Next Sunday at 5:00 p.m. EDT, the amazing Glenn Greenwald will be joining us on Book Salon to discuss his new book, A Tragic Legacy: How a Good Vs. Evil Mentality Destroyed the Bush Presidency. Glenn will no doubt have a lot to say not only about how George Bush’s foreign policy framework produced one train wreck after another in the Middle East but equally important how the deeply flawed perceptions of the world held by Bush and his neocon followers have violated long-held American values across the board. From Glenn’s discussion Monday:
The central purpose of the book is to examine what has happened to the United States for the last six years under the Bush presidency. That is the “Bush legacy” — our national character and national identity have been fundamentally degraded, our moral standing and credibility in the world eroded to previously unthinkable depths, our government engaged in the very behavior which, for decades, we have collectively deplored, our trust in America’s governmental and journalistic institutions reduced virtually to zero, and our country placed on a plainly unsustainable course as a result of the militarized, imperial role we are choosing to play in the world.
At the heart of this process lies a binary moralistic view of the world, one which seeks to define every conflict and political challenge, both foreign and domestic, as a battle of Good versus Evil. The crux of this mindset is the continuous identification of an Enemy, one which embodies Evil and which must be stopped, typically destroyed, at all costs. No competing considerations, no rational arguments, no counter-balancing objectives, not even constraints of reality or resources, can compete with the moral imperative of this mission. The mission of destroying Evil trumps all. . . .
This Manichean mentality not only drives George W. Bush personally, but it also consumes our political discourse almost entirely. It is this mindset, more than any other single cause, that has driven us to embrace extraordinary policies and truly radical beliefs that are as ill-considered and incoherent as they are destructive. This is the “moral reasoning” which led us to invade and indefinitely occupy Iraq, to vest previously unimaginable power in the President, to allow our country to become symbolized by orange-jumpsuit-clad, shackled and leashed detainees locked away and brutally maltreated in lawless prisons around the world, and which has brought us to the brink of still new wars in the Middle East, most alarmingly with Iran. It is this reasoning which has rendered our country virtually unrecognizable, and has placed us on a course which simply cannot be sustained.
Glenn’s book is right on target, pulling together many of the themes and issues we talk about here every day and analyzing the Bush legacy with penetrating insights as only Glenn can. This promises to be one of our best and most engaging Book Salons ever. You won’t want to miss it.
Update: Glenn provides a must-read dissection of the Beltway media, in response to Richard Cohen’s Washington Post column this a.m.
You can pre-order Glenn’s book here at a significant discount, and doing so now will help call attention to this important work at Amazon and even help FDL a little.
Related posts:
- FDL Book Salon Welcomes David Swanson, Daybreak: Undoing the Imperial Presidency and Forming a More Perfect Union
- Bailing Out Failed Management: Health Insurance Company Edition
- Failed Models are a Fixture on Wall Street
- Another Failed Innovation: Auction-Rate Securities
- Eric Cantor Says Stimulus Bill Failed, Except That Whole Creating Jobs in His Home State Part





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He has failed at everything he has done.
What did you expect?
zunoed?
Ah, missed it by THAT much…
Glenn’s book is #13 at amazon and it hasn’t even been published yet!
[EPUd, but appropriate here]
Failure is not an option for BushCo; it’s standard equipment that comes on every model.
(will have some liveblog notes from Jane’s TBA panel in the EPU zone of last thread so we don’t interrupt comments here)
GWB WPE is sounding more and more like the Antichrist every day.
Siun @ 6
bless you.
Looks like an interesting book, but I think that Bush failed for a lot of reasons and this is just one of them. Mismanagement and corruption come to mind. Corruption is rife with Bush and Co. This is the Administration that let Enron write it’s energy policy, not to mention Abramoff connections and Cheney’s stock in Halliburton.
And isn’t there something really wrong with a President who flies to DC early to sign the Terri Schaivo bill and takes his time when an American City is drowning?
Thanks for linking to Glenn’s smackdown of Cohen. When someone last thread nominated Cohen for WOTD, I knew it was a column I should avoid for the sake of my blood pressure. This was reinforced when I saw the WaPo0 headline for it. Just reading the excerpt in Glenn’s column was enough of an idiot exposure for the day as it was.
scarecrow – is it this coming sunday? if so, we won’t have our books delivered in time to read them before the book salon…
Not only must Dems win in 2008, but Bush’s entire set of operating methods–particularly torture–need to be denounced and repudiated, so that our country’s good name can be reclaimed.
