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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jul-14-07 08:14 PM
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In The Last Throes, Judiciously
http://www.regressiveantidote.net/Articles/In_The_Last_Throes,_Judiciously.html

In The Last Throes, Judiciously
David Michael Green

David Labowitz, an insurance salesman here , said he voted for Mr. Bush in 2004 and was eager for the next election to come along so he could rectify what he called his mistake. “I am a registered Republican,” Mr. Labowitz said, “but I am so embarrassed to be a registered Republican.” (New York Times, July 9, 2007)



Imagine a burning building, with the people inside scrambling to find the exits.

Now imagine that building located on the deck of a large ship, isolated in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, riddled with gaping holes and sinking fast.

Keep that image in your mind, and add to it the tsunami that is fast approaching the ship’s location.

It will get there soon, but not before the Enola Gay, which is buzzing overhead with a special delivery item in its payload.

Got that picture in your mind? Welcome to the Republican Party, July 2007.

Or, the “Grand Old Party”, as our regressive friends like to call it. Old? Sure – as old as greed itself. Party? Well, there ain’t a lot of celebrating going on in its vicinity, but if you mean a congregation of ever-narrowing numbers of people aggregated around certain political ideas, however ridiculous they may be, well then, sure, this is a party. But grand? Only in the scale of its current mess.

If you’ve got any political antennae at all, any sensitivity to the moods and trends of American politics, you can’t help but conclude that it is all collapsing fast, and with it as well many of the multiple enablers who have assisted in bringing us this ugliest of disasters these last years. It’s all coming apart now, bursting its tawdry seams, and doing so not only with a tremendous rapidity, but with even a tremendous increase in the rate of rapidity.

What a week it has been.

more...
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Gman Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jul-14-07 08:20 PM
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1. Kinda off topic but
I was raised a Democrat from a very, very early age. As I grew up, I could never imagine why anyone would ever want to be a Republican. Then I grew up and understood greed and evil in people. FOrtunately, there are a lot of good people that have been misled for years about the evil GOP and they are now seeing the evil for what it is.
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jimshoes Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jul-14-07 08:58 PM
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2. I can picture the GOP
looking like the Hindenburg in a ball of flame. It can't happen fast enough.
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seafan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jul-14-07 09:08 PM
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3. This is a wonderfully written piece from David Michael Green.
In The Last Throes: Judiciously:


.....

And then, of course, there is Bush himself to consider. Fully seventy percent of the public are now reported to want the troops out of Iraq by April. My guess is that that number will skyrocket even further now that it has been revealed that the cost of the war is running $12 billion per month. The president is due to report to Congress this week on the progress made in Iraq, but there isn’t any. Literally. Reported one story, “The Iraqi government is unlikely to meet any of the political and security goals or timelines President Bush set for it in January when he announced a major shift in U.S. policy, according to senior administration officials closely involved in the matter”. Is it therefore any surprise with these guys that, as another headline put it, “Administration Shaving Yardstick for Iraq Gains”, and that they are furiously trying to lower expectations in advance of the report? In yet another media report, the categories they invented trying to gussy up the corpse of Iraq were described by one insider as “bizarre”. No doubt. Perhaps they’ll be citing the Iraqi government for increased efficiency in addressing the problem of the global population boom. Could that be a category?

Meanwhile, Defense Secretary Robert Gates canceled his trip to Latin America this week and National Security Advisor Stephen Hadley bagged his family vacation, both returning to Washington in a hurry. According to ABC, an insider described the White House as being in “panic mode” as members of Congress are trying to ditch Bush and Cheney faster than a nasty case of the clap picked up on some overseas junket.

Meanwhile, the usual suspects from the rabid right are desperately trying their level best to keep the poison flowing, of course. The New York Times was attacked by conservative papers for capitulating to some very, very bad people in the Muslim world, while the Washington Times attacked both Democratic and Republican members of what it dubbed the “appeasement caucus”, who are “are poised to send another unmistakable message of weakness to the jihadists”. I had always thought that spending half a decade and half a trillion dollars only to see the entirety of your empire’s land forces get the shit kicked out of them was a pretty good definition of sending an unmistakable message of weakness to your enemy, but what do I know? The Wall Street Journal, meanwhile, cautioned frightened Republican members of Congress that “their best prospect for making Iraq less important in 2008 is military progress that allows for a reduction in US forces with honor and a more stable Iraqi government”. Hmmm... “Peace with honor”, “Peace with honor” – where have I heard that gem before?

.....

We have very far to go, to be sure, but the project of regressive politics and the Bush administration to which it has been intimately tied is crumbling before our eyes. Like David Labowitz, quoted at the top of this piece, voters have lately been clocked departing the GOP at speeds approaching Mach 5, horrified and shamed at their own foolishness for ever associating with such monsters in the first place. And still the worst tales of greed and deceit and murderous violence have yet to emerge from the bog that produced Bush, Cheney, Rove, DeLay and Scalia, of that I am as sure as can be. Imagine how it will look when more – and the worst – of the truth is revealed.

It’s worth considering how far we’ve come, and how perilous was the fate of the republic, only a short time ago (and, unquestionably, still to some degree today). The most chilling words ever to emanate from this or any administration were surely also the most honest these guys ever spoke. In the summer of 2002, a “senior advisor” to Bush (my guess has always been that it was Rove) spoke off the record to reporter and author Ron Suskind, and in so doing revealed the true project of the regressive movement, now firmly lodged in the White House. Suskind reported this conversation in the following paragraph from his 2004 article, “Without A Doubt”, and the words have been frightening many a thoughtful reader ever since:

The aide said that guys like me were “in what we call the reality‑based community,” which he defined as people who “believe that solutions emerge from your judicious study of discernible reality.” I nodded and murmured something about enlightenment principles and empiricism. He cut me off. “That's not the way the world really works anymore,” he continued. “We're an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you're studying that reality – judiciously, as you will – we'll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that's how things will sort out. We're history's actors . . . and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.”



Fortunately for the entire world, it turned out a bit differently.

History’s actors are now history’s acted upon. Perhaps they are stunned to find that they are mere mortals, like the rest of us.
And the empire has gone the way of every other empire before it. Only a lot faster.
And they did, indeed, create realities through their actions. Those realities are called Iraq, global warming, Katrina, the debt, and more.
And we in the reality-based community did indeed study them, and increasingly, we did so rather judiciously.

And we don’t like what our studies have revealed. And we don’t want their empire, especially with them at the head of it. And we don’t want their reality creations.

And so we’re creating a new reality, ourselves, we pathetic peons in the reality-based community.

And they can study our reality. Judiciously, as they will.

And they’ll have plenty of time to do so. In their jail cells.




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