I Cogitate

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June 11, 2007

We having nothing to fear but Bush himself

Fear. The four letter word worshipped by George Bush. It is the emotion he has utilized to put him where he is today. Fear is George Bush's lifelong lover--the two are inseparable. Fear completes him. It's George F-E-A-R Bush.

Let's lay out yet another Bush hypocrisy. As for yet another of his typically big lies, George Bush's 1999 offering that Jesus is his favorite political philosopher is on a par with his other deceits and distortions and yet another one he refused to explain. It's bundled with his lies about the necessity of invading Iraq, his bizarre tales of the progress and success in Iraq, his denials about his politicization of any department of government he could poison, his tight-lipped explanation, if you will, about his military service, et al.

Now he may believe in what he said about Jesus -- that's fine -- but it is one's actions post the embrace of anyone or anything that are the evidence.

I say to George Bush: words are cheap so offer value with yours. Explain to me what you have done and are doing, plus the why in your six plus years as President of the United States. Fully explain your actions and no, repeating that terrorists want to kill myself and my family or that elaborating on any of this is harmful to national security is a non-starter. In other words, cut the fear crap.

Are your actions aligned with bringing honor and glory to the individual you profess to politically admire and have spiritually given your life to? How have your political appointments -- the letting loose of your personal apostles -- the ones who have approached their service by turning our country into a den of robbers, brought light to your favorite political philosopher and personal savior?

Your use of threats, of positional power are contradictory to Jesus' guiding principles.

George Bush's acceptance of Jesus into his life as personal savior has supposedly provided him with comfort. At least that is what we are told. Sadly, this act still hasn't been enough to 'normalize' him, to propel him down the road of genuineness. No, he has simply continued on with his pre-acceptance-of-Jesus behavior of discomforting, or worse, so many others. He prefers fear, not love.

If one's actions are the measuring stick, it's clear that George Bush made a Faustian bargain deal with the devil -- his soul for a kingdom, a position he desperately needed for the personal respectability that came with it. But not unexpectedly, Bush has tarnished even that. It's obvious his favorite political philosopher is Lucifer, the purveyor of hate, division and worse who plays a prominent role in Bush's religion.

It's an easy call. Just look at which role model he has emulated.
COMMENTARY

Bush mantra: Be afraid, be very afraid
Joseph L. Galloway
McClatchy Newspapers
June. 06, 2007 []

The Democrats in Congress wring their hands, gnash their teeth and wail that there was nothing they could do but cave in and vote to continue funding the war in Iraq. After all, that crafty George W. Bush had maneuvered them into a corner and they didn't have the votes to override his veto.

Horse manure.

All they had to do was keep passing a war funding bill with a hard-and-fast timetable for beginning - and ending - the complete withdrawal of the more than 150,000 American troops fighting in that far-away place. Over and over and over, throwing it back into the face of a president who mistakes stubborn and hardheaded for principled resolve.

If that president continued to veto all the bills Congress sent to him, the money eventually would run out, although with a Defense Department budget of half a trillion dollars a year the administration could and probably would keep robbing Peter to pay Paul until both Peter and Paul were broke.

By which time it should be apparent to all who the real problem was and where the blame properly rested for failing to provide the money for an orderly end to the war that George W. Bush started and is determined will not end in his lifetime or ours.

Texas friends of the president told columnist Georgie Ann Geyer that it's the president's intention to arrange things so that his successors for half a century will never be able to pull out of Iraq. That George W. Bush intends that his blighted and bloody legacy of an unnecessary war that's hurt us more than it's hurt our enemies will continue, just as America's more rational and less costly commitment in Korea has continued.

Throwing a wrench into such misguided machinery isn't all that hard when you have check-writing authority. All it takes is courage and integrity and an absence of fear. Alas, that was lacking on Capitol Hill when the Democratic leadership, or what passes for such, cratered and caved.

Their eye is on the 2008 presidential elections, and their fear is that the White House spinmeister Karl Rove will portray the Democratic nominee and all Democrats as soft on terror; will accuse them of stabbing the American troops in the back.

The operative word here is "FEAR" and fear is the true legacy that George W. Bush and Dick Cheney and their neo-conservative chickenhawk corps will leave behind them.

They've instilled fear in the American people, beginning the day after 9/11, and they've played it like a Wurlitzer organ every day since then. Every time bad news looms on their horizon, up goes the red flag. Or the orange flag. Or the yellow flag. The national terror threat alert system became a 24/7 traffic light, except that it never turns green.

Whenever the truth threatens to intrude on the White House pipe dreams, suddenly the Federal Bureau of Investigation seems to uncover another huge and scary terrorist plot. A dirty bomb to be planted in the heart of an American city. A plot to bring down the Brooklyn Bridge with a blowtorch. Another plot to blow up Chicago's premier skyscraper. A plan for steely eyed killers disguised as pizza delivery boys to attack Fort Dix, N.J., and kill American soldiers.
Read the rest here.

ABOUT THE WRITER
Joseph L. Galloway is former senior military correspondent for Knight Ridder Newspapers and co-author of the national best-seller "We Were Soldiers Once ... and Young." Readers may write to him at: P.O. Box 399, Bayside, Texas 78340; e-mail: jlgalloway2@cs.com.

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