SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: geode00 who wrote (214122)1/23/2007 2:04:32 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Yes, Bush Has Failed This Country
____________________________________________________________

by Dave Zweifel

Published on Monday, January 22, 2007 by the Capital Times (Madison, Wisconsin)

There's a reader who e-mails me every time I write a column that criticizes George W. Bush's so-called "war on terror."
"How many attacks have we had on our country since the president took on Iraq?" he asks, obviously convinced that because we started and are now escalating a war there, the world's terrorists are cowering.

Well, guess what - there haven't been any attacks on us since Sept. 11, 2001, because we're doing enough damage to ourselves. We don't need any outside help. All Osama bin Laden and his gang of cutthroats have to do is sit back and watch us squander our money, our civility and our standing in the world.

The tragedy of 9/11 was bad enough with the loss of 3,000 innocent American lives. But, even if the terrorists wanted to, they couldn't have planned a more destructive scenario than what we've done to ourselves since. We played right into their hands.

The pity is that after the attacks on the twin towers and the Pentagon we headed down the right path, marching into Afghanistan to destroy the terrorist training camps and ousting the bin Laden sympathizers, the Taliban. Then, for reasons that still remain a mystery, we not only let bin Laden escape, but decided not to hunt him down. Instead, we took on the hapless and, as it turns out, weaponless Saddam Hussein instead. And now, because we took our eye off the ball, we've got renewed problems to deal with in Afghanistan.

Make no mistake, this will go down as the biggest and most costly blunder in U.S. history. It not only has cost us hundreds of billions of dollars that could have been used much more effectively in a battle against terror, not to mention to help with our own problems at home, but it has cost us America's reputation. We no longer are viewed as a beacon of freedom for the world, but a nation to be vilified for its war-mongering, its torturing and its refusal to work with other countries.

There was a time when people of other nations distinguished between the bad decisions of our country's leaders and the good of the American people themselves. No more. The American people, who returned this disastrous administration to power in 2004, are now viewed as villains themselves.

Yet, incredibly, what this administration has done to this country hasn't sunk in with the president and vice president.

The time has come to turn things around, to admit our mistakes, to regain our moral compass. Instead, the men with their hands on the controls are not only going full steam ahead, they're closing their eyes and refusing to hear the pleas from the American people and some of their closest friends. We once impeached a president for telling lies about his affair with an intern. Yet we give a free pass to a president who told us lies to start a war, has effectively reduced America to a rogue nation, and insists on continuing a failed course.

Can we actually survive another two years?



To: geode00 who wrote (214122)1/23/2007 8:45:31 AM
From: Dennis O'Bell  Respond to of 281500
 
Exactly. Bush hasn't done anything GOOD for Americans since he's been in office. It's 6 years of massive increases in debt and a lousy global PR job for the country.

Just don't lose sight of the fact that it was the present day Republican party that has had such complete contempt for the average American that they installed someone as unfit for the job as Bush is.

There simply isn't any excuse, all anyone had to do was *look* at Bush as governor back in Texas to realize this. Not the Republicans though. After getting the Supreme Court to "win" the first election for them, they were all slapping the palms, high five, the beginning of a century long conservative hegemony.

So it isn't all Bush's fault here, far from it. And I doubt that people have really learned anything much. Already a lot of the discourse about the war in Iraq is misplaced. People are saying they don't want American soldiers dying there, but that "It's time for the Iraqis to take responsibility", "We've removed Saddam and done our job", etc...

Who in that party has learned anything ?

bin Laden really did understand how people think in this country, particularly right wing conservatives, and his low technology terrorist sucker punch has worked like a charm. Unlike that mythical right wing conservative hegemony, the after effects really will last all century and beyond. Hell, we're still waging the War on Drugs (another Republican innovation.) That one has continued to erode basic rights and cost Americans incalculable amounts of money. The War on Terror is a far, far bigger success. And all it took to launch it was some box cutters and a handful of brainwashed idiots willing to sacrifice themselves.