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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-04-06 12:25 PM
Original message
Bush's Soft Bigotry on Terror
October 4, 2006


"Propaganda is a soft weapon; hold it in your hands too long, and it will move about like a snake, and strike the other way." -- Anouilh


Bush hoisted himself above the rest of the nation Tuesday as he ripped into Democrats and others who dared to question the scope of his power in prosecuting his manufactured 'war on terror'. The man who was president at the moment when our nation suffered its worst attack since Pearl Harbor, and who has let the prime orchestrators of that attack run free for over five years, was taunting his detractors at republican fundraisers Tuesday with his newest vile character attack in the latest installment of his fear and smear campaign; the likes of which would make Joe McCarthy cry foul.

Time and time again, the Democrats want to have it both ways," Bush complained in a calculated line , repeated at the next republican fundraiser. "They talk tough on terror, but when it comes time -- when their votes are counted, their softer side comes out," he said.

What could Bush possibly be talking about? Could it be the majority Democratic opposition to the torture and detention bill? The legislation, in it's conception, was as much of a denial of Bush's own aspirations for unlimited authority to detain and prosecute without any measure of justice or due process at all. Still, it eventually developed into it's own special evil, and his republican enablers in Congress gave Bush even more imperial gifts to enhance his increasingly autocratic rule. That vote gave Bush the swagger he used to lie to his republican crowd and claim he's on one side defending the nation against some unidentified threat, and Democrats on the other side letting 'terrorists' go and putting the nation at risk of some secret attack he says the CIA's torture foiled.

"The Democrats in the United States Senate need to explain to the American people which of the attacks that the CIA program stopped would they have been willing to let go forward," Bush told the crowd. We got a clear record on this issue," he said, "We know this program is making Americans safer, and we're not going to allow the Democrats in Congress to take it away.

Bush has yet to explain why he let al-Qaeda operate cells within our own country, under his nose, as intelligence reports flagging the growing threat were waved off by him, and by his unconcerned and otherwise pre-occupied advisers. Rice says she was unaware . . . doesn't recall . . . doesn't remember the meeting where CIA director Tenet laid out, before Bush's then-National Security Adviser, warnings of an imminent attack from al-Qaeda forces. Nothing to Rice appeared "actionable" to her, or to her boss, Bush, about a Presidential Daily Briefing entitled, 'Bin-Laden Determined to Strike Within the U.S.',which surfaced a full month before the 9-11 attacks.

The 'clear record' of Bush's stewardship of our national security is a tragedy of continuing failures; a blundering overstretch of our military defenses; and an arrogant refusal to change course, even as 16 intelligence agencies warn that his militarism is actually increasing the risks to the nation, instead of lessening them as he repeatedly claims. If he spent as much time reading his own administration's intelligence reports as he does listening to Rove and Kissinger, he would have actually done something, anything, about the threats from al-Qaeda which passed through his office more than once before the September 11 attacks.

Bush has yet to explain why he let bin-Laden and his accomplices escape at Tora-Bora, and why he's still at-large influencing and inspiring a flood of recruits encouraged by his five years of taunts and nose-thumbing videos. Bush has yet to explain why he diverted a historic chunk of our nation's resources and humanity from that pursuit to invade and occupy Iraq. He's yet to explain why he has devoted only 20,000 troops to Afghanistan and the hunt for bin-Laden, and is busy escalating the 140,000 troops he has committed to Iraq. Time and time again, Bush has proclaimed Iraq as the 'center' of his terror war, as he repeated in his calculated speeches Tuesday at his republican fundraisers.

"They say that Iraq is a distraction in the war on terror. "I strongly disagree," Bush said. I think Iraq is a central front in the war on terror, and we must defeat the enemy in Iraq if we want America to be secure."

It's all so convenient for Bush to claim Iraq as the center of his terror war. He's closed down the al-Qaeda unit which was supposed to be coordinating the search for bin-Laden. He's already gotten whatever he could torture out of the 14 prisoners the CIA gave up to Gitmo. Iraq's the one place Bush can point to where he can direct our troops around like toy soldiers while he postures as protector from the violence he's recklessly stirring up. "There are some who feel like that conditions are such that they can attack us there. My answer is 'bring them on'," Bush told reporters in the White House Roosevelt Room in 2003

Sadly, American soldiers serve as targets in Iraq, and their lives are no less important than ours here in the states. Inviting attacks on Americans overseas is an amazing retreat from the peaceful influence of a great nation of justice; humbled by bloody, devastating wars; and witnessed to the power of liberty, and to the freedom inherent in the constitution we would wisely defend with our peaceful acts of mercy, charity, and tolerance. But, Bush is unconcerned with the safety of those he places in the way of his "ideological struggle" that he wages with the lives of our soldiers. Over 2700 U.S. soldiers' lives have been sacrificed by Bush in Iraq to satisfy his imperialistic ambition to own Iraq for his own aggrandizement, and dominate the Middle East by virtue his ability to direct the overwhelming force of our nation's military from there, to unleash wanton death and destruction across sovereign borders, on a whim.

