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Subject: The Great Divider
From: Imperialist Watch
Date: 11/2/2006 1:38:30 PM
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/02/opinion/02thu1.html
The Great Divider
As President Bush throws himself into the final days of a particularly nasty
campaign season, he's settled into a familiar pattern of ugly behavior.
Since he can't defend the real world created by his policies and his
decisions, Mr. Bush is inventing a fantasy world in which to campaign on
phony issues against fake enemies.
In Mr. Bush's world, America is making real progress in Iraq. In the real
world, as Michael Gordon reported in yesterday's Times, the index that
generals use to track developments shows an inexorable slide toward chaos.
In Mr. Bush's world, his administration is marching arm in arm with Iraqi
officials committed to democracy and to staving off civil war. In the real
world, the prime minister of Iraq orders the removal of American checkpoints
in Baghdad and abets the sectarian militias that are slicing and dicing
their country.
In Mr. Bush's world, there are only two kinds of Americans: those who are
against terrorism, and those who somehow are all right with it. Some
Americans want to win in Iraq and some don't. There are Americans who
support the troops and Americans who don't support the troops. And at the
root of it all is the hideously damaging fantasy that there is a gulf
between Americans who love their country and those who question his
leadership.
Mr. Bush has been pushing these divisive themes all over the nation,
offering up the ludicrous notion the other day that if Democrats manage to
control even one house of Congress, America will lose and the terrorists
will win. But he hit a particularly creepy low when he decided to distort a
lame joke lamely delivered by Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts. Mr. Kerry
warned college students that the punishment for not learning your lessons
was to "get stuck in Iraq." In context, it was obviously an attempt to
disparage Mr. Bush's intelligence. That's impolitic and impolite, but it's
not as bad as Mr. Bush's response. Knowing full well what Mr. Kerry meant,
the president and his team cried out that the senator was disparaging the
troops. It was a depressing replay of the way the Bush campaign Swift-boated
Americans in 2004 into believing that Mr. Kerry, who went to war, was a
coward and Mr. Bush, who stayed home, was a hero.
It's not the least bit surprising or objectionable that Mr. Bush would hit
the trail hard at this point, trying to salvage his party's control of
Congress and, by extension, his last two years in office. And we're not
naïve enough to believe that either party has been running a positive
campaign that focuses on the issues.
But when candidates for lower office make their opponents out to be friends
of Osama bin Laden, or try to turn a minor gaffe into a near felony, that's
just depressing. When the president of the United States gleefully bathes in
the muck to divide Americans into those who love their country and those who
don't, it is destructive to the fabric of the nation he is supposed to be
leading.
This is hardly the first time that Mr. Bush has played the politics of fear,
anger and division; if he's ever missed a chance to wave the bloody flag of
9/11, we can't think of when. But Mr. Bush's latest outbursts go way beyond
that. They leave us wondering whether this president will ever be willing or
able to make room for bipartisanship, compromise and statesmanship in the
two years he has left in office.
--
"In all history there is no war which was not hatched by the governments,
the governments alone, independent of the interests of the people..."
Leo Tolstoy
Subject: The Great Divider
From: Imperialist Watch
Date: 11/2/2006 1:38:30 PM
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/02/opinion/02thu1.html
The Great Divider
As President Bush throws himself into the final days of a particularly nasty
campaign season, he's settled into a familiar pattern of ugly behavior.
Since he can't defend the real world created by his policies and his
decisions, Mr. Bush is inventing a fantasy world in which to campaign on
phony issues against fake enemies.
In Mr. Bush's world, America is making real progress in Iraq. In the real
world, as Michael Gordon reported in yesterday's Times, the index that
generals use to track developments shows an inexorable slide toward chaos.
In Mr. Bush's world, his administration is marching arm in arm with Iraqi
officials committed to democracy and to staving off civil war. In the real
world, the prime minister of Iraq orders the removal of American checkpoints
in Baghdad and abets the sectarian militias that are slicing and dicing
their country.
In Mr. Bush's world, there are only two kinds of Americans: those who are
against terrorism, and those who somehow are all right with it. Some
Americans want to win in Iraq and some don't. There are Americans who
support the troops and Americans who don't support the troops. And at the
root of it all is the hideously damaging fantasy that there is a gulf
between Americans who love their country and those who question his
leadership.
Mr. Bush has been pushing these divisive themes all over the nation,
offering up the ludicrous notion the other day that if Democrats manage to
control even one house of Congress, America will lose and the terrorists
will win. But he hit a particularly creepy low when he decided to distort a
lame joke lamely delivered by Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts. Mr. Kerry
warned college students that the punishment for not learning your lessons
was to "get stuck in Iraq." In context, it was obviously an attempt to
disparage Mr. Bush's intelligence. That's impolitic and impolite, but it's
not as bad as Mr. Bush's response. Knowing full well what Mr. Kerry meant,
the president and his team cried out that the senator was disparaging the
troops. It was a depressing replay of the way the Bush campaign Swift-boated
Americans in 2004 into believing that Mr. Kerry, who went to war, was a
coward and Mr. Bush, who stayed home, was a hero.
It's not the least bit surprising or objectionable that Mr. Bush would hit
the trail hard at this point, trying to salvage his party's control of
Congress and, by extension, his last two years in office. And we're not
naïve enough to believe that either party has been running a positive
campaign that focuses on the issues.
But when candidates for lower office make their opponents out to be friends
of Osama bin Laden, or try to turn a minor gaffe into a near felony, that's
just depressing. When the president of the United States gleefully bathes in
the muck to divide Americans into those who love their country and those who
don't, it is destructive to the fabric of the nation he is supposed to be
leading.
This is hardly the first time that Mr. Bush has played the politics of fear,
anger and division; if he's ever missed a chance to wave the bloody flag of
9/11, we can't think of when. But Mr. Bush's latest outbursts go way beyond
that. They leave us wondering whether this president will ever be willing or
able to make room for bipartisanship, compromise and statesmanship in the
two years he has left in office.
--
"In all history there is no war which was not hatched by the governments,
the governments alone, independent of the interests of the people..."
Leo Tolstoy
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