<<But the problem is that this makes it sound like those fighting there are deluded. They are, of course, but sayng the soldiers are deluded is not going to win points with Americans who are used to the idea of morally justified constant war.
<<If you start to talk about all the dead, the maimed, the blind, the insane of this war, that is a downer. Americans hate downers. They want it to be "morning in America".
<<Even if it's midnight.>>
You're saying exactly what I'm saying, that militarism is the curse of American politics. It creates dead zones, political taboos, truths that can't be told.
But the issue really is leadership, a test which Obama has miserably failed. John McCain is a leader for the forces of death and destruction; he speaks out forcefully in favour of murder and he mobilizes his forces. Obama is a leader who (a) tries to copycat his rival (always a disastrous mistake, nobody will buy the fake if the real thing's available at the same price and (b) fails, from a combination of cowardice and inability, to persuade and lead, to say what no one else could say.
Obama is trying to push two mutually contradictory messages at once: the antiwar message and the "magnificent accomplishments of our heroic troops" message. One undercuts the other. Maybe it takes more brilliance than Obama can muster to attack the war and at the same time, diffuse or mollify militaristic sentiment, or even better, if possible, attack it head-on as backward, primitive and counter-productive, forcing people to choose between civilized resolutions and macho posturing, and gambling that with fresh, determined and articulate leadership, a substantial majority of the public can be persuaded to reject the war drums and those who constantly beat them. The failure of Obama to demonstrate such leadership was one of the major disappointments of the evening.
<<Obama can't risk being seen as an angry Black man. Martin Luther King could show outrage, because he wasn't after a majority of votes. Odds are a majority of the White folks in some Mississippi and Alabama towns would have voted to lynch King.>>
Then AND now, as Knutey rightly points out.