

John McCain, Liberal or Warmonger? Liberals haven lately taken gleefully to pointing out that “John McCain is a liberal” as a way of sticking it to Republicans to whom the very word “liberal” is as holy water to a vampire. There is a grain of truth to that assertion, but the way it is put is far too glib. It is true that John McCain’s pro-life and anti-immigration credentials are something less than impeccable, and that he has not marched in lockstep with the GOP on every issue. However, that hardly makes him “liberal” in the sense most people understand that word.
John McCain is an economic anti-interventionist; a fiscal conservative just like any good Republican. More than half of the economic plan on his website is devoted to cutting taxes, and most of the rest discusses reducing social spending and lowering “barriers to trade”. There are two sentences on reforming healthcare “by harnessing market competition.” On foreign policy, McCain is advised by a combination of paleo-realists like Henry Kissinger and neoconservatives such as William Kristol. Neoconservatism and Kissinger’s brand of realism are two schools of thought that are methodologically at odds, to be sure, but neither of them can be well accused of liberalism. McCain has consistently called for “more boots on the ground” as the solution to the debacle in
So please, authentic liberals, be serious (though that may be too much to ask of the likes of FlushBush). You don’t get to call McCain a war monger and a liberal at the same time. Go ahead and jeer about how he has supported the “murder” of fetuses and “amnesty” for illegal immigrants – the Kool Aid guzzlers hate that – but be specific about it. McCain is not a liberal and you know it. Here’s a thought: Why don’t you just completely deny reality and your political principles and declare that you would be content with a McCain Presidency? It would be more consistent.
Republicans Lie, Except about Hillary Clinton. Since the hated Hillary Clinton is running for the highest office in the land, the anti-Clinton smears of the 1990s have enjoyed a revival. It is unsurprising that this slime should be regurgitated by the Republicans who lapped it up with such relish to begin with, but I have on many occasions heard Democrats and other left-wingers suggest that the Clintons had Vince Foster murdered or that Bill Clinton is a rapist. Such attacks are foul and false and of the same nature as the Swift Boat ads. They have been admitted to be false by their main purveyor David Brock, reformed hit-man for the “vast right-wing conspiracy” and proprietor of the media watchdog, www.mediamatters.org. If you buy into them, you have zero credibility to attack the shameful tactics of Karl Rove and Fox News. Indeed, you should be ashamed of yourself.
But there’s no need for such shenanigans, for there is plenty that is true about Hillary Clinton to criticize. She lies fairly often, she’s hawkish on war and pro-business on the economy, and she shows near complete disregard for the interests of the Democratic Party, even praising the Republican candidate when it serves her interest. In fact, she behaves very much like a Republican herself. Why follow her example?
The “Lib-Belly” Congress and Bush’s Veto. Since the Republicans were defeated in the 2006 midterm elections, President Bush has discovered his power to veto and been exercising it liberally. And when Bush doesn’t veto a bill, he arrogates to himself the power of the judiciary by issuing a “signing statement” along with his signature delineating how he, the executive, will interpret the law. Accordingly, liberals in Congress have been unable to enforce the people’s demands and hence have grown less and less popular with the American public which, sadly, has little understanding of the way our government functions.
Conservatives, for instance tommyjohnson44, take this as evidence that the “lib-belly” Congress is incompetent and that its approval rating reflects people’s opinion of liberalism itself. Hogwash. The ’06 midterms were a referendum on the performance of Republicans in power; on conservatism. The current Congress is unpopular mostly because – due precisely to Bush’s unprecedented recalcitrance – it has been unable to take steps to undo the terrible mistakes he and the formerly Republican-controlled Congress have made. People are unhappy with Congress because Congress has not been liberal enough.
If you must gloat, then, conservatives, please be honest and gloat over the fact that you have at least temporarily foisted authoritarian control on an unsuspecting public now unable to break free of it despite its wishes. Attributing the low approval rating of Congress to the moral bankruptcy of liberalism in the eyes of the majority is surely a clever way of denying reality, but the fact remains that the Bush Administration defies the will of the public, no matter how much your Dear Leader mouths the word “liberty” or “democracy.” “Freedom is Slavery” indeed. Orwell must smile sadly at us from his grave.
There are a great many more examples of this self-deluding style of thought. For instance; the accusation of Hillary Clinton supporters that the Obama campaign is nasty and divisive when the opposite is clearly true and most of the divisiveness has come from the Hillary camp, the belief that all Presidential candidates are always the same combined with an especial hatred of George W. Bush, racists of all colors who are righteously indignant at the slightest perception of racism in the hated race, and so forth. To think in that way is to be intellectually mercenary. It is to accept things as true simply because it would be convenient if they were true. It is an offence against the idea of truth. People who think like that are clay for the totalitarian sculptor. The world of 1984 may not yet be upon us, but Big Brother is certainly watching. And he is always waiting for opportunities to lead those who can be convinced of the proposition that two and two equal five if it meets some emotional need. So wake up, sleepwalkers. It may take a little effort, but if you don’t you will remain prone to being led by the nose by forces which you will never, in your blindness, see.
