Constructive gadfly
Published on September 22, 2004 By stevendedalus In Politics

According to Senator McCain he is voting for Bush because he showed great leadership when at ground zero he put his arm around the fire-chief and announced to the enemy we’re coming. Dramatic as it was, and admittedly the country was unanimously behind the President, this is insufficient reason to vote for one on the basis of one day. After all, three years have gone by and what was done in that time is the criterion for casting a vote. McCain further said that whether in agreement or not what the President says he means and the voter can take those words to the bank. This is peculiar thinking — though not, I suppose, coming from one with an eye on the White House in ‘08 — that doesn’t allow for assessing the wisdom of the President’s words, let alone the consequences. McCain himself has been highly critical of the president’s decisions and impels one to suspect that the senator cut a Machiavellian deal with Bush.

But two months from planting the seed of resolve at ground zero, the invasion of Afghanistan was an introduction to faulty thinking and a telling clue to his failure to do what he says by truncating that war before the region was thoroughly secured. Little did anyone at the time realize his short-span attentiveness had been switched to Iraq. Moreover, he did not even learn from the flimsy effort at Tora Bora and other pockets of resistance: he simplistically set out to conduct another war and again underestimated the enemy, despite advice to the contrary.

Had Gore or Clinton conducted a war in this sloppy manner, the public would be up in arms. But because Bush looked so good with the bullhorn and arm around the chief, and later in his flight suit on the aircraft carrier, substance doesn’t matter. Give me a break!

 

Copyright © 2004 Richard R. Kennedy All rights reserved. Revised: September 23, 2004.

http://stevendedalus.joeuser.com


Comments (Page 2)
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on Sep 24, 2004

You analysis is untrue. If McCain really want to be president, he should accept Kerrry offer to be his VP mate.
Kerry never would have chosen McCain anyway once he got the drift that McCain, the so-called renegade, was in reality a loyal ultraconservative. 

 

Why can't he just vote and support the person?
Of course, that's his prerogative, but why does he keep posing as freind of Kerry?

George Bush, Dick Cheney and their sycophantic hand picked speech crowds seem to think that if we say something enough, then it will magically come true. Put of a banner that says "mission accomplished," and the insurgency will crumble. Keep saying "Iraq is on a road to democracy" and magically strongman Allawi will be able to hold elections. Say that Afghanistan is free, then put a guy like Karzai in power -- the type of person that gave rise to the Taliban backlash in the first place. Kerry said that Bush is living in a "fantasy world of spin," and I think truer words have never been spoken. Just cause Condi Rice says something doesn't make it true.
Wow, what a great statement!

same underlying philosophy for winning the war on terror.
Oh, really, and just what is that philosophy so deeply underlying?

on Sep 24, 2004
Kerry never would have chosen McCain anyway once he got the drift that McCain, the so-called renegade, was in reality a loyal ultraconservative.


Wishful thininking.... The reality is that McCain turns Kerry down, not the other way.
on Sep 25, 2004
McCain might have been flattered by the courtship but he was never offered the ring when he balked at a nuptial agreement.
on Sep 25, 2004

Reply #5 By: jesusstayscrunchy - 9/23/2004 8:32:23 AM
George Bush, Dick Cheney and their sycophantic hand picked speech crowds seem to think that if we say something enough, then it will magically come true. Put of a banner that says "mission accomplished," and the insurgency will crumble. Keep saying "Iraq is on a road to democracy" and magically strongman Allawi will be able to hold elections. Say that Afghanistan is free, then put a guy like Karzai in power -- the type of person that gave rise to the Taliban backlash in the first place. Kerry said that Bush is living in a "fantasy world of spin," and I think truer words have never been spoken.


Gee jesusstayscrunchy sort of like what the Dems do huh?
on Sep 26, 2004
Gee jesusstayscrunchy sort of like what the Dems do huh?
Accentuating the positive when it does not exist is yet truth; citing the negative is necessarily false, eh?
on Sep 26, 2004
Reply #20 By: stevendedalus - 9/26/2004 10:58:46 AM
Gee jesusstayscrunchy sort of like what the Dems do huh?
Accentuating the positive when it does not exist is yet truth; citing the negative is necessarily false, eh?


You know what? You need to READ before you post! Anyone with a half a brain could see what I was refering to!

they seem to think that if we say something enough, then it will magically come true.


on Sep 27, 2004
Then you should be more incisive when you cut and paste. Besides, in attributing spin to Dems "magically" becoming true, implies that what they spin is false. Half brain.
on Sep 27, 2004

Reply #22 By: stevendedalus - 9/27/2004 1:06:30 PM
Then you should be more incisive when you cut and paste. Besides, in attributing spin to Dems "magically" becoming true, implies that what they spin is false. Half brain.


Excuse me half-brain! SPIN IS FALSE! Think about it for awhile.....
on Sep 28, 2004
Not entirely; spin is an offshoot of the truth, however caricatured or one-sided. Spinning a "road to democracy" despite the obstacles can nevertheless be possible, if not probable. The wrong reasons to go to war spins a perspective that is true, though unacceptable from another perspective. The element of falsity stems from extreme ideologies.
on Sep 28, 2004
Spin is also a wartime propaganda tactic. During a time of war, a constant "spin" of the actual events and the actions of leaders has always been used to undermine their authority and cause discontent among the military, while robbing leaders of support at home. The fact that "votes" are what is being robbed somehow blinds people to the damage being done. Given the torrent of such now, I am at a loss how people can't see parallels between people like Ted Kennedy and Tokyo Rose...

on Sep 28, 2004

Reply #24 By: stevendedalus - 9/28/2004 12:58:15 AM
Not entirely; spin is an offshoot of the truth, however caricatured or one-sided. Spinning a "road to democracy" despite the obstacles can nevertheless be possible, if not probable. The wrong reasons to go to war spins a perspective that is true, though unacceptable from another perspective. The element of falsity stems from extreme ideologies.


There is NO off-shoot of the truth! Either it's *true* or it's not. It's black and white not gray.
on Sep 28, 2004

It's black and white not gray
I would expect this from you.


Why not Zell Miller and Rose? Elect Kerry and you have a spitball defense?

on Sep 28, 2004

Reply #27 By: stevendedalus - 9/28/2004 11:34:01 AM
It's black and white not gray
I would expect this from you.


Why? Is it because I expect the truth to be the truth and NOT someones idea of what the truth *should* be (gray area)?
on Sep 29, 2004
Touché, truth and nothing but the truth so help me...
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