Democratic Debate and Iraq: Where's The Outrage?
Yesterday's debate in Iowa was a good one, the best of the campaign so far. (Thank you, George Stephanopoulos).
But I was struck by one thing: the lack of real anger about Iraq.
On a day when the New York Times ran an amazing op-ed by seven courageous (still active) soldiers describing how hopeless the Iraq situation is and how everything the administration is telling us about Iraq right now is a lie, the Democratic candidates discuss the war as if it was a blunder not a crime.
I don't want to hear how we can and must stay in. I want to hear how we can get out (Bill Richardson to his credit, did tell us that).
America cannot solve Iraq's problems because we caused them. The resistance is to us.
This is not to say that we do not have an obligation to the Iraqi people. We do. God only knows how much we owe them in terms of reparations, and no amount can ever make up for all the dead produced by this war (our dead and theirs).
But we can no more solve Iraq than Slobadan Milosevic could have solved the problems of Yugoslavia once he had destroyed the very idea of Yugoslavia.
All that is left for us to do is to help put together some kind of international force that can replace us and protect the Iraqi people from further slaughter.
I want to hear the Democrats use the phrase "unconditional withdrawal" and then say what device they will come up with to help this nation we have destroyed. But first things first. Our policy must be to get out and fast.
Most of the candidates yesterday sounded too much like Nixon in 1968 for my taste. They are against the war but they won't leave, not for a year or two or four.
Where is their outrage about this crime against Iraq and America? Is there any? Or is Iraq, for them, merely a foreign policy mistake rather than the worst crime America has ever committed internationally, a crime that not only destroyed a nation but one which will blow back against Americans in terrible ways for a generation.
I do not want to hear their plans for staying in. I want to hear how they are getting out. And I want to hear outrage, if any of them feel any.
Enough with the goddam jokes and laughter and collegial bs. 3700 Americans died for nothing, and we destroyed a nation that did us no harm.
In the last debate, someone made some comment about Hillary's outfit. Ha ha, cute. All I could think was that the outfit they all should be wearing is the sack cloth and ashes of mourners, especially the ones who voted "aye" to authorize mass slaughter because they thought voting "no" would hurt their electoral prospects and piss off key donors.


Comments (96)
I am disgusted by the entire presidential campaign. This dog-and-pony show has a Nero-like quality about it, candidates fiddling while the nation and the Constitution burn.
I too want to know how these well-coiffed lightweights plan to get us out of this mess, but I also want them to demand accountability (of the Bush Administration and of Congress) so that we don't make this same mistake in the future.
There were plenty of wise people warning against this misadventure (Russ Feingold, Howard Dean, Al Gore, Dennis Kucynich all come innediately to mind) and at least one, Sen Byrd, who spoke eloquently and at length about the constitutional dangers inherent in ceding Congress' warmaking authority to the president. Sen. Feingold also courageously voted against the Patriot Act while 99 of his Senate colleagues bought in.
So there ***were*** people who anticipated our current woes. Why were they ignored, who or what (systemically) is responsible, and what are we going to do about it?
August 20, 2007 6:33 AM | Reply | Permalink
It's like the American people are on Earth and the candidates are on Pluto - they missed Mars by a wide margin of 30 polling points.
Not only do we not hear outrage from the contenders over Iraq, we hear them promising the same thing for Iran.
Obama is right about too many debates. They need to listen, not talk.
The worst thing you can do to a dogma is give it an empire. Anon
August 20, 2007 6:43 AM | Reply | Permalink
Do you even think these guys (except Kucinich and Gravel) are really angered and pained about Iraq.
I don't see it.
And if they don't feel it, if they aren't driven crazy by this war (as I admit I am), I don't know that I trust them to end it.
Actually, Edwards sounded truly angry when he spoke about his terrible vote. Maybe he feels it deeply.
August 20, 2007 6:53 AM | Reply | Permalink
MJ:
I agree with you that, because of what this country has done in Iraq, I think we need to make a concerted effort to have an international presence (which has to be inclusive of Iraq's neighbors) to help prevent chaos at a level we have not yet seen when we leave (that's my assumption and it's subject to challenge I'm sure). But I am not sure that we are able to do that anymore in light of the credibility we no longer have with the rest of the world.
Indeed, this is one of the reasons our poor relations with Iran is such a shame and a tragedy. Even though my support for a candidate will ultimately be most influenced by who my clients in the labor movement support, I personally would love to hear from a candidate who I believe could help bridge the gap between this country and the international community.
So the question that must be considered is whether an expeditious withdrawal is the only viable alternative we are left with. If that is the case, instead of folks talking about Nader and other options that will ensure a GOP victory, I think Kucinich deserves the support of those who favor an expeditious withdrawal. Even if he can't ultimately get the nomination, a solid line of support for Dennis Kucinich will force the other Democrats to be more candid about where they stand.
I am a bit perplexed by the tenor of the campaign. To me, the war in Iraq is paramount on the minds of most Democrats, yet Kucinich seems to be disregarded--with some notable exceptions--even by the most strident in support of an immediate withdrawal.
In short, I guess I feel that concerns about electability (a concern I'm not shy about admitting to have) seem overshadowed by what, from what I read, is most important to the vast majority of posters on here.
Bruce
P.S. I don't mean to dis Gravel. I just think Kucinich is a more realistic spokesperson for those who advocate for an immediate withdrawal.