OT: I’m at TBA at the progressive bloggers’ panel, hosted by Jim Dean. Chris Bowers just presented, very well. Jane will be up soon, but maybe not next.
I think we can all agree that ‘failure’ is a matter of perspective.
With that said, Iraq is not a failed state and GWB is not a failed president…it’s all going according to PLAN!
That Cohen oped is pretty sad. He admits that the crime has been committed, but never once entertains the idea that the punishment has anything to do with the crime. It’s totally twisted logic.
Greenwald citing Cohen:
I remember well when I was growing up, my dad would always tell me: “Very bad things happen at night, done by people who have something to hide.”
Oliver Willis is speaking now, after Jim Dean, who sounds eerily like his brother Howard.
I remember the first time I heard the word Manichean used to describe the Chimperer was by Mark Crispin Miller of NYU. It was shortly after the 2000 elections I believe. That man turned out to be positively visionary.
“Our media stars have not merely stood idly by while our highest government officials engage in endless deceit and corruption. They actively defend it, enable it, justify it, and participate in it. Keeping the lights off is their principal function, one which — with rare and noble exceptions — they perform quite eagerly.”–from Greenwald’s essay.
dakine01 @ 10
Yes we have WOTD!
OT, if you are in NE Georgia don’t forget to vote for wingnut Charlie Norwood’s seat. We actually have a “gasp” liberal in the race!
Marlow
My note to Richard Cohen:
I’m not going to waste my time or yours dissecting today’s partisan paean to neocon fantasies about what the Libby trial was about. I’m just going to note one thing:
But the underlying crime is absent, the sentence is excessive and the investigation should not have been conducted in the first place.
The one person in this country who is most knowledgable of the evidence—including classified information that never made it to trial or the press, who is the most impartial observer of the affairs, and has the clearest understanding of the case in the context of criminal trials that take place in the District, the one person who ranks the highest in the combination of these attributes. He ruled that there was an underlying crime, and that Libby prevented the prosecution of that crime through his deliberate obstruction. He made that ruling and then decided to use the sentencing guidelines for the IIPA rather than obstruction for that count. Who are you to arrogate yourself above this judge? What do you know that that Reggie Walton does not?
————-
If I’m wrong about any of this, I’d appreciate being corrected.
(Jane up – liveblogging on last thread)
raven @ 21
raven – did you see TRex’s piece on the race list night?
This is my favorite part of the Salon piece. Sums up the arrogance perfectly…
egregious @ 4
Yes, and if we hit the Amazon link above and order, we can push it up within the top 10. “Your mission . . .”
JF @ 24
No, thanks. I’ll check it out. T and I are on different ends of the Athens clock!
Siun @ 23
Bless you, Siun!
selise @ 11
I ordered mine yesterday; there is an expedited delivery, for an extra charge.
This sounds like a great book, and Glenn Greenwald has a constantly renewed record of seeing things as they are, but I’m leery of taking the maladministration’s good-vs.-evil world view too literally. It’s the retail version that they foist on the religious rubes, but the insiders’ behavior indicates that they only believe it themselves when it’s convenient.
If they are animated by a Manichean vision, I would guess it’s closer to us-vs.-them or profit-vs.-loss. The successful pursuit of profit by the group identifiable as “us” has been far more consistent than the administration’s inconsistent, mendacious, and violent crusade against evil.
The administration may include some true believers, but they’re just chumps. Cheney is too devious and dishonest and Bush is too shallow and addled to believe the stuff they’re pushing. But they know what they want. It’s a gut thing (which is a euphemism for appetite).
That said, we have to deal with their public statements and justifications, and sort the accurate gossip from they chaff they’re spreading to cover their tracks. I can think of no better guide than Greenwald.
egregious @ 4
Yeah, but Dick Morris’ book is at # 5. Ugh!!!
raven @ 27
Great! TRex is damn man. Meanwhile reports are that noooo frickin body is voting. Maybe we can steal it!
Joe Klein’s conscience @ 31
Gotta fix that then.
Scarecrow @ 29
has it shipped? amazon has it listed for pre-order only… release date is listed as june 26 (although i have sometimes gotten books earlier than their release date from amazon).
selise @ 34
Ah, you’re right; looks like I don’t get mine until the 29th.
