Archive for the 'Bush' Category

26
Apr

Bitter Bad/Bitter Blue

 Let’s be blunt. Bitter? You bet I’m bitter

By Robyn E. Blumner, Times Columnist
Published Friday, April 18, 2008 12:46 AM

Barack Obama may have been a little too blunt in his now infamous quip about  how the economic insecurities gripping small-town America manifest themselves, but the word “bitter” perfectly sums up my feelings these days.

You bet I’m bitter.

I’ve watched my country get hijacked by a group of self-serving incompetents who have little conscience about sending young men and women to die in an unnecessary war, while putting the bill on a credit card for the next generation.

You bet I’m bitter.

I’ve seen some of the greatest moral handiwork of modern civilization — the Geneva Conventions — get treated as if it were the naive ramblings of out-of-touch do-gooders. I’ve watched the founding principles of our nation — the inalienable right of due process of law and the checks and balances of three co-equal branches of government — treated as a copse to be mowed down en route to the unitary executive.

You bet I’m bitter.

I’ve stood by as the wealth of our nation has been concentrated in the hands of a tiny elite while the middle class struggles to financially tread water. I’ve seen our tax policies shift to benefit this small group, starving our national treasury of needed resources and making it far less possible to prepare for the future by investing in infrastructure, education and shoring up Social Security and Medicare.

You bet I’m bitter.

I’ve watched a macabre health care system become even more dysfunctional, so that a single accident or illness can destroy the economic security of a family. I’ve seen Big Pharma use its lobbying muscle to keep Medicare from negotiating better drug prices. I’ve observed as health insurance companies with their inflated middle-man profits add immeasurably to the cost of care while trying to deny coverage and services to their customers. I’ve heard our leaders whine about “socialized medicine” any time a comprehensive fix is suggested.

You bet I’m bitter.

I’ve seen industry insiders put in charge of regulatory agencies so that worker safety and environmental protection are eroded in the name of increased profits. I’ve watched as science is subverted to ideology. Where facts on global climate change are ignored or manipulated to fit a politically driven script. I’ve seen the Department of Justice transform into the legal arm of the Republican Party.

You bet I’m bitter.

I’ve watched the dismantling of the wall of separation between church and state, allowing billions of tax dollars to flow to religiously affiliated groups that peddle their own brand of faith as part of the government-funded service. I’ve seen Christian fundamentalism defeat funding for international family planning and constrain the distribution of condoms in places where HIV/AIDS has decimated the population.

You bet I’m bitter.

I’ve stood by as the national debt nearly doubled in the last seven years due to irresponsible tax cuts and spending on such folly as an endless pre-emptive war that may end up costing three trillion dollars. I’ve observed the privatization of core government functions, such as the handling of security assignments in Iraq by the unaccountable Blackwater. I’ve seen billions of dollars in Iraq reconstruction money wasted and lost to a system of endemic corruption.

You bet I’m bitter.

I’ve watched our nation get less secure thanks to the counterproductive policies of the neocons in charge. I’ve seen the populations of otherwise friendly nations turn against the United States, seeing us as the world’s biggest bully and hypocrite rather than its greatest beacon of liberty, justice and opportunity. I’ve observed that our willingness to abuse prisoners has become a recruiting tool for our enemies, making us masters of our own demise.

You bet I’m bitter.

And when more than 80 percent of Americans think we’re on the wrong track, I’m not the only one. Obama chose the right word. The only question is, how long this bad taste will last and how to get rid of it?

07
Jan

McGovern - Impeach Bush and Cheney

Former Representative, Senator and presidential candidate, George McGovern calls for the impeachment of both Bush and Cheney, stating the case against them is far stronger than the case against Nixon.  Agreed.  These men have violated their oaths of office too many times to count.  But as McGovern admits, it seems to be a pipe dream at this point.  There is (unsurprisingly) no support from the republican arena, and “a lack of courage and statesmanship on the part of too many Democratic politicians.”

 Truer words…

26
Dec

Finally, someone finally came to the Democratic party

Thwarting Bush.  What a concept.  Even on a small scale it is comforting to finally see the members of Congress taking a stand.  Keeping the Senate in session technically during the holiday break to nullify Bush’s ability to make recess appointments to top goverment positions.  Finally.  Maybe the backbone is beginning to regenerate. 