August 20, 2007 7:30 AM | Reply | Permalink
I can't believe we have 15 months of political posturing before we truly know where we're headed.
BigBiz will support the war and the candidates who support it (or who pussyfoot around firm withdrawal platforms) and will also ultimately decide what two candy bars go into the candy machine November, 2008. That's choice? Hardly.
Until then, what good does it do for Americans to postulate outcomes? The debates are making the MSM richer by stereotyping candidates; they're not improving the depth of dialog.
Debates? Paaaaahhhhh! Now a word from our sponsor.
August 20, 2007 7:39 AM | Reply | Permalink
Here comes the 'broken record' again.
US military aggression in Vietnam wasn't stopped by peace marches or letters to the editor, and it certainly wasn't stopped by politicians. It only came to an end when the troops refused to continue the aggression, punctuated by mission refusals, mutinies, insubordination and even fragging (killing superiors).
What we're seeing from these brave men is that some US soldiers are able to think for themselves, and that there may be some hope of changing things from the bottom up. The difference from Vietnam is that now soldiers are lesser citizen-soldiers than in Vietnam. Now they are volunteers, often attracted by financial incentives and by the shear action of warfare.
We can now expect that the government will present us with a hundred soldiers who will say, in print and broadcast, that everything is going just fine.
Let's hope that these dissidents have started something, recognizing that it's a slender hope of ending the brutal US military occupation of Iraq..
August 20, 2007 8:24 AM | Reply | Permalink
J. McCutchen
Amen.
Time for a "do-over" - a major do-over
August 20, 2007 8:34 AM | Reply | Permalink
I don't think that the US should try to just kinda shove some international force into our place in Iraq, any organized body which gets inserted into this equation is just going to be forced into the same role we're in now, as mitigators of a civil war. The violence in Iraq by this point is only partially resistance to us, there is a real competition going on for basic resources, territory and political power. There is no sense inserting anyone into that mess. They have to resolve it. It may mean long term fighting, it may not. But at this point, you can't force a solution onto the situation from outside.
This does present some potentially bad scenarios though. Saudi Arabia has already stated that they won't sit idly by, in a military sense, and watch the Sunni population get slaughtered. Nor will any of Iraq's Sunni neighbors, and the whole neighborhood is Sunni except for Iran and Iraq. If the conflict becomes widespread, it would be in danger of becoming an all out Sunni vs. Shia war, a gross replay of the Iran / Iraq war writ large. How do we, having squandered every drop and then some of good will that the Shia might have felt towards us, tell them to rein themselves in and dish out appropriate, proportionate political power? There is almost no way, other than the old-fashioned one - bribery. We have to get ourselves together, leave, and tell representative Shias that there's a whole lot of money in it for them if they work out a settlement everyone can live with. Which may not work at all, but is pretty much the only thing which could.
None of the candidates are really talking sense right now though, you're right. They're all trying to manage expectations instead of talking reality. Which I find very annoying and disappointing. The next Dem president has a chance to right a lot of wrongs, and alter the perceptions of Dems as foreign policy incompetents, which was a weak argument to begin with and which is now undercut by the Republicans' uninterrupted idiocy on display over the past 7 years. I fear that whoever is elected will fail miserably at this, because they are all hedging on actually ending the conflict. Not that they won't withdraw forces, but they won't just hand things (such as that imperial embassy we're building) over and leave the way we need to. They're going to try to hang on to this or that part of the Bush regime's policies/resource grabs. And it will never work. Vietnam didn't end for any reason EXCEPT that someone ended up in office who had not publicly or privately committed to continuing the war. Dems had better make a more clear and coherent case that they fully intend to End this thing with a capital E.
August 20, 2007 8:43 AM | Reply | Permalink
Come on, grow up! Politicians don't discuss emotions; we talk emotions.
August 20, 2007 8:45 AM | Reply | Permalink
"Vietnam didn't end for any reason EXCEPT that someone ended up in office who had not publicly or privately committed to continuing the war. "Who are you talking about? Ford? The cease-fire started in 1973 when Nixon was President.Tom
August 20, 2007 9:08 AM | Reply | Permalink
I agree with you, MJ. I don't know if it's fear, lack of perceptiveness or what. It seems that only candidates who won't clearly take on the military-industrial complex have a chance under our present system. Plus I think the word "impeachment" needs to come up more in these debates. Kucinich is a good guy on both of these issues.Tom
August 20, 2007 9:14 AM | Reply | Permalink
Maybe because a good three years ago I passed already from anger to hopelessness, I can understand if the candidates delivering stump lines day after day and addressing a disillusioned American people prefer to talk about what they're going to do next. They all get their digs in at Bush, and I'm encouraged that we're going to see change.
I'm also discouraged when our anger stops us from seeing an election here. It breeds that cynicism that the blogosphere loves. See they're all the same. The nominees are all the same. The parties are all the same. Let's forget the whole thing. What's taking back America when we've got our virtual escape?
John
http://www.haberarts.com/
August 20, 2007 9:19 AM | Reply | Permalink
help put together some kind of international force that can replace us
I'm afraid that ship sailed in the fall of 2003.
August 20, 2007 9:45 AM | Reply | Permalink
John:
I can understand your caution about wallowing in cynicism. But it remains fair, I think, to try and draw the candidates out in terms of what they are thinking of doing. The caveat, of course, is that I do think that demanding "detailed plans" from each candidate is unrealistic for both political and other more significant reasons. But I do think that it is appropriate to discuss what should happen and how proposals might be effected, and I also think it's fair, even if generally coated with cynicism, to point out the lack of any material distinction on Iraq, the paramount issue of the day.