I am beginning to have a small special library because of FDL.
Scarecrow @ 35 –
maybe glenn would be willing to comeback for another visit later?
well, at least in this case, i will feel it’s ok to participate in book salon, even if i haven’t yet read the book. *g*
raven @ 32
Maybe!!! I’m down in Cobb, so I can’t help today. I’ll be watching tonight.
clem @ 30
of course, I haven’t read the book beings that it’s not out yet, but at this point, I mostly agree with Clem. And I’m a big fan of Glenwald.
and here’s another view:
an insult to Manicheans by Dan Skinner
Thanks for this, Scarecrow. :-)
Richard Cohen: WHAT IS WRONG WITH THESE PEOPLE??
I’d like to think that readers of the WaPo are relatively intelligent. Does he think, and is he right in thinking, that his readers actually buy the fabrication, or fantasy might be a better term, that Mr. Greenwald just so effortlessly dissected?
I guess the easiest way to determine that is to look at reader responses to that article, but I’m not a WaPo subscriber.
scarecrow, selise, I am confused. Why isn’t there a special thread for the liveblogging. Is it supposed to be in the last thread?
Glenn’s book is #13 at amazon and it hasn’t even been published yet!
There is something odd about Dick Morris’ book being number 5 and “The Reagan Diaries” beating Al Gore on the NYT Bestseller list. There is no dagger to idicate that there were bulk purchases of the Reagan book, but I’m betting some “entity” is playing around with this stuff. This is one of the things I see going on in the “MSM” that just irks the hell out of me. Am I off base on this? Should I build a new tin foil hat?
Joe Klein’s conscience @ 31
Another awful person from CT who should sh*t the f*ck up. (from a person in CT).
mui @ 42
Siun is live-blogging on the prior thread.
jayackroyd @ 22
DAMNED STRAIGHT! I’m sick of these pundit-heads second-guessing and/or pissing and moaning about the Court’s ruling. Apparently, they have as much disdain for law and order as the Bush administration.
Why am I not surprised?
Morning Scarecrow.
Thank you, Siun, all.
I’m shamefully late to the Lake today. Horrible nightt trying to sleep after bad day yestidie.
It does my spirit much good to see this place hoppin’. Thanks guys.
Can anyone tell me if Glenn’s book is in stores yet?
I’d just as soon thank local book store for it in person eye-to-eye as it were, partly so i can have it in my hot little hand, but also to “push” the book locally fwiw – advertisin’ strategy don’tcha-know…
Then I’ll give my $$ directly to FDL also.
Seems ta me s’more of that’s about due from this house. ;->
{{{{{{JANE}}}}}}
GeorgeSimian @ 25
I have been a lifelong Republican, although I am rapidly moving toward becoming an independent (and have been voting that way in several elections). The thing is — I don’t care how disruptive, disrespectful or demeaning it might be to these dumbasses! That is how you learn! And, when you break the law, that in itself is disruptive, disrespectful and demeaning to our country.
Dumb shits!
selise @ 37
I agree. Same thing happened with the Murray Waas book. Now that I’ve completed it I have a bunch of questions, not the least of which is about this passage re: Fitz’s rebuttal to the defense’s closing statement:
“News reports at the time noted that Fitzgerald moved very quickly through his rebuttal. He spoke with great haste, and those listening in the courtroom later reported that, at times, he was almost incoherent”
Yikes, Fitz incoherent? That’s news to me. I don’t remember the live blog mentioning this.
I guess the easiest way to determine that is to look at reader responses to that article, but I’m not a WaPo subscriber.
Mandrake,
You can read the posts by just signing up at their web site. Make yourself a new yahoo or hotmail account, and then just pop back to confirm your password. You don’t have to use your personal e-mail. Beleive me, the comments these days are way better than what they publish. LOL.
Pachacutec @ 13
I’m sure this has been asked countless times, but is there a webstream or podcast of the event?
hoosierville @ 43
Yeah, my wager is that at some point within six months, there will be a lot of reich-wing web sites/blogs fundraisers that will have ads exclaiming that for the small donation of (fill in amount here), a copy of Reagan’s diaries will be given as a reward.
However I have no idea who would actually WANT Morris’ book. Unless it is the army of Clinton haters.
Good morning, Adie — Glenn’s book isn’t out until the 26th. We’re hoping this and the Book Salon will give it some of the attention it deserves. Glenn’s a one-man army against the idiocy of the right and their media enablers. And with him, they’re outnumbered.
