2 June 2005 - 12:32am
Go ahead, I dare ya
It's an obscenity, what Bush did to our service men and women, lying to justify a war where they had to go fight and bleed and die. Bob Herbert puts it well:
Now, with George W. Bush in charge, the nation is mired in yet another tragic period marked by incompetence, duplicity, bad faith and outright lies coming once again from the very top of the government. Just last month we had the disclosure of a previously secret British government memorandum that offered further confirmation that the American public and the world were spoon-fed bogus information by the Bush administration in the run-up to the invasion of Iraq.
President Bush, as we know, wanted to remove Saddam Hussein through military action. With that in mind, the memo damningly explained, "the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy."
That's the kind of deceit that was in play as American men and women were suiting up and marching off to combat at the president's command. Mr. Bush wanted war, and he got it. Many thousands have died as a result.
He ends his piece with a challenge:
The lessons of Watergate and Vietnam are that the checks and balances embedded in the national government by the founding fathers (and which the Bush administration is trying mightily to destroy) are absolutely crucial if American-style democracy is to survive, and that a truly free and unfettered press (which the Bush administration is trying mightily to intimidate) is as important now as it's ever been.
There you have it in a nutshell. Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon, drunk with power and insufficiently restrained, took the nation on hair-raising journeys that were as unnecessary as they were destructive. Now, in the first years of the 21st century, George W. Bush is doing the same.
Congress and an aggressive press ultimately played crucial roles in bringing the truth about Vietnam and Watergate to light.
A similar challenge exists today. We'll see how it plays out.
We'll see indeed. Is there any hope? I'd like to think so.
Only yesterday, Tom Friedman wrapped up a column on how our embattled-mindset response to 9/11 is changing our national character with these words:
In New Delhi, the Indian writer Gurcharan Das remarked to me that with each visit to the U.S. lately, he has been forced by border officials to explain why he is coming to America. They "make you feel so unwanted now," said Mr. Das. America was a country "that was always reinventing itself," he added, because it was a country that always welcomed "all kinds of oddballs" and had "this wonderful spirit of openness." American openness has always been an inspiration for the whole world, he concluded. "If you go dark, the world goes dark."
Bottom line: We urgently need a national commission to look at all the little changes we have made in response to 9/11 - from visa policies to research funding, to the way we've sealed off our federal buildings, to legal rulings around prisoners of war - and ask this question: While no single change is decisive, could it all add up in a way so that 20 years from now we will discover that some of America's cultural and legal essence - our DNA as a nation - has become badly deformed or mutated?
This would be a tragedy for us and for the world. Because, as I've argued, where birds don't fly, people don't mix, ideas don't get sparked, friendships don't get forged, stereotypes don't get broken, and freedom doesn't ring.
So what do we do now?
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Comments
I have to say I don't agree with you about President Bush. I believe President Bush is a better president than John Kerry could ever be.How do you know he is lying.Do you live in the Whitehouse,do you personally know someone that works there.You probably don't, so you need to be quiet about something you know nothing about.
You're awfully quick to scold someone for expressing free speech, and you're awfully quick to dismiss mounting evidence that the war on Iraq was planned from the day after Inauguration.
Don't take my word for it. Read accounts by people who were there.
Why do you bring up John Kerry, anyway? Who's talking about John Kerry? Do you think lying is a partisan issue? Do you think that over 1600 dead soldiers in a war started on false evidence is a partisan issue?