Bruce
August 20, 2007 9:54 AM | Reply | Permalink
By no means do I think there is no difference between Democrats and Republicans. The Democratic nominee will be infinitely better than the Republican.
I have yet to be convinced that he or she will be better on matters relating to the Middle East.
August 20, 2007 10:01 AM | Reply | Permalink
Come on, now! This is about a Presidential election.
The "American people" don't count; our Constitution sees to that. The only people who count are the 5% of voters located in Ohio and Florida -- principally independents -- who will decide the outcome. I trust that professional politicians have a better understanding of what they have to do and say to appeal to those voters than anyone on this board.
Don't like it? Change the Constitution!
August 20, 2007 10:06 AM | Reply | Permalink
I agree MJ--I think all of us on this thread are focusing on the Dems. There is a major difference between the parties concerning Iraq, I submit, and that is that other than guys like Lieberman, who isn't running, the Dems want to get out and the GOP frontrunner candidates continue to endorse the necessity of our presence in Iraq until, well until, well I'm not sure what their endgame is frankly.
August 20, 2007 10:10 AM | Reply | Permalink
SSDD, Same Shit Different Day.
None of the Democrat candidates has had to sacrifice anything in the Iraq war, so don't expect much passion. Expect more cover your ass political mumbo jumbo, just as many of these same people did during the 90s, scoring cheap political points by going to the well of the House or Senate and babbling about how evil Saddam was.
Heh, and now their cheap grab for the high ground, their words and deeds, have come back to haunt them.
As to getting together an international force to replace us and protecting the Iraqis, how can anyone suggest that with a straight face? What country would we, or the UN, go to first? How many could we actually get? Enough to make a difference?
300,000?
Getting this International Force has as much probability of success as Biden's creating 3 autonomous regions. Has anyone ever asked Biden how he would accomplish that?
I can see it now; as what's left of The Coalition of the Willing continues to withdraw from Iraq, they pass these International Forces going IN TO Iraq.
Heh, good luck.
Iraq ceased to exist when Saddam was overthrown. There is no Iraq, there are only Sunnis, Shia and Kurds living in that area.
The only control we have there is whether we leave or stay.
August 20, 2007 10:11 AM | Reply | Permalink
Leave. Guaranteed, the Iraqi's will not miss you.
August 20, 2007 10:12 AM | Reply | Permalink
The American people count. It is the American people, through their votes, that made Ohio and Florida the swing states in the last few elections. It was the American people, sad to say, who took the entire Deep South (every state of which went for Carter in '76) and turned it solid Red in 1980 and ever since.
Our votes count, not all of them, but most.
After all, had Gore carried Tennessee or West Virginia or Arkansas, he would have been sworn in and not Bush.
This defeatism isn't called for. Yet.
August 20, 2007 10:14 AM | Reply | Permalink
Leave. Guaranteed, the Iraqi's will not miss you.
August 20, 2007 10:18 AM | Reply | Permalink
bslev: "I can understand your caution about wallowing in cynicism. But it remains fair, I think, to try and draw the candidates out in terms of what they are thinking of doing." Oh, totally. We have to see who we can back, which is why we have elections. I just think that MJR was too focused on tone, the thing about which candidate most closely expresses my feelings. That's still the politics of image that the GOP has mastered. It's a little better than who we'd like a beer with, as it's about our anger at war. But it's yet not what you, Bruce, are fairly calling for.
I don't say things are hunky-dory at all. We still have even good candidates trying to pin down just how to exit, which is a hard problem, actually, where we might want more insistence on exiting. We still have Clinton playing tough guy, which is just plain disturbing.
On the other hand, we've got Obama reminding us often that he voted against the war, so that failure in Iraq is at the heart of is candidacy. We've his clear speaking on nukes and other aspects of foreign policy. We've got Edwards stating that he wants any American presence, more radically than in Obama's plan, restricted to the borders confining the conflict to Iran. We've got even Clinton voting with us in all Iraq resolutions for months now and saying she will end the war. We've got them all hitting Bush hard. So i'm not dispairing, especially while the GOP candidates are all running on more war.
Ok, so you or I or MJR can second guess which tone is best in a future president. When should they express our anger, our hopes, our this, our that. But it's not what you're asking, and it's not right. MJR is a really, really good person, and his stances on Israel have shown his heart, patience, and courage. But whenever he posts on the candidates, often pro one or the other, maybe he lets his heart speak a little too much?
John
http://www.haberarts.com/
August 20, 2007 10:18 AM | Reply | Permalink
Valdron,
truly!
August 20, 2007 10:18 AM | Reply | Permalink
mj,
agreed, on all 3 points.
August 20, 2007 10:21 AM | Reply | Permalink
If we don't stay in ,and expand the war, and have a draft, how the hell am I gonna get my two boys and a girl, all 18 or older, off the couch and out of the house?
It simply isn't fair. Back in VietNam war days, you could count on the government taking your lazy-ass kids and making a man, or a corpse out of them. Now they have to volunteer. I can't get 'em to volunteer to do the dishes, they ain't gonna volunteer to fight.
And you want to leave and deny these kids all the oppurtunity my generation had to grow up or go down in the Armed Forces.
Look how much Presidential Bush got out of his Guard service? Why should my kids be denied the same chance?
