February 23, 2007
Concluding our George McGovern Week
There's not a great deal new in the following but contrast the values
of George McGovern with those of our current Command-In-Chief. We
return to our question: what if?
An Impartial Interrogation of George W. Bush
by GEORGE MCGOVERN
posted online at THE NATION on January 17, 2007
I'm glad to be back at the National Press Club. Indeed, at the age of
eighty-four, I'm glad to be anywhere. In my younger years when the
subject of aging came up, trying to sound worldly wise, I would say,
"It doesn't matter so much the number of years you have, but what you
do with those years." I don't say that anymore. I now want to reach a
hundred. Why? Because I thoroughly enjoy life and there are so many
things I must still do before entering the mystery beyond. The most
urgent of these is to get American soldiers out of the Iraqi hellhole
Bush-Cheney and their neoconservative theorists have created in what
was once called the cradle of civilization. It is believed to be the
location of the Garden of Eden. I mention the neoconservative theorists
to recall Walter Lippman's observance, "There is nothing so dangerous
as a belligerent professor."
One of the things I miss about my eighteen years in the US Senate are
the stories of the old Southern Democrats. I didn't always vote with
them, but I loved their technique of responding to an opponent's
questions with a humorous story. Once when Senator Sam Ervin of North
Carolina had to handle a tough question from Mike Mansfield, he said,
"You know, Mr. Leader, that question reminds me of the old Baptist
preacher who was telling a class of Sunday school boys the creation
story. 'God created Adam and Eve and from this union came two sons,
Cain and Abel and thus the human race developed.' A boy in the class
then asked, 'Reverend, where did Cain and Abel get their wives?' After
frowning for a moment, the preacher replied, 'Young man--it's
impertinent questions like that that's hurtin' religion.'"
Well, Mr. Bush, Jr. I have some impertinent questions for you.
Mr. President, Sir, when reporter Bob Woodward asked you if you had
consulted with your father before ordering our army into Iraq you said,
"No, he's not the father you call on a decision like this. I talked to
my heavenly Father above." My question, Mr. President: If God asked you
to bombard, invade and occupy Iraq for four years, why did he send an
opposite message to the Pope? Did you not know that your father, George
Bush, Sr., his Secretary of State James Baker and his National Security
Advisor General Scowcroft were all opposed to your invasion? Wouldn't
you, our troops, the American people and the Iraqis all be much better
off if you had listened to your more experienced elders including your
earthly father? Instead of blaming God for the awful catastrophe you
have unleashed in Iraq, wouldn't it have been less self-righteous if
you had fallen back on the oft-quoted explanation of wrongdoing, "The
devil made me do it?"
And Mr. President, after the 9/11 hit against the Twin Towers in New
York, which gained us the sympathy and support of the entire world, why
did you then order the invasion of Iraq, which had nothing to do with
9/11? Are you aware that your actions destroyed the international
reservoir of good will towards the United States? What is the cost to
America of shattering the standing and influence of our country in the
eyes of the world?
Why, Mr. President did you pressure the CIA to report falsely that Iraq
was building weapons of mass destruction including nuclear weapons? And
when you ordered your Secretary of State, Colin Powell, to go to New
York and present to the UN the Administration's "evidence" that Iraq
was an imminent nuclear threat to the United States, were you aware
that after reading this deceitful statement to the UN, Mr. Powell told
an aid that the so-called evidence was "bullshit"?
Go here for the rest.
Here is a link to another viewing of George McGovern that is quite informative.
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