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Louise Slaughter wants our opinions on the Bu$h era

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justiceischeap Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-15-05 06:53 PM
Original message
Louise Slaughter wants our opinions on the Bu$h era
Edited on Thu Sep-15-05 06:57 PM by thecorrection
edited for better subject line

Louise Slaughter wants to know what people think of the Bush era. Here's your chance to sound off.

She wants your thoughts and reflections on the Bu$h era. How has the Bu$h Administration affected your day to day life? What will it mean to have a Democratic Congress and President? What are you going to do to make that a reality? Members of Congress need to hear your voice loud and clear! I thought we HAVE been talking loud and clear!!!! http://www.votelouise.com/era

My letter:
Though I've only lived 34 years and been political only 16 of those years, this nation is more divided than I've ever seen it. What's worse, there seems to be no end in site. This administration seems to be hellbent on ripping at the very fabric that holds us together by creating a divide that is larger than it has ever been before, whether it be with religion or economics. I also find myself looking at those that support this administration with disdain because they are supporting the destruction of our democracy.

More importantly, it seems there is little the "common" person can do to stop this. It feels like those that I voted for, the Democratic Party, have no spirit, no fight left. The Robert's hearing is a perfect example. Why were there no questions about his involvement in Iran Contra, why no questions about his involvement in the 2000 elections? Why is someone who doesn't seem to answer one important question during the hearings have the right to serve this nation? Yet no one really asked those hard questions though the American's they are hired to represent deserve to know about these things. If this man doesn't want to answer serious questions, then why should he be appointed to the highest court for another 30 years? It just doesn't make sense.

Finally, the way the media walks lock step with the Bush talking points, there is no discernable difference between fact and fiction. It took the horrible tragedy in the Gulf Coast to wake some from the slumber, including the media. This is the first time they have been truly critical of this administration and it is beginning to show in the polls. Why were they not this critical about his claims when taking this nation to war? We have since found that the entire war and the deaths' of 2000+ service members and countless innocent Iraqi's were all predicated on lies and fairy tales. Again, the Democratic Party showed no backbone, most signed on without a second thought.

This nation cannot afford to "stay the course" as the administration likes to say. This doesn't mean just the Republican party but the Democratic party as well. The entire federal government needs a hurricane to clean her halls because what we have now just isn't working.
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joemurphy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-15-05 06:58 PM
Response to Original message
1. Some thoughts on "the Bush Era"
Edited on Thu Sep-15-05 07:22 PM by joemurphy
This is part of my take on the “Bush Era”. I originally put it up in response to a Tom Friedman article on which someone invited comment:

Tom Friedman lost me when he joined the Bush bandwagon and came out in favor of an invasion of Iraq. Prior to that time I thought he was fairly knowledgeable about the Middle East. But in choosing to back Bush's plan for military action against Iraq he hitched his wagon to the Neocon pipedream that somehow the Middle East could be remade by the United States into a group of shining new democracies -- a sort of Islamic Europe with lots of representative republics, responsive to the collective will of their people, and pacific in their purpose and intent. The Iraq intervention would have the twin results of repressing terrorism and solving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. That, in turn, was going to bring an era of peace to the Middle East.

Friedman's endorsement of the Iraq War came in a column in which he said that we "had to do something" to answer the 911 attacks. In espousing mindless action, he was well-aware of the fact that there was no real link between Iraq and 911. Friedman, however, by his own admission, didn't care. Conditions had come to the point where America had to show somebody, somewhere in the Middle East, that it was no nation to be trifled with. Iraq, said Friedman, was as good a place as any to do that.

Friedman’s "we have to do something" and "we can democratize the Middle East" ideas were departures from both his past journalism and from the realpolitik that he and his Neocon friends had previously paid lip service. Both ideas have since proven disastrous to Iraq and to the United States. Terrorism, the root cause of our intervention, is now worse than ever and, instead of becoming truly democratic, Iraq has devolved into a chaos of sectarian violence, armed militias, daily bombings, kidnappings, assassinations, and blatant war-profiteering. It is increasingly clear that we cannot bring stability to Iraq. Indeed, our presence there is exacerbating Iraq’s inherent instability.