August 20, 2007 10:32 AM | Reply | Permalink
I'd much rather my kids go off to Iraq than have to explain to them all about bundling, sub-prime mortgages, margin calls, and Why I can't buy them each a sports car.
You know what kids are like.
August 20, 2007 10:34 AM | Reply | Permalink
Hmm. And in 1976 Carter won Ohio and Florida. And in 2000 Gore lost Ohio and Florida.
August 20, 2007 10:53 AM | Reply | Permalink
Our votes count, not all of them, but most.
Ellen and MJ, there's the rub. I'm a Palm Beach County voter.
Ellen, have you been reading Sandy Levinson?
The worst thing you can do to a dogma is give it an empire. Anon
August 20, 2007 10:57 AM | Reply | Permalink
I disagree.
If the Democrats wanted us out of Iraq, we'd be out of Iraq. All they had to do was cut off the money, that doesn't require a veto-proof majority.
It might be accurate to say that the Democrats want us out of Iraq, but not quite as bad as they want to hold on to their seats. Their fear of being painted as "against our troops" is the only reason the troops aren't en route home right now.
Oh, and one more thing: I am tired of cutting the Democrats slack just because they are better than their demonic step-sisters in the GOP. Every time we excuse the cowards on the left because they're not as despicable as the cowards on the right, we enable cowardice. I am done with that.
August 20, 2007 11:02 AM | Reply | Permalink
Point well-take, John. Thanks.
PS I'm more antiwar than I am pro- any candidate. I wish McGovern was running!
August 20, 2007 11:04 AM | Reply | Permalink
My oldest is not yet 16 and isn't yet eligible, but she has served in the armed forces only a few days less than W. I suspect she has learned about as much as he did from the experience, too. Hell, I know she'd make a far better President and Commander-in-Chief.
August 20, 2007 11:08 AM | Reply | Permalink
"Obama reminding us often that he voted against the war"
If I am reading my calendar correctly (and I may not be), when Obama voted against the war, he did so as an Illinois state legislator.
Heck, I voted against the war too, as a member of my Homeowners' Association Board.
Each vote took at least a little courage, but neither mattered in the least.
August 20, 2007 11:14 AM | Reply | Permalink
Agreed, its the same Dem spinelessness that refuses to do anything but announce how bad the Bush gang is then gives them another 2 weeks to comply with subpoenas.
As a cudgel, the Dems can cut the funds off for more than Iraq.
August 20, 2007 11:15 AM | Reply | Permalink
No; but anyone whose discourse can be described as "bracingly unromantic" is my kind of guy.
Addendum: Just noticed Mario 4 dropped by to give one of my comments a rating. Here's a guy who's made 5 comments in 47 weeks, none of which received a rating higher than "1" -- and he's rating someone else's comments? Sheesh!
August 20, 2007 11:24 AM | Reply | Permalink
And to think I've finally mastered the art of "bracing romanticism" only to be told this! Same ole' story.
August 20, 2007 11:30 AM | Reply | Permalink
MJ, There is a certain irony when you write "than Slobadan Milosevic could have solved the problems of Yugoslavia once he had destroyed the very idea of Yugoslavia." during a piece about where is the anger in our involvement in Iraq. One of the factors that led to the Iraq war debacle was the prewar lies and propaganda that preceded our actual attack.
Then you repeat a similar part of the preSerbian war propaganda that was used to prepare us for that war. Milosovic was widely demonized in the American press for 8 years preceding the actual shooting. Much of it was incorrect and all of it was lacking any context.
The nationalist feelings that led to the disintegration of Yugoslavia existed within all 5 states. In fact the precipitating event occurred in Slovenia. Milosovic, Izebegovic and Tudjman were the leaders that helped blow it apart after that event. Milosovic was not any worse than the others. The big difference was that Tudman's backers hired a Washington PR firm to spin the story in their favor. And that resulted, eventually, in our allying with Croatia in the civil war.
August 20, 2007 11:32 AM | Reply | Permalink
He's just a phone call away.
August 20, 2007 11:33 AM | Reply | Permalink
:-)
August 20, 2007 11:34 AM | Reply | Permalink
J. McCutchen
We've just witnessed the biggest mass attack of the war; assassins have killed the second governor in as many weeks; PetRaeus is so desperate that he's creating militias out of Sunni insurgents; CheneyBush are setting up an attack on Iran, and Southern Irag, including the critical oil and supply line hub, Basra, the Brits have been defeated according to US military officials.
So...
Hillary's triangulating again. There are truly no do-overs in ClintonWorld.
Bush-Clinton-Bush-.... There THAT woman goes again
You've GOT to be kidding!
August 20, 2007 11:36 AM | Reply | Permalink
I'd place that call to Feingold. He is the perfect 3rd party candidate. Actually seems to have respect for the Constitution. His presence as a third party candidate would almost certainly pull the "mainstream" Dems off center a bit, one way or the other.
August 20, 2007 11:39 AM | Reply | Permalink
I'm not pulling rank here, but I am pulling age.
Those on this site who lived through WWII well remember that not only were all branches of our military fighting for themselves and us, the entire citizenry of this country was directly or indirectly affected by, and engaged in winning and ending that war.
Newspaper headlines, front page coverage, editorials and op-eds were focused on the war. Radio broadcasts focused on the war at the front, behind the lines and on the home-front.
It is hardly necessary to list the differences between then and now. (Not that I have anything against Miss Hilton, but her troubles really are not all that earth-shaking.)
