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Politics : The Donkey's Inn

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To: TigerPaw who wrote (9127)9/7/2004 12:28:09 PM
From: Mephisto   of 15516
 
GOP Convention's Looney Tunes

latimes.com

ROBERT SCHEER

An advertising guru once warned his acolytes never to
confuse the thing being sold with the thing itself. Good
sizzle can always sell a lousy steak.

This strategy is on brilliant display these days as the
Republicans emerge post-convention, bristling with
tough-sounding talk about "girlie men" and shamelessly
attacking decorated war veteran John F. Kerry as
some kind of traitorous wimp. The same leaders who
have never apologized for being totally oblivious to the
terrorist threat before Sept. 11 continue to mawkishly
exploit the tragedy for political gain, all while trumpeting
far-off victories for democracy that dissolve like
mirages under the mildest scrutiny.

The Republicans' strategy is to counter critique with
caricature, and they do it with all the panache of an old
Roadrunner cartoon, effectively smashing Kerry with
rhetorical frying pans.

"Even in this post-9/11 period, Sen. Kerry doesn't
appear to understand how the world has changed. He
talks about leading a 'more sensitive war on terror,' as
though Al Qaeda will be impressed with our softer
side," Dick Cheney mocked in his convention speech,
reusing a joke that wasn't funny the first time.

This from a man who secured five deferments from
Vietnam because he had "other priorities" at the time.
But it was Cheney's own war "fever," as Colin Powell described it to the
Washington Post's Bob Woodward, that was crucial in the president's reckless
decision to chase U.N. inspectors out of Iraq - lest they confirm that the White
House was hyping a WMD threat that didn't exist.


"There is nothing complicated about supporting our troops in combat," said a
sneering George W. Bush, challenging Kerry's patriotism because he dared vote
against a version of an $87-billion bill that will neatly turn around the fortunes of
Cheney's old outfit, Halliburton. So far, the Texas-based corporation has
accomplished next to nothing when it comes to bringing peace, stability or even a
steady supply of running water and electricity to Iraq and Afghanistan. But what
should we expect from a man who used his family name to get out of serving in
Vietnam but has yet to condemn those among his staff and financial contributors
who floated the phony Swift boat ad attack on Kerry's wartime courage.

This is the Orwellian cartoon we live with every day that Bush remains president,
in which supporting troops means sending them to die while occupying a deeply
troubled country that posed no threat to us; in which a man hit with "only
shrapnel" when serving his country is considered akin to a traitor for speaking out
against an immoral war when he returns.

In this Looney Tunes matinee, the loudest voices are those of the blustering
schoolyard bully who crudely masks his own inadequacies by calling others
sissies and punks. The GOP faithful ate up Cheney's barroom riff on Kerry's
alleged "sensitive" side just as they did earlier when Bush's shill, TV talk-show
host Dennis Miller, made the crack that Kerry and running mate John Edwards
should "get a room."

But, in a more sober mood, can any reasonable person really disagree with
Kerry's call for a "more effective, more thoughtful, more strategic, more
proactive, more sensitive war on terror that reaches out to other nations and
brings them to our side"? The fact is, the money hustlers and Beltway power
brokers know in their gut that Bush is in way over his head and Cheney is a loose
cannon - and that together they have alienated U.S. allies and enflamed the
Islamic world while making only marginal gains against Al Qaeda.

But these people don't care, because the fix is in. See, Bush promised at the
convention that in a second term he would continue to ensure that the rich get
richer, no matter how many unfair tax breaks, wasteful military contracts or
union-busting laws it takes.

And if you disagree with this son of privilege - a man who never earned an
honest dollar on his own but acts as if the lives of the unemployed and working
poor are of no consequence - well, you must be an "economic girlie man." At
least, so says mega-millionaire Arnold Schwarzenegger, the macho Hollywood
warrior who has never experienced combat himself.

This cartoon is all a great joke, except for the price we will pay if the audience
buys into it. We are not watching a movie, and the stakes are very real. Bush's
convention acceptance speech was a clear ideological endorsement of the
neoconservative vision that America can and should dominate the world with
military force.

Four more years of George W. Bush would mean more blood flowing - and
none of it would be fake.
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