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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Alighieri who wrote (202003)9/14/2004 2:26:31 PM
From: Tenchusatsu  Respond to of 1572946
 
Al, You're flipping and he's flopping.

Remember, it all depends on what your definition of "flipping" and "flopping" is. ;-)

Tenchusatsu



To: Alighieri who wrote (202003)9/14/2004 4:07:25 PM
From: Road Walker  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1572946
 
Posted by Poet to another thread... a good read by the author E. L. Doctorow:

:
It first appeared in the September 9th issue of the
Easthampton Star.

*

I fault this president for not knowing what death
is. He does not suffer the death of our twenty one
year olds who wanted to be what they could be.

On the eve of D-day in 1944 General Eisenhower
prayed to God for the lives of the young soldiers he
knew were going to die. He knew what death was. Even
in a justifiable war, a war not of choice but of
necessity, a war of survival, the cost was almost
more than Eisenhower could bear.

But this president does not know what death is. He
hasn't the mind for it. You see him joking with the
press, peering under the table for the WMDs he can't
seem to find, you see him at rallies strutting up to
the stage in shirt sleeves to the roar of the
carefully screened crowd, smiling and waving,
triumphal, a he-man. He does not mourn. He doesn't
understand why he should mourn. He is satisfied
during the course of a speech written for him to
look solemn for a moment and speak of the brave
young Americans who made the ultimate sacrifice for
their country. But you study him, you look into his
eyes and know he dissembles an emotion which he does
not feel in the depths of his being because he has
no capacity for it. He does not feel a personal
responsibility for the thousand dead young men and
women who wanted be what they could be. They come to
his desk not as youngsters with mothers and father
or wives and children who will suffer to the end of
their days a terribly torn fabric of familial
relationships and the inconsolable remembrance of
aborted life.... they come to his desk as a political
liability which is why the press is no permitted to
photograph the arrival of their coffins from Iraq.
How then can he mourn? To mourn is to express regret
and he regrets nothing. He does not regret that his
reason for going to war was, as he knew,
unsubstantiated by the facts. He does not regret
that his bungled plan for the war's aftermath has
made of his mission-accomplished a disaster. He does
not regret that rather than controlling terrorism
his war in Iraq has licensed it. So he never mourns
for the dead and crippled youngsters who have fought
this war of his choice. He wanted to go to war and
he did. He had not the mind to perceive the costs of
war, or to listen to those who knew those costs. He
did not understand that you do not go to war when it
is one of the options but when it is the only
option; you go not because you want to but because
you have to.

Yet this president knew it would be difficult for
Americans not to cheer the overthrow of a foreign
dictator. He knew that much. This president and his
supporters would seem to have a mind for only one
thing --- to take power, to remain in power, and to
use that power for the sake of themselves and their
friends. A war will do that as well as anything.
You become a wartime leader. The country gets behind
you. Dissent becomes inappropriate. And so he does
not drop to his knees, he is not contrite, he does
not sit in the church with the grieving parents and
wives and children. He is the President who does
not feel. He does not feel for the families of the
dead, he does not feel for the thirty five million
of us who live in poverty, he does not feel for the
forty percent who cannot afford health insurance, he
does not feel for the miners whose lungs are turning
black or for the working people he has deprived of
he chance to work overtime at time-and-a-half to pay
their bills --- it is amazing for how many people
in this country this President does not feel. But he
will dissemble feeling. He will say in all sincerity
he is relieving the wealthiest one percent of the
population of their tax burden for the sake of the
rest of us, and that he is polluting the air we
breathe for the sake of our economy, and that he is
decreasing the safety regulations for coal mines to
save the coal miners' jobs, and that he is depriving
workers of their time-and-a- half benefits for
overtime because this is actually a way to honor
them by raising them into the professional class.
And this litany of lies he will versify with
reverences for God and the flag and democracy, when
just what he and his party are doing to our
democracy is choking the life out of it.

But there is one more terribly sad thing about all
of this. I remember the millions of people here
and around the world who marched against the war. It
was extraordinary, that spontaneous aroused oversoul
of alarm and protest that transcended national
borders. Why did it happen? After all, this was not
the only war anyone had ever seen coming. There are
little wars all over he world most of the time. But
the cry of protest was the appalled understanding of
millions of people that America was ceding its role
as the last best hope of mankind. It was their
perception that the classic archetype of democracy
was morphing into a rogue nation. The greatest
democratic republic in history was turning its back
on the future, using its extraordinary power and
standing not to advance the ideal of a concordance
of civilizations but to endorse the kind of tribal
combat that originated with the Neanderthals, a
people, now extinct, who could imagine ensuring
their survival by no other means than pre-emptive war.

The president we get is the country we get. With
each president the nation is conformed spiritually.
He is the artificer of our malleable national soul.
He proposes not only the laws but the kinds of
lawlessness that govern our lives and invoke our
responses. The people he appoints are cast in his
image. The trouble they get into and get us into, is
his characteristic trouble. Finally the media
amplify his character into our moral weather report.
He becomes the face of our sky, the conditions that
prevail: How can we sustain ourselves as the United
Sates of America given the stupid and ineffective
warmaking, the constitutionally insensitive
lawgiving, and the monarchal economics of this
president? He cannot mourn but is a figure of such
moral vacancy as to make us mourn for ourselves.

E.L. Doctorow