True, when we actually think about it, the Iraq invasion and occupation (it's not a war) infuriates us. But we're hardly engulfed by it, and the debating candidates may merely reflect where it is on the American citizen's agenda.
It seems to me that Iraq is without a functioning government. I don't care what country it is, one without a government is a country in a state of anarchy. The obvious solution would be to restore or if needs be create a government. As it is now, we seem intent on shuffling populations, drawing border lines, increasing the number of police and/or military personnel...Is anyone talking about the core problem - a governmentless country?
August 20, 2007 11:41 AM | Reply | Permalink
There is still only two choices: continued warfare or withdrawal. Because the latter choice comes with a bitter pill -- acknowledgment that we lost -- none of our candidates are willing to say this.
Who wants to be pilloried as a defeatist. And for sure if any top tier candidate did advocate complete withdrawal that is the image that would be stuck on them.
Actually, I do not really blame them for avoiding that fate. None has a big enough bank account to counter such a campaign that would be launched by the entire traditional press.
Thus I will accept something like "withdrawal of all combat forces and retreat into our permanent bases" or reduction of force levels to 40,000 or so. These cannot be solutions. Those residual forces would quickly be driven out anyway. Then our war would be over. So we end up with a permanent base in Kurdistan, just one more to add to the 700 others we have.
August 20, 2007 11:52 AM | Reply | Permalink
Naysayer! Iraq is a beacon of democracy that will certainly inspire others.
You are right. It's an invasion and occupation, and certainly not a war.
Only Congress can declare war, and they never did.
August 20, 2007 11:55 AM | Reply | Permalink
Wrong Madam, Diebold et al will decide (I hope you noticed what the cowards in Congress did to the bill that would have solve the problems with the vote altering machines.) as the establishment has crossed the Rubicon and cannot chance anyone not under their control looking into the crimes that murdered 3000 innocent human beings, kicked off two wars with more in the wings, and is busy daily creating a police state.
A Democracy requires a free, active press for informed decision making on the citizenry's part as well as a secure voting system to reflect that informed decision making, this nation does not have either one anymore. Stick the fork in this democracy. Nor should the Neo-Conservatives be proud of their crimes/work as they have created a monster that will quickly get free of their hands and will eat them as well as a lot of innocent people ...so well done ya s*&t-for-brains manipulators, didn’t you realize in the end you are only as safe as your fellow citizens are!
August 20, 2007 12:00 PM | Reply | Permalink
"Actually, I do not really blame them for avoiding that fate. None has a big enough bank account to counter such a campaign that would be launched by the entire traditional press."
Which proves the point: they may favor withdrawal, but not as much as they value their own electability. And therein lies the basic problem with representative democracy in the "information age".
We "information age" consumers are a feeble-minded lot.
August 20, 2007 12:02 PM | Reply | Permalink
Diebold, Incorporated
5995 Mayfair Road
P.O. Box 3077
North Canton, Ohio USA 44720-8077
Mark Hanna; we hardly knew ye!
August 20, 2007 12:09 PM | Reply | Permalink
MJR: "I'm more antiwar than I am pro- any candidate. I wish McGovern was running!" And I'm totally open to your excitement about the potential of all of them, especially at making the GOP squirm. So let's hope. Maybe we'll get there yet. Or maybe not. I'll let you know if I survive another year of campaigning...
John
http://www.haberarts.com/
August 20, 2007 12:12 PM | Reply | Permalink
"If I am reading my calendar correctly (and I may not be), when Obama voted against the war, he did so as an Illinois state legislator." Sorry. I misspoke. I meant only to say that he keeps reminding us, not unfairly I think in a campaign about such things as peace, vision, experience, and judgment, that he had this one right a long time ago. And of course Edwards has made a major deal of repudiating his vote.
John
http://www.haberarts.com/
August 20, 2007 12:14 PM | Reply | Permalink
What is far less obvious is whether the United States is in a position to do either of these things. Some diseases can't be cured. Some cures require different physicians. Our political elite had the hubris to think it could do elective surgery and "cure" Baathist Iraq, and the country consorted in that hubris. Most of the craftsmen I know believe that it is more difficult to mend a badly done repair than to do the repair themselves. The honest ones walk away when they know the attempt is beyond their skill. The most honest ones tell the owner that the object is irreparable. Are any of our leaders that honest? I mean any to include the political class of both parties?
That which was Iraq will remain as a place, peopled, regardless of whether Iraq as concept survives. The most humane thing at this stage might be to help it fall apart. The analogy may not be close, but Czechoslovakia is gone, The Czech Republic and Slovakia remain. The Balkans are the Balkans: formed, reformed, torn apart, contrived--they remain true to their essential characters.
aMike
August 20, 2007 12:45 PM | Reply | Permalink
huh. not sure why feingold (or mcgovern for that matter) would need to leave the party and run third party. not to mention that it would be a disaster especially if you really wanted to end the war.
i grow suspicious that more 'progressives' consider ending the democratic party more important than ending the war.
August 20, 2007 12:45 PM | Reply | Permalink
I understood what you meant, it's just that Obama's anti-war credentials are not quite bona fides. He has not provided any real leadership in opposing the continued occupation, his votes in opposition to Bushco coming after matters were already decided.
Kucynich has credibility in the subject, he has been consistent. Edwards has unequivocally repudiated his vote, but if he were still in the Senate would he have triangulated as unashamedly as Clinton and Obama have done? I suspect so and do not know how to prove myself wrong, though I would very much like to do so.
