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I knew I always liked John Cusack for a reason.

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Nordmadr Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Nov-15-05 11:45 AM
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I knew I always liked John Cusack for a reason.
Bush 2. How depressing, corrupt, unlawful and tragically absurd the administration's world view actually is...how low the moral bar has been lowered...and (though I know I'm capable of intellectually lazy notions of collective guilt) how complicit our silence as citizens is...Nixon, a true fiend, looks like a paragon of virtue next to the criminally incompetent robber barons now raiding the present and future.

But where are the Dems? American foreign policy is in chaos. We are now left in the surreal position of having to condemn American-sponsored torture as official policy while a deranged President Bush orders his staff to attend ethics briefings -- a "refresher course" -- from the White House counsel. The very idea of America is in chaos and this chaos has created a vacuum. 

One question for any Democrat: Who will have the balls to get us out of Iraq? 

If the Democrats don't step up and fill this vacuum, the Republicans will. They will take us out of Iraq. And then the Democrats will be left holding the bag -- first as the enablers who let the Republicans take us into an unnecessary and immoral war, and then as the whipping boys who stood by while the Republicans kept justifying what was clearly an unnecessary and immoral war. They were so worried about positioning themselves as hawks, not being seen as soft on terror and war, that they lost the capacity for outrage when the person responsible for a legal memo that denied the validity of the Geneva Conventions was appointed Attorney General. And it was downhill from there.

The Republicans, especially leading up to the 2006 elections, with the Bush administration crumbling, KNOW they have to find a way out of Iraq. So they will basically find a way to declare victory and do something that looks like a withdrawal, and the Democrats will be left as passive bystanders -- because they don't have the courage to suggest that people who lied to get us into war should not only not be in office, they should be in prison.

Last Tuesday, Harry Reid demonstrated wonderful signs of life. The question now is, are they going to build on this, or is it going to be an isolated episode that doesn't lead to a fundamental shift? Will enough Democrats now be willing to admit that voting to authorize the war was a mistake? Whether they were genuinely misled, they bought into it, or they were too cowardly to vote for what they believed was true, it was a mistake. Will they now have the courage to say, "This was wrong, and that we need to get our brave troops out of Iraq now."

Are the Democrats going to offer an alternative plan to get us out of Iraq? Are they going to fill this vacuum created by the chaos in Iraq and a scandal-plagued administration in tatters, or are they going to wait for the Republicans to do it their way, reap the political diviedends, and leave the Democrats sniping outside the palace gate?

Much much more...
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-cusack/on-bush-the-dems-jon-st_b_10485.html

I predict he'll be starring as the title character in "The Fitzgerald Story"

Olaf
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ms liberty Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Nov-15-05 11:51 AM
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1. kick for one of my favorite actors...n/t
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Mist Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Nov-15-05 12:17 PM
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2. The point about "reflected hipness" is well-made. I've often wished
Jon would be tougher on his RW guests, put them on the defensive more.
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Einstein99 Donating Member (171 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Nov-15-05 01:26 PM
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3. Read the whole speech
Follow the link above and then the link at the end of that section. I haven't finished it yet, but what I have read so far is outstanding! One part I really like is where he puts McCain in his place. He might have said almost the same thing to Colin Powell. If I had a chance to interview Powell, I would say to him, "We all understand that you are a military man and that you feel an obligation to your superior officer, but when you took that oath as secretary of state, you did not pledge to support G. W. Bush; you pledged to support the Constitution. Don't you think it's time that you admitted to the American people that you betrayed them?" I'm getting off the point, but I just had to say that.
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