15
Oct

walkin’ on the fightin’ side of me

Seems even some of the uber-patriotic country music icons are walking away from the fear-mongering of the Bush administration.  Merle Haggard, as nationalistic a songwriter that I know of, has put his endorsement behind Hillary Clinton.  Knowing a bit about the past political bent of theman, I was a bit hesitant to read an article entitled “Does Merle Haggard Speak for America.”  I am glad I did.  It shows the degree to which the Republican voting base may be disillusioned with the fear, greed and anti-Constitution platform of the GOP.   As Haggard says:

I supported George W. I’m not exactly a liberal. But I know how that Texas thing works, who those oil folks are and what they wanted in Iraq… I’m a born-again Christian too, but the longer I live, the more afraid I get of some of these religious groups that have so much influence on the Republicans and want to tell us how to live our lives.”

Anger is what drove him to his change of view, says Haggard.  Anger, when it is focused at the GOP and the Bush Admin, may be the best friend the Democrats have this election year. 

07
Oct

we have met the enemy, and he is us

Arguably the most notable Pogo quote.  Originally intended as a sad reflection on our poor stewardship of the environment, it is for me the most suitable comment I can offer on the current state of our governmental moral vacuity.  We have the most morally bereft executive leadership that America has experienced, one willing to throw away the basic principles upon which our judicial and constitutional systems were founded in order to execute an unnecessary war.

Reading an essay today by Andrew Sullivan in Times Online I was reminded of an entry I made in the original Left Side Out.  I think it is worth repeating here.

Friday, March 23, 2007

 Watershed - Das könnte hier nicht passieren.

It was a smallish tilt in the checks and balances status quo. 

The duly elected government of a republic deferred the interpretation and necessity for and formulation of law to the duly elected leader of that republic.  The passage of the Enabling Act – a seemingly temporary amendment written to run out in four years – was brought about in reaction to an act of arson and terrorism and was ostensibly an attempt to keep safe the citizens of the republic.  
 
Today is the anniversary of the passage of the Enabling Act of 1933.  Seventy-four years ago Germany handed over to Adolph Hitler the keys to facism.  It is a mind-boggling leap from that simply delegation of power to the near eradication of an ethnic people.  No one would ever believe it could happen.  Not in their own country! Not by their own duly elected leader!  Not in a democratic republic! But it happened, there.

After the gas chambers, after the gulags, after the tortures and atrocities it was pledged — “Never again!”  A great hew and cry arose from around the globe — “Never again!” 

America was integral in ending Hitler’s reign of terror.  Hero and democratic beloved, we rode in on the white horse and shot the man in the black hat.  We kissed our horse and rode off into the sunset.  And we cried as we rode, “Never again!”

Now, it seems we are at a similar place in history.  There has been a duly elected body of leaders of a republic who have deferred the interpretation and necessity for and formulation of laws to the duly elected leader of that republic.  The smallish tilt to the checks and balances status quo has been noted.  Shall we believe, as the good people of Germany believed, that it cannot happen in our country, not by our own duly elected leader, not in this democratic republic?  Shall we close our eyes and our ears and our memories and our history books and see and hear and remember and learn nothing? 

Never again.  But what about habeas corpus?

It cannot happen here.  But what about Guantanamo?

Das könnte hier nicht passieren.  Es fängt an, jetzt zu geschehen.

27
Sep

Children’s health insurance bill

Breaking news on CNN — senate passes child health insurance bill by more than the 2/3 majority to prevent presidential veto. 

Finally.  Something.  Worthwhile.

19
Sep

not just no, but hell no!

Bush calls for expansion of spy law

President Bush said Wednesday that a law hastily passed in August to temporarily give the government more power to eavesdrop without warrants on foreign terror suspects must be made permanent and expanded.

Again…. not just no, but HELL NO!

18
Sep

florida student taser incident

I’ve seen this video several times and I have to admit that this student does not appear to be at this speech simply to listen and to ask a question — he was there to make a statement.  He was fired up with anger and passion and does not seem eager to yield the floor or actually allow time for his questions to be answered.  But we actually don’t know that.  He was never given a chance to finish his questions before his mic was cut.  He was not being abusive.  He was not being profane.  He was being insistent and persistent.  And they shut him up.  

Now, what the hell were the officials thinking?  From the looks of this, we have an overly reactive police force trying to deal — six on one — with an obviously distressed young man.  The background conversation is hard to understand, but Kerry at one point  says “…if we would all just calm down…,” “…(inaudible) unfortunately he’s not available to come up here and swear me in as president,” and later  ”(inaudible) …let me just (inaudible) because it’s a very important question…,” while the young man was screaming repeatedly “don’t taser me” and “why am I being arrested”. I for one would like to have responses for all of those comments. 