I want to see one of these "front-runners" (a more cynical term would be "electables") actually stick his/her neck out and lead his colleagues in opposition to the war and to the wholesale shredding of the Constitution. It's what we should all expect of our so-called leaders.
August 20, 2007 12:49 PM | Reply | Permalink
Information we got. Knowledge we ain't got.
And there's the rub. We're literally swimming in data, which fools us into thinking we have knowledge - thereby allowing our feeble-mindedness to blithely continue undetected.
Knowledge includes not only acquaintance with facts, but acquaintance with truths and principles, as from study or investigation.
Foreinstance, expecting a debating candidate to, in two minutes time, lay out his/her 'solution' to the Iraq 'problem' is a blatant example of just how feeble-minded he and we have become.
August 20, 2007 1:07 PM | Reply | Permalink
But we tried, o.k.? We tried. I hunkered down in my apartment in Cleveland during the days of Kent State, listening to random shots from who knows where, and wondering what campus would erupt next. No gassing that I can remember, but curfews, and passes to get from friends' houses home.
We also harbored some of those who practiced that insubordination about which you write...arranging safe passage to Canada or Sweden, and maybe, just maybe our actions empowered and encouraged them to refuse. Ask John Kerry or others associated with Viet Nam Vets against the War. Could they, alone, have ended that war?
aMike
August 20, 2007 1:49 PM | Reply | Permalink
Embrace a romantic...you're more likely to get hugged back. But, remembering that you discus politics with your wife (I did remember that from a previous post, right?) you probably already know about hugging romantics. <grin></grin>
aMike
August 20, 2007 1:52 PM | Reply | Permalink
You get better and better, MJ. All I would add to this, is sack cloth and ashes would be embarrassed to be worn by those who, in the rush to get to their vacations, voted also in favor of extending FISA for the reasons you mentioned above.
aMike
August 20, 2007 1:57 PM | Reply | Permalink
Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom; and with all thy getting get understanding.
Ah, Sophia.
August 20, 2007 2:15 PM | Reply | Permalink
aMike:
You do have a fine memory indeed!
I do discuss politics with my wife and she thinks I'm a reactionary SOB just like lots of other folks around here! But, in any event, we still manage to hug each other now and then. She is what you would call my oh so much better half, and I thank the stars everyday that she agreed to marry me. Are you reading this honey???? :-)
By the way, true story, but I proposed to her when we were down in Orlando together working with the AFL-CIO voter education folks on the eve of the 2004 election. It was the Saturday before the election (and we were at dinnner celebrating my 45th birthday) and man we were on a high. And then Election Day: we were hearing all this great news on the radio but at the same time we were seeing these endless lines of folks waiting for hours in the hot sun to vote. It was unbelievable. And that trip home the next day was one of the most brutal experiences of my life.
Life can be bittersweet.
Bruce
August 20, 2007 2:21 PM | Reply | Permalink
To fix Iraq we just need to install an iron fisted, totalitarian sociopath as President of Iraq.
Since we have lost Saddam; our best hope for fixing...oh wait, that won't work.
Well, the only iron fisted totalitarian sociopath we have left to send is Cheney. Maybe he would take the job as Iraqi President on 1-21-09?
August 20, 2007 2:37 PM | Reply | Permalink
Isn't it interesting that in this supposedly democratic land ending a major war apparently depends on what the president does and not on what the people want. There's a word for that kind of government, and it's not "democratic".
. . .That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed . . .
We could say: Can it, Tom, you're out of date, and you dressed funny. We found a better way to do--just put all our trust in Number One and hope for the best.
Or, we could say: Look, presidential candidates, we don't give a flying you-know-what how you feel about the war. Not one friggin' iota, because we are going to end this thing before you even get into office.
We are going to disseminate a petition amongst the populace, because we don't trust the Congress, telling President Bush to get out of Iraq within six months of its receipt. Our intention is to have it signed by one hundred million people on the internet. We expect the president to agree to comply with it or we will shut down Washington, and that's a promise. Now get back to your TV games and remember, you may be next. A new day is dawning in America, one based on the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, powered by the will of the people and the reach of the web, and not dependent on what your political consultants may have told you this morning.
Now all we need is someone to coordinate this effort and we will re-democratize America. God Bless America!
August 20, 2007 2:48 PM | Reply | Permalink
The Democrats running for President and their missing outrage are exemplified by Senator Leahy today. In addressing the White House ignoring his deadline for obeying the subpoena, he all but said;
'The White House ignored our deadline for the papers subpoened, and this forces me to issue an ultimatum to the Bush Administration; You have a one year extension to heed the subpoena or we will be forced to give you an extra year.'
August 20, 2007 2:55 PM | Reply | Permalink
Just to expand a little on the Nixon Vietnam analogy; Nixon also campaigned on the platform of gradual withdrawal despite the public’s desire for immediate withdrawal. He wanted to win the "peace" and ensure a viable South Vietnam while bringing our troops home gradually.
Nixon actually expanded the war (into Cambodia) before signing the Paris peace accords.
Is this what we can expect from our gradual withdrawal candidates, some expansion before withdrawal? Should we expect another 1968 through 1973 with expansion into Cambodia updated to 2009 through 2014 with expansion into Iran before withdrawal?
It would be nice if we could get a dedicated 30 minute interview for each Candidate to explain their Iraq policy in detail. This should include a host tough enough and knowledgeable enough to pin down the specifics and air out the inconsistencies with each candidate.