A repressed and desperate country under Saddam, Iraq now may not even be a country at all. Its public services are a shambles and its people are in most ways more cowed and financially destitute than they were under their former dictator. Since the war, Iraq's ethnic and religious divisions have widened. Public safety is non-existent in most urban areas. Oil revenues have dried up and pipelines are repeatedly cut by a hydra-headed armed insurgency that an undermanned and ill-equipped American military has proven unable to control. There is less electricity and oil produced in Iraq now than there was under Saddam, as its electrical power grids and pipelines are routinely sabotaged. The Iraqi people themselves are desperate for jobs and security and neither are in the foreseeable offing. Reconstruction has been stymied by graft, profiteering, and the ongoing violence.
Nor do the portents for Iraq’s long-term future appear bright. Those portents include an inevitable American pullout that will probably be sooner than later, violent civil war, and ultimately some kind of partition along ethic and religious lines. Meanwhile, as the U.S. fights to keep a lid on everything, Iraq’s Shiis move closer to their coreligionists in Iran, its Sunnis grow increasingly angry, wary, and alienated, and the Kurds move to consolidate their position in anticipation of gaining the oil fields around Kirkuk and the political independence which have always been their true aim. Private militias encompassing all factions are now arming themselves for the anticipated combat to come. Foreign jihadists continue to pour in, exploiting these internal divisions and serving to further destabilize the country. Suffice it to say that in Iraq we now have something akin to a present Somalia, a former Lebanon or a pre-Taliban Afghanistan in the making – a questionable nation being torn apart by a total breakdown in public order that seems to be increasingly moving toward faction, warlordism, and militia rule.

Our always somewhat fictitious "coalition of the willing" has now completely fallen apart. The Poles, Italians, and Spaniards have rightly seen the current situation as hopeless and have either pulled out or are in the process of doing so. Our only real ally, Great Britain, we now learn, has formulated plans to follow them.

For the American people, the Iraq war has meant a huge national debt, thousands of soldiers killed or maimed for life, and a democracy that has countenanced the torture of Abu Ghraib, the indefinite internment of minors at Guantanamo, and a weakened National Guard that, as the aftermath of Katrina has shown, is also needed at home. Our domestic immigration policy has become increasingly xenophobic and discriminatory against people of Islamic belief. Jingoism is now routinely used for political and ideological ends. We now debate laws in the halls of Congress that tolerate the examination of library records and the search of homes without the knowledge of the affected citizenry. It is now feasible to imprison American citizens and hold them incommunicado based solely on "enemy combatant" designations, without access to lawyers or to due process of law. The government uses ridiculous color-codes, unfounded rumor, and alarming news reports to ratchet up fear instead of quieting it. We now have our bags searched before taking subway rides, entering public buildings, or attending sporting events. We have to remove our shoes to ride airplanes. Security guards are everywhere. Metal detectors and pat-downs are now a public norm. And for all the billions spent, a hurricane has shown that we can’t even manage the anticipated threats from natural calamities and raised doubts about our ability to cope with a surprise attack from terrorists.

Meanwhile, our vaunted all-volunteer army has been debilitated by a war without aims or exit strategy. Without a draft, manning it has become problematic. Forty year olds are now encouraged to enlist as buck privates and high schools are complaining of cajoling from recruiters and their ability to influence impressionable youths. Our people have been coarsened and inured to an erosion of their ideals and their financial well-being. Worst of all, none of this seems to be getting any better. Owing to a near absence of meaningful leadership, there appears to be no clear path out of our present malaise. Most Americans I know are not sanguine about the future.

Men like Tom Friedman, the cheerleaders for our intervention in Iraq, have proven to be failed visionaries. In view of their past errors of judgment, they no longer merit being listened to. Personally, I no longer care what Tom Friedman has to say about Iraq or about anything else. To me he has become worse than irrelevant. He has become a cipher. To hell with him, and to hell with the others like him – those that are responsible for all this.

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BlackVelvetElvis Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-15-05 07:16 PM
Response to Original message
2. I shared my opinion.
Even though she isn't my congressman/woman. Any dem that stands up is mine.
I didn't cut and paste either, so I can't share. I thought it was good too.
I'm feeling cynical and hope this isn't just to put me on some email list for money. I want action from our dems in congress, not to put me on some mailing list.
Go Louise!
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justiceischeap Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-15-05 07:28 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. She certainly isn't getting my money
But my opinion is free. I think the dems need to start hearing that they are just as culpable as the repugs.
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