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Subject: Olbermann on Election Eve
From: Imperialist Watch
Date: 11/7/2006 9:13:48 PM
http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/november2006/071106OLBERMANN.htm
And finally tonight, a Special Comment about tomorrow's elections.
We are, as every generation, inseparable from our own time.
Thus is our perspective, inevitably that of the
explorer looking into the wrong end of the telescope.
But even accounting for our myopia, it's hard to
imagine there have been many elections more
important than this one, certainly not in Non-Presidential years.
And so we look at the verdict in the trial of
Saddam Hussein yesterday, and, with the very
phrase "October, or November, Surprise" now a
part of our vernacular, and the chest-thumping
coming from so many of the Republican campaigners
today, each of us must wonder about the
convenience of the timing of his conviction and sentencing.
But let us give history and coincidence the
benefit of the doubt let's say it's just
"happened" that way and for a moment not look
into the wrong end of the telescope.
Let's perceive instead the bigger picture:
Saddam Hussein, found guilty in an Iraqi court.
Who can argue against that?
He is officially, what the world always knew he was: a war criminal.
Mr. Bush, was this imprimatur, worth the cost of
2,832 American lives, and thousands more American lives yet to be lost?
Is the conviction of Saddam Hussein the reason you went to war in Iraq?
Or did you go to war in Iraq because of the
Weapons of Mass Destruction that did not exist?
Or did you go to war in Iraq because of the
connection between Iraq and Al Qaeda that did not exist?
Or did you go to war in Iraq to break the bonds
of tyranny there while installing the mechanisms of tyranny here?
Or did you go to war in Iraq because you felt the
need to wreak vengeance against somebody anybody?
Or did you go to war in Iraq to contain a rogue
state which, months earlier, your own
administration had declared had been fully contained by sanctions?
Or did you go to war in Iraq. to keep gas prices down?
How startling it was, Sir, to hear you introduce
oil to your stump speeches over the weekend.
Not four years removed from the most dismissive,
the most condescending, the most ridiculing
denials of the very hint at, as Mr. Rumsfeld put it, this "nonsense".
There you were, campaigning in Colorado, in
Nebraska, in Florida, in Kansas suddenly
turning this 'unpatriotic idea'. into a platform plank.
"You can imagine a world in which these
extremists and radicals got control of energy
resources," you told us. "And then you can
imagine them saying, 'We're going to pull a bunch
of oil off the market to run your price of oil up unless you do the
following."
Having frightened us, having bullied us, having
lied to us, having ignored and re-written the
constitution under our noses, having stayed the
course, having denied you've stayed the course,
having belittled us about "timelines" but instead extolled "benchmarks".
You've now resorted, Sir, to this?
We must stay in Iraq to save the two-dollar gallon of gas?
Mr. President, there is no other conclusion we
can draw as we go to the polls tomorrow.
Sir. you have been making this up as you went along.
This country was founded to prevent anybody from
making it up as they went along.
Those vaunted founding fathers of ours have been
so quoted-up, that they appear as marble statues:
like the chiseled guards of China, or the faces on Mount Rushmore.
But in fact they were practical people and the
thing they obviously feared most, was a government of men and not laws.
They provided the checks and balances for a reason.
No one man could run the government the way he
saw fit unless he, at the least, took into
consideration what those he governed saw.
A House of Representatives would be the people's eyes.
A Senate would be the corrective force on that House.
An Executive would do the work. and hold the
Constitution to his chest like his child.
A Supreme Court would oversee it all.
Checks and balances.
Where did that go, Mr. Bush?
And what price did we pay because we have let it go?
Saddam Hussein will get out of Iraq the same way
2,832 Americans have, and thousands more.
He'll get out faster than we will.
And if nothing changes tomorrow, you, Sir, will
be out of the White House long before the rest of
us can say. we are out of Iraq.
And whose fault is this?
Not truly yours. You took advantage of those of
us who were afraid, and those of us who believed
unity and nation took precedence over all else.
But we let you take that advantage.
And so we let you go to war in Iraq. To. oust
Saddam. Or find non-existant Weapons. Or avenge
9/11. Or fight terrorists who only got there
after we did. Or as cover to change the fabric of
our Constitution. Or for lower prices at The Texaco. Or. ?
There are still a few hours left, before the
polls open, sir, there are many rationalizations still untried.
And whatever your motives of the moment, we the
people have, in true good faith and with the
genuine patriotism of self-sacrifice (of which
you have shown you know nothing). we have let you go on.
Making it up.
As you went along.
Un-checked. and un-balanced.
Vote.
---
"We talk a great deal about patriotism. What do we mean by patriotism in the
context of our times? I venture to suggest that what we mean is a sense of
national responsibility which will enable America to remain master of her
power-to walk with it in serenity and wisdom, with self-respect and the
respect to all mankind; a patriotism that puts country ahead of self; a
patriotism which is not short, frenzied outbursts of emotion, but the
tranquil and steady dedication of a lifetime. The dedication of a
lifetime-these are words that are easy to utter, but this is a mighty
assignment. For it is often easier to fight for principles than to live up
to them." - Adlai Stevenson's 'Nature of Patriotism' Speech, 1952
Subject: Olbermann on Election Eve
From: Imperialist Watch
Date: 11/7/2006 9:13:48 PM
http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/november2006/071106OLBERMANN.htm
And finally tonight, a Special Comment about tomorrow's elections.