This is what we need but it is not what we will get.
We are only entitled to the 30 second sound bite according to the current MSM debate standards. This is because they only want sound bites they can spin on the nightly news and with their own in-house pundits.
Substantive policy debates are apparently gone forever.
Obama hinted about dialogue with “the people” instead of more wasted debate time. I concur with his decision about debate under the current format.
The question will be which candidate has the guts to bring the substantive policy debate format forward? The answer is none have the guts to do it.
If they don’t have the guts to do this debate format then how can expect them once elected to have the guts to follow through for the People as opposed to the status quo?
August 20, 2007 3:23 PM | Reply | Permalink
I apologize for replying to myself but the debate format should be 30 minutes per candidate per subject hosted by Moyers and Lehrer. For each topic they should bring in one subject matter expert to co-host.
August 20, 2007 3:31 PM | Reply | Permalink
It is true that some diseases cannot be cured. But it is also true that the Iraq government is corrupt to the core and reaping huge personal - think money - benefits from the chaos that is Iraq. Seems to me, in this case the disease may be curable if we get rid of those who are, if nothing else, determined to prevent a cure.
August 20, 2007 3:33 PM | Reply | Permalink
Debate topics:
Iraq
Foreign Policy
Tax structure, deficit, debt
Social Security and Medicare
Health Care
Free Trade and Jobs
Candidates Choice
Any other ideas?
August 20, 2007 3:37 PM | Reply | Permalink
Infinitely? I think not. For the first time I voted for one Green candidate in 2006. The Democrat running for the Senate refused to take a strong stand on getting out of Iraq. She told the local paper that universal health care is "unrealistic". So I didn't vote for her. So far she's voted to fund the Iraq War and for the FISA bill.
If they don't have the guts to stand up on Iraq, they won't be putting themselves at risk for health care, civil rights, or any infinitely important issue. And as long as they know you are going to vote for them anyway, why should they?
August 20, 2007 3:40 PM | Reply | Permalink
IMO what ought to said to the squatters in the White House is you have forty-eight hours to comply with our legally issued subpoenas or we will initiate impeachment proceedings, and afterwards trials for high treason seeking the death penalty…all just to hear GW whine ala CF Tucker please don't kill me...hee hee!
August 20, 2007 4:44 PM | Reply | Permalink
I don't see power in the internet, and if I do see a potential for it, I don't see it being utilized. The analogy I see is one that includes a couch, a television set, and a potato.
Talking about the Democrats being the same is easy and perhaps therapeutic. But it's not the same as organizing at the local level.
You can rail against corporate money, you can rail against weak-kneed Democrats being just as bad as the Republicans, and you can vote green, blue or purple and help ensure the election of Republicans.
Stand up folks and organize, organize, organize.
Alternatively, slap each other on the backs for criticizing incumbent Democrats, hand out "5" ratings, take two bucks and ride the subway from Inwood to South Ferry. But the internet doesn't replace the power of the people. And the power of the people is not the same as, forgive me, kvetching on the internet about "what's the use", etc. because all these folks are the same.
Organize, organize, organize. And if you don't believe that, well then there's always the internet.
Democracy is hard work, and the internet doesn't change that reality.
August 20, 2007 5:12 PM | Reply | Permalink
You can say that again.
August 20, 2007 5:29 PM | Reply | Permalink
Anti-Trust regulation and corporate power. I'd like to see one of them channel Teddy Roosevelt.
aMike
August 20, 2007 5:34 PM | Reply | Permalink
I am tired of cutting the Democrats slack just because they are better than their demonic step-sisters in the GOP. Every time we excuse the cowards on the left because they're not as despicable as the cowards on the right, we enable cowardice. I am done with that.
So, what shall we do?
Think about this. There's a lot of talk about the power of AIPAC, and how it is able to exert extraordinary influence over American foreign policy, and there's no argument here. But AIPAC doesn't just do it with money. AIPAC and its allies can send the message down to local synagogues and in less than a week have hundreds of thousands of people from all over the country caravaning into Washington, D.C. to flex their muscle on this or that issue. The pro-lifers, I suppose, can do the same.
And, as MJ, aMike and others can tell you from first-hand experience, there was once an anti-war movement in this country that didn't just do it with money; they did it with sweat and hard work and they marched on Washington and they made their presence known and they made their perspective resonate in a way that all the corporate money in the world couldn't silence. Is that what ended the war? Who knows, but I bet it accomplished something.
Start renting some buses people.
August 20, 2007 5:47 PM | Reply | Permalink
Last of the Red Hot Mantras.
aMike
August 20, 2007 5:52 PM | Reply | Permalink
It's because our culture would rather deny a wrong than to see it for it really is and attempt to correct the mistake.
Most of these clowns were involve with the war effort and are just as culpable as the admininstration.. We seem to for get that the evidence presented at the time did NOT sway for the weapons of mass destruction, but directly AGAINST it.
the only things I remember (please correct me if I am wrong) shown to support the existence of these weapons, is the testimoney of one Iraq official with NO believability, and the rantings of Hussein.
The administration made a case that Hussein himself bragged about the weapons... interesting, since this is the ONLY instance the administration EVER believe him. In fact, anyone who has ever talked to folks from that part of the world (including our spies, even as inept as they were later to be presented) knows, this is a way their culture negotiates. We are seeing the same rhetoric continually from almost everyone newsworthy in the mideast. WE will most likely be attacking Iran next, and use this same reasoning as one of the excuses.