It is as a result of the spoils of our political system, as well as the collective cowardice of Congress, that one party has been able to prop Bush up and enable him to pilfer almost every measure of power and control that was on his wish list. The torture and detention legislation is no exception. It's an election-season document; its constitutional value not worth any more than the scant attention Bush gives any law. It's not terrorists that Bush is interested in at all. He's eagerly willing to shame the office he was gifted with by the American people as he uses the security of our nation as a mere pawn in his cynical political campaign to hold on to the power.

If Iraq is truly the 'center' of his focus in his 'war on terror', then we have no hope in securing our nation; not if he holds to his promise to stay in Iraq "as long as he's president." The American people should have had enough of being called "soft" and "weak" for disbelieving Bush's lies about Iraq. They're accused in his fear and smear campaign (along with their Democratic representatives in Congress) of putting the country at risk of terrorism - like Bush himself allowed in 2001- for demanding a check on the unconstitutional power his republican enablers are granting him under the pretext of 'protecting' us from the chaos that his own military bungling has caused.

Nothing could be softer than the actual public support for the course that Bush and his republican 'party of fear' have taken. In the Sept. 29-Oct. 2 CNN poll, 58% of respondents said the Bush regime lied to them when they repeatedly claimed the occupation of Iraq was going swimmingly.

Fifty-seven percent in the poll say the conflict has made the U.S. less safe from terrorism; unconvinced by Bush's boasting that his policies and actions have "made America safer and the world a better place." Sixty-one percent say they oppose the war, and 66% percent say they disapprove of Bush's handling of the occupation in Iraq. Bush's answer?

"The first thing I would ask the Democrats is, do they truly believe the world would be better off with Saddam Hussein still in power?" Bush asked the fundraiser crowd. "And if so, they need to say it loud and clear -- because I know full well that this state sponsor of terror, a person who had used weapons of mass destruction, a person who invaded his neighbors, the sworn enemy of the United States, someone who was shooting at U.S. pilots, someone who defied the United Nations resolution -- removing him from power has made America safer and the world a better place."

Bush is out there on his own, fighting his imaginary 'war on terror', against the will of the American people; against the very citizens in Iraq that he claims to have 'liberated'. As he persists, the 'spawning' of recruits in Iraq into active militarized resistance to Bush's occupation continues unabated; fueled by the American targets Bush is so willing to provide as a buffer between Iraqis and Maliki's puppet regime.

No one, except for his fearmongering followers, believes Bush's reasons for diverting to Iraq from the hunt for bin-Laden and his accomplices in Afghanistan. That hasn't dissuaded Bush from using the words of the terrorist to gin up voter's fears as he warns that rejecting his 'party of fear' at the polls will cause terrorists to attack again. It's all the more self-serving to raise the specter of violence from al-Qaeda as his administration is doing next to nothing to catch and prosecute them.

Not a word of dissent was heard from Bush on the campaign trail against Sen. Bill Frist this week, as the Majority Leader of the republican-controlled Senate suggested unilateral surrender to the Taliban, and recommended the 9-11 terrorist-supporting members join the Afghan government. Do Bill Frist and Bush truly believe the world would be better off with the Taliban still in power?

If so, they need to 'say it loud and clear'. Bush can't have it both ways. Either he can persist in making the risks of violent reprisals to our country worse by continuing to occupy Iraq, or he can pull our soldiers out of there and concentrate the nearly $10b a month he's spending on Iraq alone on honoring his original promise to Americans to pursue and capture bin-Laden, "dead or alive", and eliminate the sources of inspiration for vengeful aggression against us.

Bush is arguing that he should be allowed to yoke generations to his "call of the 21st century;" to his "ideological struggle" that he imagines he's waging in Iraq, with our compromised soldiers doing all of the fighting and dying for him. All he needs to complete his reign of torture, indefinite detentions, warrantless surveillance of random Americans, calculated collateral killings of innocents caught in the way of his swaggering militarism is the complicity of the Americans, voting for his republican enablers in the November congressional elections.