“No individual president can compare to the second Bush,” wrote one. “Glib, contemptuous, ignorant, incurious, a dupe of anyone who humors his deluded belief in his heroic self, he has bankrupted the country with his disastrous war and his tax breaks for the rich, trampled on the Bill of Rights, appointed foxes in every henhouse, compounded the terrorist threat, turned a blind eye to torture and corruption and a looming ecological disaster, and squandered the rest of the world’s goodwill. In short, no other president’s faults have had so deleterious an effect on not only the country but the world at large.”
“With his unprovoked and disastrous war of aggression in Iraq and his monstrous deficits, Bush has set this country on a course that will take decades to correct,” said another historian. “When future historians look back to identify the moment at which the United States began to lose its position of world leadership, they will point—rightly—to the Bush presidency. Thanks to his policies, it is now easy to see America losing out to its competitors in any number of area: China is rapidly becoming the manufacturing powerhouse of the next century, India the high tech and services leader, and Europe the region with the best quality of life.”
One historian indicated that his reason for rating Bush as worst is that the current president combines traits of some of his failed predecessors: “the paranoia of Nixon, the ethics of Harding and the good sense of Herbert Hoover. . . . . God willing, this will go down as the nadir of American politics.” Another classified Bush as “an ideologue who got the nation into a totally unnecessary war, and has broken the Constitution more often than even Nixon. He is not a conservative, nor a Christian, just an immoral man . . . .” Still another remarked that Bush’s “denial of any personal responsibility can only be described as silly.”
“It would be difficult to identify a President who, facing major international and domestic crises, has failed in both as clearly as President Bush,” concluded one respondent. “His domestic policies,” another noted, “have had the cumulative effect of shoring up a semi-permanent aristocracy of capital that dwarfs the aristocracy of land against which the founding fathers rebelled; of encouraging a mindless retreat from science and rationalism; and of crippling the nation’s economic base.”
“George Bush has combined mediocrity with malevolent policies and has thus seriously damaged the welfare and standing of the United States,” wrote one of the historians, echoing the assessments of many of his professional colleagues. “Bush does only two things well,” said one of the most distinguished historians. “He knows how to make the very rich very much richer, and he has an amazing talent for f**king up everything else he even approaches. His administration has been the most reckless, dangerous, irresponsible, mendacious, arrogant, self-righteous, incompetent, and deeply corrupt one in all of American history.”
Four years ago I rated George W. Bush’s presidency as the second worst, a bit above that of James Buchanan. Now, however, like so many other professional historians, I see the administration of the second Bush as clearly the worst in our history. My reasons are similar to those cited by other historians: In the wake of the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, the United States enjoyed enormous support around the world. President Bush squandered that goodwill by taking the country into an unnecessary war of choice and misleading the American people to gain support for that war. And he failed utterly to have a plan to deal with Iraq after the invasion. He further undermined the international reputation of the United States by justifying torture.
Mr. Bush inherited a sizable budget surplus and a thriving economy. By pushing through huge tax cuts for the rich while increasing federal spending at a rapid rate, Bush transformed the surplus into a massive deficit. The tax cuts and other policies accelerated the concentration of wealth and income among the very richest Americans. These policies combined with unwavering opposition to necessary government regulations have produced the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. Then there is the incredible shrinking dollar, the appointment of incompetent cronies, the totally inexcusable failure to react properly to the disaster of Hurricane Katrina, the blatant disregard for the Constitution—and on and on.
Like a majority of other historians who participated in this poll, my conclusion is that the preponderance of the evidence now indicates that, while this nation has had at least its share of failed presidencies, no previous presidency was as large a failure in so many areas as the current one.
Good Politicians by Victoria Atmosphere
Are there good politicians? Yes there bloody well are! In fact, there are great ones and I would like to tell you about one of them. Tommy C. Douglas. When we discuss politicians in chat rooms, the question often comes up, or the conclusion is that all politicians are only in it for their own gain: corporate shills who may once have had a good reason to go into politics but forgot all their values once the lure of big money from lobbyists etc. stole their hearts.
Tommy was different… selfless, idealistic, extremely hard working and committed to the fight for social justice in
I often think about Tommy, especially when people say ‘there are no good politicians’. And it’s true we have so many reasons to be cynical about politicians. I need only refer to