I had to stop ordering books I am dying to read for financial reasons. I just can’t seem to wait for the prices to go down because so much new stuff comes up everyday, political books become quickly dated – I want to be on top of the issues, but I just can’t. I would love to read this book, but I have to stop somewheres (I’m sending a check to FDL instead, however!)
Once again the ever-excellent Glenn Greenwald outdoes himself. What a masterpiece!
Mandrake @ 46
No shit. Glen has made the point over and over that these pundit and their Pols are an incestuous cliche. They will do almost anything to protect their cushy gig.
mui @44: Excellent company for Shays and Droopy.
Any solstice activities planned?
wigwam @ 55
indeed
Mandrake @ 46
Well, thanks for not mentioning that long sentence fragment. I shouldn’t write when I’m angry.
Thanks for the edit, mods. I cannot say often enough how much we appreciate your silent vigilance.
[Mod: Your post wasn’t changed. The requote was shortened to save space.]
Biodun @ 16
Apparently Bush never quite got over that monster under the bed thing.
hoosierville @ 50
Okay, thanks. I had tried to do that in the past and was having trouble b/c I would never get a response from them with my psw. So I’d get frustrated and give up. I finally just shut down my old yahoo acc’t and started a new one so I will do that now.
Did anyone else think that, in addition to Cohen’s idiocy on Libby (ably smacked down THANX GLEN!), that ‘leaving the light off’ for sex or real estate is a recipe for trouble in love or business?
What sort of idiot would think such a thing?
Oh, the ‘liberal columnist’ at the WaPo?
Never mind.
This is not an entirely trivial matter since government officials should not lie to grand juries, but neither should they be called to account for practicing the dark art of politics. As with sex or real estate, it is often best to keep the lights off.
As for the last line, we can only assume that that idea came from Mrs. Cohen.
- BarbinMD at the Great Orange Satan
mui @ 36
umm – yeah. We’re trying to downsize everything else around here, but the politics library continues to outgrow its shelves and is currently piling up on the floor and endtables thruout.
Librul press might just help pull this country kicking & screaming into the 21st century after all, after a quick, corrective trip back to pick up a certain Hon. Sir Habeas Corpus.
————
[Mod: Edited to remove a reference to a spat with another commenter. We are just not going to allow this, is that clear?]
————
{{{{PEACE}}}} {{{{JUSTICE}}}}
rwcole @ 57
The solstice will occur on June 21 at 2:07 PM EDT.
Aaaaaaggghhh, I can’t STAND iT ANYMORE! What’s it gonna take, another Tea Party and all its sequelae??
/S.O.S., blogging from Metro-Boston
WOW! Just turned over to the Senate hearing on Sec Army nominee. Just heard Liddy Dole ask, “Do you think it’s time that we fund our military at 4% of GDP?”
Geren: “Don’t know about that but we are at historic lows of GDP”
WTF???
Akaka now offers Aloha and thanks geren for his and his families service to country. He now introduces the family, wife and three daughters. Sounds like Akaka is on the reach around side here.
And Comments to Cohen are at over 42 pages of smackdown, many quoting and linking to Glen, 95-5% against Cohen’s mendacity.
ifthethunderdontgetya @ 64
Why is real estate best seen with the lights off? So you can pull something over on an unsuspecting buyer? That can’t possibly be his point, can it?
ifthethunderdontgetya @ 64
Ah, indeed. THe poor woman..
MR. Bill @ 63
We now live in a land where “liberals” are not liberals and “conservatives” are no longer true conservatives.
Thanks, msm. Thanksalot for allowing these terms to be bastardized by the right for their own vile and selfish purposes. Again, you serve your masters well. May your ratings sink like a cement piling.
Akaka: Is trouble with mail system at Walter Reed unique to WR or systemic.”
Geren: We got problem and we attacked it. Looking to see if it is systemic. WR been fixed now, Soldiers looking after soldiers but don’t know if systemic so looking at it.
Scarecrow @ 53
Thanks Scarecrow. He is indeed incredible. So are you, Sir. ;->
I’ll place my bookorder as soon as i can find the caffeine around here. *blergh*
rwcole @ 58
No dancing n*ked around bonfires for me. That’s something no one wants to see. Leave that stuff for people who haven’t surrendered to entropy.
