The Bushophobes need therapy



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Topic: Science > Prophecies-Of-Nostradamus
User: "TonyZ2001"
Date: 02 Jul 2004 11:55:29 AM
Object: The Bushophobes need therapy
The Bushophobes need therapy
Posted: July 2, 2004
1:00 a.m. Eastern
2004 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
There is such a policy incoherence – such a disconnect – among the national
brotherhood of Bush-haters that an objective observer might conclude that the
throng could benefit from a little group therapy.
More to the point, given the particulars of his supporters' complaints against
President Bush, it's difficult to see how John Kerry will make an intelligible
case for his candidacy concerning Iraq if the time ever comes in the campaign
when he is forced to do so. After all, it's not as though Sen. Kerry has a plan
to extricate us from what his multitudes regard as a quagmire.
Let me illustrate a bit of the confusion that clouds the lovable Bushophobes.
On "Hannity and Colmes," Alan Colmes pointedly inquired of a Republican guest
why a recent poll showed that some 92 percent of Iraqis viewed Americans as
occupiers rather than liberators.
It appeared that Alan could barely contain his glee with this news and as if he
were dying to say, "See, I told you they don't like us. And they shouldn't like
us – because we're imperialist pigs."
I'm not trying to pick on my friend Alan, who I assume was merely spouting his
party's line. But let's look at what anti-Bush diva Maureen Dowd had to say in
her New York Times column on this subject.
Dowd wrote, "If Americans needed any more confirmation that they're viewed as
loathed occupiers, not beloved liberators, it came with the sad little
spectacle of a hasty, heavily guarded hand-over that no Iraqi John Trumbell
will memorialize in an oil painting of the Declaration of Iraqi Independence."
Is it just me, or is MoDo gloating at the prospect that America is not being
well received in Iraq? Does her antipathy for Bush cause her actually to root
for American adversity in Iraq – to the point that she even finds negativity
in our transfer of power to the Iraqi people? And speaking of disconnects,
isn't it curious that Dowd is simultaneously denouncing both our "occupation"
and our restoration of sovereignty to the Iraqis? Could therapy even help such
a double-minded condition?
Beyond that, here's what I mean about the incoherence of the Bush-bashers. All
of their complaints about Bush's Iraq policy, if addressed and remedied,
wouldn't make the slightest difference in how we are perceived there.
Do you think the Iraqis care, for example, how many nations joined our
coalition? Do you think it matters to them whether we allowed Saddam to violate
20 United Nations resolutions instead of 17? Do you think it matters to them
whether we have located stockpiles of WMD? Do you think they would prefer to be
oppressed by Saddam Hussein's regime?
Besides, do the anti-Bushers think polls of the Iraqi people should dictate our
foreign policy? Even if the answer is yes (God forbid), do they believe the
Iraqis would like us better if John Kerry were president?
Well, Kerry voted for the resolution to attack Iraq. And he has since stated,
despite his schizophrenic failure to vote for the $87 billion supplemental
appropriation for rebuilding Iraq and for our troops: "Whatever we thought of
the Bush administration's decisions and mistakes – especially in Iraq – we
now have a solemn obligation to complete the mission, in that country and in
Afghanistan."
Indeed, Kerry has indicated that far from withdrawing he might expand the
operation with more troops (preferably with more from our allies, presumably by
using a gentler tone of voice in asking for their support).
But would the influx of more troops make the Iraqis view us less as occupiers?
Of course not. As most reasonable people will concede, no nation relishes being
occupied.
So again we are entitled to ask, what is the relevance of the complaints of
Kerry's supporters? Zilch, because if they succeed in electing Kerry, unless
Kerry is fibbing, they'll just get more of the same.
One wonders whether or not they've really thought it through – to the point
of realizing that their own candidate has not promised to do anything
appreciably different, prospectively, in Iraq.
Probably so. But to them, this isn't really about Iraq. Nor is it about the
alleged discontentment of the Iraqi people, because if it were, they would be
praising President Bush for liberating them from Saddam.
Nor is it about invading a sovereign nation without justification, for if it
were, these same people would not have so unreservedly supported President
Clinton's policy to take out Serbia's Slobo when he represented no conceivable
threat to the United States.
What it is about is regime change, not in Iraq, but in the United States.
.

User: "Michael Johnathan McDonald"

Title: Re: The Bushophobes need therapy 02 Jul 2004 05:47:43 PM
(TonyZ2001) wrote in message news:<20040702125529.04141.00000657@mb-m26.aol.com>...

The Bushophobes need therapy

Maureen Dowd talking about negativity - that is an oxymoron to her whole character.
.


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