April 13, 2007
Here's how the congressional Republicans can become patriots
Just like Matthew Dowd's recent confession, long-time
GOP-er Vic Gold has split with President Perversion. Gold, a friend and
staffer for George H. W. Bush, has had it up to here with the neo-cons
and the Dobson-ites that currently control the Grand Ol' Party.
In effect, what Gold desires is amazingly Howard Dean-ish. Dean desired
his country back--Gold will settle for the Republican Party to return
to its roots.
More and more of these types of 'defections' are critical and
necessary. For it's quite apparent that George Bush is going to listen
to no one--neither his father, any elder statesmen or the American
public--for he is the channeler of the Almighty and performer of God's
work. Why would the deity who wanted Bush to run for the presidency
advise him incorrectly on anything? Therefore, the Iraq quagmire, by
extension, is God's struggle--simplistically a good versus evil
scenario--and Bush must stay the course, at any cost, in carrying out
God's wishes. To do otherwise would be blasphemous, an affront to the
Almighty.
But it's going to take Republican congressional members to finally grow
at least the beginning of a spine and not accept Bush and his
child-like fantasies and behavior anymore. Let's hope they do so out of
a sense of right and wrong and not due to the hellhole of Iraq being a
2008 electoral burden.
That may be too much to ask for but it really boils down to this: who
in the GOP will be true patriots and who will continue to put party
before country?
Rightist Indignation
GOP Insider Vic Gold Launches a Broadside at the State of the Party
By Michael Abramowitz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, April 2, 2007; C01
Vic Gold heard from Lynne Cheney a few weeks before George
W. Bush was sworn in as president in January 2001. Cheney had an
assignment for her old friend: She wanted Gold to write the profiles of
her and her husband, the new vice president, for the official
Inauguration program.
The veteran journalist and GOP campaign operative was a
natural choice. After all, he had shared an office with Lynne Cheney at
Washingtonian magazine before she became chairman of the National
Endowment for the Humanities -- and they even worked on a satirical
novel together.
Gold was also an old friend of the new president's father,
having worked with George H.W. Bush on his campaigns and co-written his
autobiography. The association dated back to 1964, when Bush 41 was an
unsuccessful Senate candidate in Texas and Gold a press assistant to
unsuccessful presidential candidate Barry Goldwater.
So Gold was also asked to write the official bios of the new president and first lady.
"With Texas deep in his heart, America's 43rd president is an optimistic man of faith and family," he proclaimed in the program.
Gold was equally effusive about Dick Cheney : "A man of
gravitas with a quick and easy wit; a conservative who'll see a road
less traveled; a political realist who sees his country and the world
around him not in terms of leaden problems but golden opportunities."
At a lunch recently at a downtown Washington hotel, Gold,
78, hands over the program, now an artifact of seemingly ancient
history. He is trying to explain why it was so hard to write his new
book, one whose title encapsulates what he now thinks of his onetime
friends: "Invasion of the Party Snatchers: How the Holy-Rollers and the
Neo-Cons Destroyed the GOP." The two men at the top, he says, were men
he knew pretty well -- or at least he thought he did.
"What I described there was the Cheney we all thought we knew," Gold says ruefully.
His book, to be published this month by Sourcebooks with an
initial print run of 20,000 copies, offers quite a different assessment
of the two most powerful men in Washington. Under Bush and Cheney, he
argues, the GOP has moved away from principles of small government,
prudent foreign policy and leaving people alone to live their private
lives -- all views Gold associates with his hero, Goldwater. "Invasion
of the Party Snatchers" makes plain Gold's contempt for the direction
of his party and the guidance of its leaders.
"For all the Rove-built facade of his being a 'strong' chief
executive, George W. Bush has been, by comparison to even hapless Jimmy
Carter, the weakest, most out of touch president in modern times," Gold
writes. "Think Dan Quayle in cowboy boots."
Gold is even more withering in his observations of Cheney.
"A vice president in control is bad enough. Worse yet is a vice
president out of control."
Go here for the rest.
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