Stephen
Yes- any solstice activities planned?
GeorgeSimian @ 69
Perhaps an allusion to Clinton/Whitewater? Dunno. I think Cohen is implying that the Clinton perjury should not have been pursued, giving him cover to allow Libby to walk. Just a guess.
MR. Bill @ 63
Think cocktail weenies. Now it all becomes clear. He probably drives a Porsche also.
He is a sad, sad man.
I heard the producer of this show on Frontline tonight…
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/endgame/
talking about how there was no debate about the pro’s and con’s of going into Iraq. He said, it just sort of appeared. Should be good. Most Frontline’s are.
Fresh thread, up and running for everyone.
Akaka: What about mental health problems at WR? You aware of that?
Geren: “We’re aware. Shortage of MH pros. Hiring more but still working to address. PTSD is problem. We’re attacking as a force multiplier. working at ways to address problem through early ID by fellow GIs. MH professionals shortage in civilian areas as well. Especially rural areas where many of our bases are located.
Akaka: Problem fro WP story for me was private mentioned who still not tested after seven months. 43 times more psycholoigcal injuries in this war than previous in relation to physical injuries. Why the problems?
G: We’re attacking problems with aciton plans. More resources finanicial and personnell. MH resources applying attention to task and …
GeorgeSimian @ 70
a pretty revealing comment about Cohen’s moral compass — skipping any references to his wife, unless she’s a real estate agent.
MR. Bill @ 71
Ooops, thought he was talking about Fred Thompson’s wife.
It’s a madhouse I say.
I was just lectured last night by some dipshit who said that the the DrudgeReport was liberal because some college did a study of his content.
Whoofah.
-GSD
I can see today is going to be an EPU day for me
*sigh*
rwcole @ 76
I don’t know anything yet about solstice activities.
GeorgeSimian @ 79
thanks for the reminder!
More dragons to slay. Christy has a new thread ready.
dakine01 @ 68
GDP doesn’t measure “product” anymore. Much of GDP is now the enormous speculative froth of hedge funds and such. Globally there’s now a couple quadrillion (yes, thousands of trillions or millions of millions) of dollars of this stuff. It ain’t real money. You can’t even turn anything more than a tiny, tiny fraction of it into real money. It’s only slightly more real than that million dollar bet you won in 5th grade.
Mandrake @ 57
What a picture! Somehow it’s very funny.
Mandrake @ 54
I don’t know if either of these will help…
http://bookmooch.com/
http://www.frugalreader.com./
Helpless Dancer @ 75
Solstice! Midsummers Eve. I love the lore. Something wacky will happen without fail.
I often think that a total failure of imagination (and historical knowledge) grips the neocons–to them, every war must be World War II again. Bush seems to have drawn his entire good-vs-evil vision of foreign policy from the cartoon-version of how that war was fought and won. This vision conveniently manages to believe that the American Third Army won the war by breaking out of Normandy, when in actual fact it was Stalin’s Red Army–not the greatest force for good ever known in the world–that tore the heart out of Hitler’s Wehrmacht.
Stephen van Evera has written a very interesting article on the forgotten lessons of the actual conduct of the Second World War, and what they should have meant for a strategy against al Qaeda.
I trust Glenn is prepared for a widespread, well-plannwed deeply homophobic attack from the usual wingnut bloggers who invariably shriek “SOCK PUPPET!!!!”
every time his name is mentioned.
One of Glenn’s commenters has a nickname to add to the growing list:
Richard “Lights Off” Cohen.
jayackroyd @ 60
I got that, actually.
just pre-ordered greenwald’s book and while I was at it, bought marcy wheeler’s! these will make my summer reading lots heftier and more worthy than ever.
so, I give a big huzzah to glenn & marcy for great reporting and rock-solid journalism. I’m looking forward to both reads and greenwald at the book salon on sunday.
Just ordered this and Waas and Gore’s new book (clicked through). Summer reading….
Adie @ 65
as long as it’s kept fair – perfectly clear ;->
ccmask @ 39
Last night, the answer to this question became clear — Bush has failed because of his US vs THEM world view; Good vs Evil is the sugar coating to make his worldview palatable.
More important are the factions in the Bush US vs THEM world view — the US is the superwealthy robber baron class; THEM consists of everyone and everything else.