All we need to put the necessary checks and balances in place, in front of his unbridled power-grab, are our votes for our Democratic candidates against the republican enablers. If we want leaders in Washington who understand the enemy we face and will provide the correct focus and commitment necessary to protect us, if we want people in Washington who are not going to divert us from the hunt for the 9-11 perpetrators again, making us less safe and less secure, you make sure you send our Democratic candidates back to the United States Congress.

Our county's fate is truly in our hands now.


by Ron Fullwood

http://journals.democraticunderground.com/bigtree
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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-04-06 08:12 PM
Response to Original message
1. kick
Edited on Wed Oct-04-06 08:16 PM by bigtree
perfectly good article, perfectly ignored :kick:
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razors edge Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-04-06 08:59 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. Didn't see it earlier. damn straight.
Rove is NOT above throwing a gay overboard to stay out of prison.

And if it snags a loyal good ole boy or two, well, collateral damage. They will hook them up in carlyle group, no harm, no foul.

And the Dems he refers to as showing their softer side? Well they rolled over like good little puppies and will get their soft bellies rubbed by the Dictator for their so called opposition.
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Time for change Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-04-06 10:48 PM
Response to Original message
3. Very nice
If our corporate media would point out half the things that you point out in this post Bush would have lost the 2004 election so badly that Ken Blackwell couldn't have stolen it for him.
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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-05-06 06:59 AM
Response to Reply #3
5. thanks TFC
we have to be the media until they catch on
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JeffR Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-04-06 11:08 PM
Response to Original message
4. I kick, therefore I am
:kick:
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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-05-06 10:28 AM
Response to Reply #4
9. I am, therefore I kick
:kick:
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jokerman93 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-05-06 07:32 AM
Response to Original message
6. Well, he's right in one sense
The Dems in congress have been consistently soft on his particular form of neocon fascist terror against the Amerikan people. I'd say almost downright limp.
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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-05-06 07:49 AM
Response to Reply #6
7. yet, that isn't the point at all
Democrats HAVE been challenging Bush's militarism, and despite the votes of 15% of our party members for the torture and detention bill, they HAVE been challenging Bush's autocratic initiatives.

For that effort, they are to be labeled from the elevation of our White Houseas traitors and cowards. I don't see how anyone in our party can stand by and tolerate being blamed by Bush for some future terrorist attack when it was HIS own administration in power and flat-footed when the nation was attacked four times in one day on Sept. 11, 2001. And, he has yet to catch the leader of the band of thugs our government says is responsible. Soft is the word for his failures. His efforts to actually defend the nation have been practically non-existent, and 16 of the nation's intelligence agencies have concluded that his 'center' of his manufactured terror war in Iraq has actually increased the risk of attack on our nation, instead of reducing it as Bush is claiming.

None of that has a thing to do with whether or not some Democrats have been complicit in the assault on our rights and civil liberties along with the entire republican party. Some obviously have, but, the majority in our party have been fully engaged in opposition to Bush, and have rejected and condemed Bush's every move as they offer their own proposals to defend the nation. There is no similarity between the Democrats' measured, responsible approach to defending our nation and Bush's demonstratedly flawed one.

Soft is not the adjective I would use to describe our party, not even in the votes that we object to. Not in any comparison with Bush and his fascist agenda.
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jokerman93 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-05-06 02:15 PM
Response to Reply #7
10. You are correct
The challenges and alternatives to Bush's militarism have been put forth.

My reference to the dems being "soft on terror" was meant with sarcasm. (I should have used an icon.) The remark has more to do with the republican strategy of fear mongering (propagandist terrorism if you will). A campaign of fear has been waged against the American people through the media in order to make the population more compliant to their agenda of deconstructing our basic civil liberties to the advantage of the fascist corporatists. Very few on our side have spoken out to challenge or object to any of the disinformation that we've been fed. To my mind, the Bush propaganda machine is using a methodology that is as much a form of terrorism as any random act of violence perpetrated on a population could be. Who, but a handful, have challenged them in this regard? I haven't seen it reported. Not even on these boards.

Don't mind my flippancy. I get that way. What I meant to suggest is we don't need Bush to protect us from terrorists. We need real leadership, a responsible news media, and legitimate, verifiable elections to protect us from what I regard as homegrown republican terrorism. Where are the dems on these far more fundamental issues?

J

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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-05-06 05:43 PM
Response to Reply #10
11. hopefully they're listening to folks like you
who want to see more of a direct challenge to the republican power grab they are waging behind their leader in the WH. As for the media, we have to be a driving force for information. It's the least we can do.
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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-05-06 09:02 AM
Response to Original message
8. link to final (hopefully edited) version
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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-05-06 11:51 PM
Response to Original message
12. end of publish day kick
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