The three questions posed by this young man were:

  • Why did Kerry concede the 2004 election so soon in light of the obivous discrepancies in voting standards and the claims of disenfranchisement already being made?
  • Why does Kerry not now call for the impeachment of Bush?
  • Did Kerry indeed belong to Skull and Bones.

I think they, regardless of the “truth” behind this series of videos now popping up all over the web, deserve to be addressed.  Perhaps they would have been.  Perhaps they still will be.  But I think we should keep asking them.  Especially the second question.  That one is the one most pertinent to the present.  Why isn’t Kerry, and the whole damned cowardly Congress, calling for the impeachment of Bush and Company?

I asked on this blog a long time ago where the college voices are.  Where are the young people who so fervently spoke out against the Vietnam War?  Well, here they are and they are being silenced.  In the noxious political climate in which we are now engaged we should expect the anger and passion and distress this young man evidenced.  We should encourge it.  In fact we should foster it.  We have a president who lies to get us into a war, lies to keep up in that war, and lies to retain his place in the White House.  We should all be at these speeches (and everywhere else) holding our politicians’ feet to the fire. Especially the Democrats’. 

11
Sep

The day it all began to change

I was off work that day.   We stayed up much too late the night before and we were sleeping in late.  Patti woke first and turned on the television. She woke me and said “A plane hit the World Trade Center.”  I sat up and tried to focus on the confusion and chaos playing out on the screen.  At that time it seemed more a horrible accident than a terrorist plot. 

Then the second plane struck. 

422.gifFor a few minutes none of it registered, none of it made sense.  The scene was surreal.  Then the realness of it began to seep in.  It wasn’t an accident, it as a deliberate air attack.  Oh my god.  Oh my god.  That’s all I could say or think.  Oh my god.

Since that day so much has changed.  This nation has become enmeshed in a chimeral war on terrorism.   Thousands of our youngest and strongest have died and many thousands more have been devastatingly injured.  We have a president with the lowest approval ratings in history, surrounded at once by sycophants and Rasputins.  We have a shattered national morale, and shattered national morals; a president who swinishly guts the very Bill of Rights and Constitution he pledged to uphold and protect; a president who used the horror of 9-11 to justify attacking the uninvolved nation of Iraq; a president who;  a president who obscenely used the excuse of national security to spy on his fellow Americans without legal warrant.   

And bin Laden is still free.   

29
Aug

Two years on

we-are-not-ok.bmp

 

Graphic by Suspect Device

I can so vividly remember my own horror at the potential for damage that loomed over New Orleans two years ago, and it was partly from a sense of guilty relief that my own part of the Gulf was being spared Katrina’s fury.  Then the storm hit.  And the levees broke.  And the Superdome turned into hell.  And rational behavior seemed to be on vacation at the federal level. 

This second anniversary of the storm we’ve always feared finds much less changed in New Orleans than should be expected.  Families torn apart, houses falling into further disrepair, piles of debris left unmoved, low-rent housing nearly impossible to find, a health care system in tragically dangerous shambles…and a federal government that seems less concerned with rebuilding one of the major cities of our nation than with reducing the cities of another country to rubble. 

The city is still living, still going on.  But it is being treated like the black sheep by this government, receiving a disproportionately smaller share of federal funds for reconstruction and recovery than other areas affected by the storm.  Today’s editorial in the Times-Picayune:

We are Americans who have suffered a great tragedy. We have worked tirelessly for two years to revive this beloved place and reconstruct our lives. And we ought to get no less help from our government than any other victims of this disaster.

We must remember that the government knew the levees were not optimally operational.  We must remember that the government was heinously and painfully slow to offer aid and assistance to New Orleans in the aftermath of Katrina.  we must remember “Heckuva job, Brownie.” 

But what can we do but remember,  when the leaders of our nation aren’t eager to restore our country?  The least we can do as residents of this nation, as spokespersons for the ethics we hold, is to speak up and hold our leaders accountable, time and time and time again, if necessary.  We continue to hold their feet to the fire of public scrutiny.  We keep the problem out in the daylight where it is harder to ignore.  We demand beforehand what every American is entitled to receive — able leadership from their leaders in a time of national emergency.  That is the very least they can offer us.  When our leaders fail at that obligation then we demand their jobs.  And we make it happen.   






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