reminds us that the dream is still ours to reclaim.  And as a message, "Let America be America again" sure beats "Hello, you've reached the Democratic Party. We're not home right now." 

Ain't that the truth
You remind me of the morons that believe Stephen Colbert is really one of them. She is lamenting the fact that the Dems aren't different enough from you corrupt assholes in power. As I do . The only reason I even sometimes call myself a Dem is not  because they are good, only not as evil as the Repubs.

sirs

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Re: I knew we should never elect a drunk driver as POTUS.
« Reply #5 on: October 27, 2006, 02:49:37 PM »
You remind me of the morons that believe Stephen Colbert is really one of them.

Who?  And what's the relevence?
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

BT

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Re: I knew we should never elect a drunk driver as POTUS.
« Reply #6 on: October 27, 2006, 02:53:16 PM »
Quote
She is lamenting the fact that the Dems aren't different enough from you corrupt assholes in power. As I do . The only reason I even sometimes call myself a Dem is not  because they are good, only not as evil as the Repubs.

Somehow i don't see this as a ringing endorsement for voting dem.

"Vote Dem, we are underachievers, we can't even do bad, good " just doesn't seem to inspire confidence.

Mucho

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Re: I knew we should never elect a drunk driver as POTUS.
« Reply #7 on: October 27, 2006, 02:57:05 PM »
Quote
She is lamenting the fact that the Dems aren't different enough from you corrupt assholes in power. As I do . The only reason I even sometimes call myself a Dem is not  because they are good, only not as evil as the Repubs.

Somehow i don't see this as a ringing endorsement for voting dem.

"Vote Dem, we are underachievers, we can't even do bad, good " just doesn't seem to inspire confidence.


Tis better than doing evil and even screwing that up like the Repubs.

Mucho

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Re: I knew we should never elect a drunk driver as POTUS.
« Reply #8 on: October 27, 2006, 02:59:34 PM »
You remind me of the morons that believe Stephen Colbert is really one of them.

Who?  And what's the relevence?

You. And you wouldn't figure it out even if I told you.

sirs

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Re: I knew we should never elect a drunk driver as POTUS.
« Reply #9 on: October 27, 2006, 04:51:13 PM »
You remind me of the morons that believe Stephen Colbert is really one of them.

Who?  And what's the relevence?

You. And you wouldn't figure it out even if I told you.

So, in other words, more of the same irrelvent crap of yours.  Gotcha
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Amianthus

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Re: I knew we should never elect a drunk driver as POTUS.
« Reply #10 on: October 27, 2006, 04:55:34 PM »
So, in other words, more of the same irrelvent crap of yours.  Gotcha

It was just an opportunity for Knuttia to through out another one of her gratuitous insults. Seems to be her only form of "debate."
Do not anticipate trouble, or worry about what may never happen. Keep in the sunlight. (Benjamin Franklin)

sirs

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Re: I knew we should never elect a drunk driver as POTUS.
« Reply #11 on: October 27, 2006, 05:01:05 PM »
It was just an opportunity for Knuttia to through out another one of her gratuitous insults. Seems to be her only form of "debate."

Boy ain't that the truth.  Has knute EVER made an attempt at conversing like an adult?  I don't seem to recall any examples.  Maybe his head would explode, if such an effort were attempted.  More than 10 neurons firing at once could prove detrimental
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle