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Rants, Rates, Slags, Slates. Manic-depressive posts from Red Wright-Hand. Because there are thousands of worthless blogs out there and who am I not to add to their number? Total US troop deaths in Iraq to date (09/01/07) since 03/20/03: 3739
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Monday, September 20, 2004
ON BEING HAPPILY HUMBLED: In case I haven't made my opinions clear in recent months, let me state my loathing for President Bush and his ranking Administration officials...with some loathing left over for the non-ranking officials as well. He represents the most unashamedly cynical aspects of American political life (namely that the general populace will agree with, or at least offer no resistance to, obvious lies if the lies are comforting enough, and presented in relation to some terrible threat), not to mention the most arrogant (namely the refusal to readjust policies when clearly necessary). It's not even so much that I disagree in principle with those policies of the hard-right elements now in control of the Republican Party, but that those policies, when implemented, do not work on their own terms. Of course I need point to nothing other than our miserably failed occupation of Iraq. Bush & Co. got to have their cooked-up war, and they fucked it up with their spectacular mis-estimations. If you're going to be a pre-emptive-war-declaring, Axis-of-Evil-toppling superpower, you should at least do it right, and if we were presently looking at a new Garden of Democratic Eden flowering between the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, I would have to admit that Bush's plans might have been worth the human cost. But we are not looking at such a Garden, nor does it appear at all likely that we ever will. BUSH OUT NOW Anyway, it's all so disgusting to me that I got my sleepy ass in gear earlier this year and have been doing some volunteer work related to getting our 43rd President out of office: voter-registration drives, door-to-door polling, and so on. And I admit to being pretty proud of myself at first simply for hauling myself off the sofa on some weekends to do this, a few hours here and there on various Saturdays and Sundays in the Philadelphia area (considered crucial in the election, especially the suburbs). But here comes the humbling part: every time I participate in these activities, I meet people (many college-age, but not nearly all) who've traveled so far to volunteer in the SE Pennsylvania area, some from way out of state, youngsters temporarily putting aside education and job opportunities to give all their time to this effort, oldsters who are certainly entitled to spend a sunny weekend afternoon doing something else besides walking around the non-pedestrian-friendly suburbs to knock on doors and ask questions of strangers. Just yesterday, I did some polling with a fellow (mid-20s) wearing a "Republicans for Kerry" t-shirt (which message he assured me described himself with 100% accuracy), who, when we were done for the afternoon and had returned to central Philadelphia, got in his car for the two-hour drive back to Maryland, where he lives with his new wife, and told me "See you again next weekend." I repeat: Yesterday I met a young, recently married registered-Republican man who's spending his Indian-summer Sundays driving two hours each way between Maryland and Pennsylvania in order to spend more hours canvassing voters in the Philadelphia suburbs in the hope of getting Sen. John Kerry elected President. Meanwhile, after waving him goodbye, a 30-minute stroll and I'm home again on my sofa. This is when I'm proud to call myself a (properly humbled) American. |