We are, as every generation, inseparable from our own time.
Thus is our perspective, inevitably that of the
explorer looking into the wrong end of the telescope.
But even accounting for our myopia, it's hard to
imagine there have been many elections more
important than this one, certainly not in Non-Presidential years.
And so we look at the verdict in the trial of
Saddam Hussein yesterday, and, with the very
phrase "October, or November, Surprise" now a
part of our vernacular, and the chest-thumping
coming from so many of the Republican campaigners
today, each of us must wonder about the
convenience of the timing of his conviction and sentencing.
But let us give history and coincidence the
benefit of the doubt let's say it's just
"happened" that way and for a moment not look
into the wrong end of the telescope.
Let's perceive instead the bigger picture:
Saddam Hussein, found guilty in an Iraqi court.
Who can argue against that?
He is officially, what the world always knew he was: a war criminal.
Mr. Bush, was this imprimatur, worth the cost of
2,832 American lives, and thousands more American lives yet to be lost?
Is the conviction of Saddam Hussein the reason you went to war in Iraq?
Or did you go to war in Iraq because of the
Weapons of Mass Destruction that did not exist?
Or did you go to war in Iraq because of the
connection between Iraq and Al Qaeda that did not exist?
Or did you go to war in Iraq to break the bonds
of tyranny there while installing the mechanisms of tyranny here?
Or did you go to war in Iraq because you felt the
need to wreak vengeance against somebody anybody?
Or did you go to war in Iraq to contain a rogue
state which, months earlier, your own
administration had declared had been fully contained by sanctions?
Or did you go to war in Iraq. to keep gas prices down?
How startling it was, Sir, to hear you introduce
oil to your stump speeches over the weekend.
Not four years removed from the most dismissive,
the most condescending, the most ridiculing
denials of the very hint at, as Mr. Rumsfeld put it, this "nonsense".
There you were, campaigning in Colorado, in
Nebraska, in Florida, in Kansas suddenly
turning this 'unpatriotic idea'. into a platform plank.
"You can imagine a world in which these
extremists and radicals got control of energy
resources," you told us. "And then you can
imagine them saying, 'We're going to pull a bunch
of oil off the market to run your price of oil up unless you do the
following."
Having frightened us, having bullied us, having
lied to us, having ignored and re-written the
constitution under our noses, having stayed the
course, having denied you've stayed the course,
having belittled us about "timelines" but instead extolled "benchmarks".
You've now resorted, Sir, to this?
We must stay in Iraq to save the two-dollar gallon of gas?
Mr. President, there is no other conclusion we
can draw as we go to the polls tomorrow.
Sir. you have been making this up as you went along.
This country was founded to prevent anybody from
making it up as they went along.
Those vaunted founding fathers of ours have been
so quoted-up, that they appear as marble statues:
like the chiseled guards of China, or the faces on Mount Rushmore.
But in fact they were practical people and the
thing they obviously feared most, was a government of men and not laws.
They provided the checks and balances for a reason.
No one man could run the government the way he
saw fit unless he, at the least, took into
consideration what those he governed saw.
A House of Representatives would be the people's eyes.
A Senate would be the corrective force on that House.
An Executive would do the work. and hold the
Constitution to his chest like his child.
A Supreme Court would oversee it all.
Checks and balances.
Where did that go, Mr. Bush?
And what price did we pay because we have let it go?
Saddam Hussein will get out of Iraq the same way
2,832 Americans have, and thousands more.
He'll get out faster than we will.
And if nothing changes tomorrow, you, Sir, will
be out of the White House long before the rest of
us can say. we are out of Iraq.
And whose fault is this?
Not truly yours. You took advantage of those of
us who were afraid, and those of us who believed
unity and nation took precedence over all else.
But we let you take that advantage.
And so we let you go to war in Iraq. To. oust
Saddam. Or find non-existant Weapons. Or avenge
9/11. Or fight terrorists who only got there
after we did. Or as cover to change the fabric of
our Constitution. Or for lower prices at The Texaco. Or. ?
There are still a few hours left, before the
polls open, sir, there are many rationalizations still untried.
And whatever your motives of the moment, we the
people have, in true good faith and with the
genuine patriotism of self-sacrifice (of which
you have shown you know nothing). we have let you go on.
Making it up.
As you went along.
Un-checked. and un-balanced.
Vote.
---
"We talk a great deal about patriotism. What do we mean by patriotism in the
context of our times? I venture to suggest that what we mean is a sense of
national responsibility which will enable America to remain master of her
power-to walk with it in serenity and wisdom, with self-respect and the
respect to all mankind; a patriotism that puts country ahead of self; a
patriotism which is not short, frenzied outbursts of emotion, but the
tranquil and steady dedication of a lifetime. The dedication of a
lifetime-these are words that are easy to utter, but this is a mighty
assignment. For it is often easier to fight for principles than to live up
to them." - Adlai Stevenson's 'Nature of Patriotism' Speech, 1952
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