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kpete

(71,954 posts)
Mon Sep 1, 2014, 10:39 AM Sep 2014

Repukes/MSM to America: We have to panic, and we have to panic now.

There’s a new message coalescing around events in the Middle East, coming from Republicans, the media, and even a few Democrats: It’s time to panic. Forget about understanding the complexities of an intricate situation, forget about unintended consequences, forget about the disasters of the past that grew from exactly this mind-set. We have to panic, and we have to panic now.


The centerpiece of every Sunday show yesterday was a sentence that President Obama spoke in a press conference on Thursday. He answered a question about “going into Syria” by saying that we shouldn’t “put the cart before the horse. We don’t have a strategy yet.” Naturally, Republicans leaped to argue that Obama wasn’t actually talking about military action in Syria, but about dealing with the Islamic State (or the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria) more generally, and who knows what else. Many in the media took the same line. The first rule of a “gaffe” is that it should be taken out of context, and then the discussion should quickly be shifted away from whatever it was actually about to how, thus decontextualized, it might be perceived.

So on “Meet the Press,” Andrea Mitchell ignored the fact that the question Obama was answering was about U.S. military action in Syria, and asked Sen. Dianne Feinstein, “is the president wrong to signal indecision by saying that we still don’t have a strategy against ISIS?” When that didn’t elicit a sufficiently strong condemnation from Feinstein, Mitchell pressed on: “Doesn’t that project weakness from the White House?” Obviously, there’s nothing worse than “signaling indecision” or “projecting weakness.” Not even, say, invading a country without having a plan for what to do after the bombs stop falling.

..........


And let’s be clear about this, too: the position of the people who pretend to be horrified at Obama’s “gaffe” about not having a strategy for invading Syria is that we don’t need a strategy. As Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) — a man who wants to be commander in chief — said, “we ought to bomb them back to the stone age.” Having a carefully constructed plan that takes into account not just what you want to blow up but what the consequences of American action will be in the coming months and years? That’s for wimps. We should just invade, yesterday if possible, and worry about all the messy stuff later. After all, it worked in Iraq in 2003, right?
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/plum-line/wp/2014/09/01/on-the-islamic-state-the-voices-counseling-panic-grow-louder/

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jwirr

(39,215 posts)
1. And this time it is not about oil - its about the 2014 election. Get scared - blame the Democrats.
Mon Sep 1, 2014, 10:50 AM
Sep 2014

Fred Sanders

(23,946 posts)
2. The Big Lie of Iraq happened after the mass media and Republicans tilled the fields of fear.
Mon Sep 1, 2014, 10:53 AM
Sep 2014

They are growing the same crop, folks. I think a lot more folks see through the fog.

British PM reaction versus Obama, contrast and compare. Who creates and uses fear and who rejects it?

BlueCaliDem

(15,438 posts)
3. Republicans are desperate to take back the "Republicans are better at protecting America" ever since
Mon Sep 1, 2014, 11:07 AM
Sep 2014

President Obama, not G.W., caught and killed OBL and has showed the strength of America without launching into another costly war America can't afford in blood and resources.

If Teddy and Diane "never met a war I couldn't profit off of" Feinstein want to fight ISIS militarily, they should take their overpaid behind, sign up, suit up, and ship out. Otherwise, they should sit down and shut-up as the shameless coward and war-profiteer that they are, respectively.

BlueCaliDem

(15,438 posts)
5. Me, neither. And corporate media is pushing for another war using both a Republican (TeaBagger)
Mon Sep 1, 2014, 11:19 AM
Sep 2014

and a "Democrat" (Republican-Lite) as proof that we should.

Good thing that all polls show that NO citizen of the United States, both American and 'Murican, want another war. So pro-war corporate media are collectivly "strategorying" how exactly to go about changing American (and Murican) hearts and minds, and to convince us to sacrifice our sons and daughters for MIC and corporate profits.

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