To Bush, the natural order of the universe is his kind on top, with everyone else being wage slaves or cannon fodder — whatever is most profitable, and most effective in securing the position of BushCo on top. In the Bush worldview, anything that serves this goal is GOOD — anything that impedes it is EVIL (or at the least, very undesirable).
In Bush’s world, “Democracy” is evil, because it gives the rubes a chance to upset the natural order of BushCo rule — but “Democracy” is also a useful tool, because it allows BushCo to con the rubes, so that the natural order can be restored.
It’s no accident that Karl Rove sees himself as a Mark Hanna to George W Bush’s William McKinley (except that McKinley had a brain).
The divide and conquer strategy of McKinley/Hanna is the essence of the Rove Playbook — use wedge issues to get populists and progressives fighting each other, so that the Robber Barons can clean up.
It was the PBS Power of Art segment on Pablo Picasso that brought this into focus — the Spainish Civil War was a battle between the the anti-democratic wealthy and powerful against the elected socialist government. As such, it was the laboratory for WWII — Guernica was the test run for terror bombing, which became the standard means of projecting military force.
To understand Bush, we need to look at the forces that shaped him — the history of the 20th century and beyond. (to be continued in part two)
Greenwald:
” The Libby prosecution clearly was the dirty work of the leftist anti-war movement in this country, just as Cohen describes. After all, the reason Patrick Fitzgerald was appointed to investigate this matter was because a left-wing government agency (known as the “Central Intelligence Agency”) filed a criminal referral with the Justice Department, as the MoveOn-sympathizer CIA officials were apparently unhappy about the public unmasking of one of their covert agents.
In response, Bush’s left-wing anti-war Attorney General, John Ashcroft, judged the matter serious enough to recuse himself, leading Bush’s left-wing anti-war Deputy Attorney General, James Comey, to conclude that a Special Prosecutor was needed. In turn, Comey appointed Fitzgerald, the left-wing anti-war Republican Prosecutor and Bush appointee, who secured a conviction of Libby, in response to which left-wing anti-war Bush appointee Judge Reggie Walton imposed Libby’s sentence.”
He is an absolute master of the sustained snark.
ck @100
I completely agree, and the ‘Them’ includes anyone who hasn’t signed a loyalty oath… Probably there are few, if any, people Bush would reveal his real feelings of weakness to. There are layers of facade and dysfunction leading to a life time of hiding and denying. People who percieved this back in 2000 are not prescient, just skilled observers.
Look forward to your next, equally excellent post, Christy.
Moralistic yes, but not Manichean – an important distinction. Greenwald doesn’t seem to comprehend this at the depth necessary to interpret to his readers the messianic Christian influence at Bush’s core.
Thank god for Glenn. Although it strikes me that even *he* gives Bush more credit than he deserves. He gives the president the benefit of having some screwy *world view* but honestly, I think the man is just plain evil. Sigh.
Heh. Reading a few comments now and I see I’m not the first one who was struck with the same thought. SIGH.
Glenn Greenwald unmasks the realities that the beltway set tries so hard to repress from their consciousness.
The pundits try so desperately to elevate the level of their prose to the height of near poetry. The problem is that the content of their message is not as high-spirited as their attempted stylistics. Greenwald is, stylistically, a match for any of them. More importantly, his content is more insightful and more cogent.
They are aware, on some deeply subconscious level, that they must retain favour in order to retain their employment. How insecure this must make them feel with every word. Is it stylistically good enough? Can those amateurs in the blogs write better?
In admitting that they need to kiss up to be competitive in the world of writing and ideas, they admit either:
1. They cannot compete on a level playing field, and therefore they need to kiss up to gain an advantage over the more talented writers who nip at their heels for jobs.
Or
2. The playing field is not truly level. If this is admitted, then they have no right to be so proud of their accomplishments. It means that they are not “the best” at what they do. They are merely the luckiest and the most accommodating.
Oh! The insecurity. The sleepless nights wondering if they are good enough, if they are smart enough, if those in power really like them.
It would be sad if the consequences of their efforts to please their masters weren’t so destructive.
God Bless President Bush…the best President this nation has ever had.
Scarecrow: I wonder if you might want to consider writing about the issues Ian Welsh raised in this post.
I remember Cheney saying that the point of having a military is to use it, but whether he said it out loud or not, they certainly act like they believe it. What is the purpose of this military, anyway? Are we getting our money’s worth from this collection of arms and people. I think we need to really concentrate on this point.