During this same time (prior to attacking), we had United Nation inspectors searching, questioning, and assessing all the data coming in from actual, first hand (as opposed to 2nd and 3rd hand heresay from unknown and disreputable sourses) experience.
I believe, from everything I remember, these folks who WE were supporting, relying upon, and giving the responsibility to... these folks were adament that they could find NO instances of ANY WMDs.
The administration stated their belief (whether actual or construed) that there was a real danger. Both THEY AND CONGRESS had access to the UN reports. Both THEY AND CONGRESS had access to relevant info, and both THEY AND GONGRESS chose to wage war, when the overwhelming, first hand proof was completely opposing their actions.
We are paying the consequence of the actions of many of these folks who now want us to forget just what they have done to (yes, I meant "to", not "for") this nation. Apparently, from the looks of their donations and fans, it's working quite well.
Of course, if they were truly angry, they would have to take a good look at themselves... and maybe live with who they REALLY are, not just who they BELIEVE they are.... IMHO
August 20, 2007 6:00 PM | Reply | Permalink
Dear Mr. Bacon--
I hope when you attempt to shut down Washingtonm you are prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law and restrained in a lawful manner from doing so. The last thing we need is people like you trying to re-create Grant Park and the Days of Rage. That helped usher in six years of Nixon. People like you are either idiots or on Rove's payroll.
August 20, 2007 6:25 PM | Reply | Permalink
Start renting some buses people
This would be a good date/destination.
- all that's necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to remain silent
- all that's necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to remain silent
- all that's necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to remain silent
- all that's necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to remain silent
- all that's necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to remain silent
- all that's necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to remain silent
- all that's necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to remain silent
Have we got time to design a TPM Café T-shirt? (I should update---I understand Petraeus will brief Congress on September 11. Of course the choice of date is purely coincidental). BTW, I have vowed not to use the shorthand version of that infamous date until GWB is out of office and immersed in pondering his failed life and presidency.aMike
August 20, 2007 6:58 PM | Reply | Permalink
And if you want a taste of just how hard the work is, check out Patrick Watson's ten part TV series "The Struggle for Democracy."
August 20, 2007 7:56 PM | Reply | Permalink
Excellent Mike:
I assume that this is in heavy planning stage already and I will look to see and report on whether any groups in the NY Metro Area are already organizing to head down. Anyone else interested should do the same with in their areas too. Cool. Thanks for turning my rants into something productive.
Bruce
August 20, 2007 7:58 PM | Reply | Permalink
Maybe I'll see you on Amtrak. :-) It has been fun watching the number of signatures on the petition mount. While I "suspect" that there are some multiple signatures (don't some of us have multiple personalities?) I've only signed it once, so there must be at least two valid signatures on the petition. :-)
aMike
August 20, 2007 8:05 PM | Reply | Permalink
It would be totally cool to meet on the Amtrak, so long as you can tolerate an eight-month old for the three hours or so we'll be on the train. Hee
August 20, 2007 8:27 PM | Reply | Permalink
The list is a good start.
My number one would be: Restoration of lawful and constitutional government and related.
Another would involve global warming and environmental issues.
Kevin Russell Cook
August 20, 2007 9:48 PM | Reply | Permalink
skip
August 20, 2007 9:51 PM | Reply | Permalink
Had to give this comment an "excellent" as "really clever" is not available to us
Kevin Russell Cook
August 20, 2007 9:58 PM | Reply | Permalink
Doing the "undoable" has it roots in saying the "unsayable". Which in turn is rooted in thinking the unthinkable. In this little part of the world we're involved in the earlier stages of the middle activity. Keep Making it happen. (and, Thank you, Jonathan Alter.)
Kevin Russell Cook
August 20, 2007 10:41 PM | Reply | Permalink
I'm a Democrat. While I don't believe the party is yet in the place the Whigs were (just before they fell apart), I do think the current Democratic leadership could really benefit from a little review reading on the demise of the great Whig party.
And,
Dear Candidates, Stop letting this extra official electorial process use you, and start thinking about how you can use it.
Brainstorm. Start by thinking about more outrageous positionings (based on saying the true but unsayable) and consider what might be done (perhaps through proxies) to make such positioning more acceptable to the public. It's still a long way to 11/08.
Kevin Russell Cook
August 20, 2007 10:54 PM | Reply | Permalink
Maybe I can induce you to scan my diatribe about another guy I am not all that fond of here.
Whatever the case, Richardson has taken a lot of heat for proposing precisely what you moan no one but the two hopeless suspects is advocating.
You are exactly right IMO on the other candidates.
Best, Terry
August 21, 2007 2:17 AM | Reply | Permalink
Thank you for that. When I have a silly moment I have to debate with myself whether or not to share it, especially as a comment to a topic as grave as this one. I usually yield to temptation, thinking that a grin is so very closely associated with a tear ("I laughed so hard I cried") that maybe the only choice I have emotionally is to do one or the other--or maybe to do a little of both. As I type this stuff out, I'm hearing about the beginning of the trial of "Chemical Ali" and of the concurrent trial of an American soldier for murder of an insurgent. I'm not smiling. But if I don't smile occasionally I won't be much use to anyone in these grim times.
aMike
August 21, 2007 4:35 AM | Reply | Permalink
August 21, 2007 4:42 AM | Reply | Permalink
Clinton at the VFW: