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Our Declaration of Intolerance
In a democracy, people get the government they deserve. And boy, did we. What George Bush says about who we are and what we stand for.
 

July 13 2006
Counterbias.com
STEVE HOROWITZ


It's like we're going backward.

Once America was seen as a beacon of hope and freedom. Today it's the world's bully.

We know how it happened. The smirking simpleton in the Oval Office, guided by Karl Rove, trumpeted by the venomous hatemongers of right-wing radio, and with the complicity of all but a few Republicans, discovered the ticket to political power: appeals to people's worst instincts.

And oh, how the people responded.

They demand religion in schools -- as long as it's their religion. They demand Constitutional amendments prohibiting gay marriage, abortion and flag-burning. Why? Those things offend them. They're wrong, the way they see things. And if you don't see things that way, if you're not offended, you're wrong, too.

But here's what's right: That we can invade a sovereign nation that posed no threat to us and kill tens of thousands of their citizens. And jail their elected president. And force a government we approve of on them. And unleash civil war.

Back at home, anyone who wants a timetable for troop withdrawal is "cutting and running" -- in other words, a base, dishonorable coward.

Yet the base, dishonorable coward who ordered the illegal aggression against Iraq -- a one-time reservist who declined overseas duty during Vietnam and then deserted -- tells us to relax and wait patiently, to wait as more of our troops die and more of the trillion dollars we're borrowing from China and Japan is squandered.

But don't worry about that gaping financial hole he pulled us into. In fact, feel good at how his tax cuts for the rich have shifted the economy into second gear.

Can't you just feel the gears whirring?

This is the man we allowed into the presidency. A spoiled frat boy and male cheerleader who drove every enterprise he ever led into the ground quickly and efficiently. As he's doing it now to an entire nation.

He's a uniter, not a divider, he tells us, even as he exploits the worst tragedy in our history for political gain, fear being the only thing he has to offer. Even as his administration works to foment rage and retribution against the press for telling us what our government is doing, and against the federal judiciary (activist judges!) for sometimes issuing decisions Republicans disagree with.

Bush and his supporters profess to be patriots, but it's an allegiance based on cynicism on the part of his inner circle, and ignorance on the part of those who voted for him. They don't believe that all men are created equal, with the same right to the pursuit of happiness; otherwise, why deny a small fraction of the population the freedom to marry that everyone else enjoys? They don't believe in the 1st Amendment ("Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion ..."); otherwise, why would they demand prayer in schools and religious symbols on government property?

No, theirs is a bellicose, lazy, unthinking jingoism, characterized by flag lapel pins, "Support our Troops" bumper stickers, intolerance for those with differing views and utter contempt for those who play fair. By the rules.

In other words, contempt for those who strive to live in accordance with the high ideals enshrined in the document we profess to celebrate today.

Of course, they didn't install their man in the White House by playing by the rules, did they.

But their fraud is not the worst of it. The worst of it is all those millions of Americans who voted for George Bush not just the first time, but the second time, when his hypocrisy, lies, embarrassing stupidity, lack of vision (Let's go to Mars, everybody!), and cynical manipulation of a tragedy he could have prevented (if he'd been doing his job) had been plainly demonstrated for four years.

"Up yours!" we've declared to a world we once sought to lead into a new era of compromise and cooperation. "If you don't like the way we're running things -- and we are running things, beeyotch -- do something about it!" Greenhouse gases? Leave us alone. Secret prisons? Indefinite detentions? Torture? International law doesn't apply to us. Preemptive war? Our prerogative. (But not anyone else's.) Because we have ... George Bush in charge!

And if anyone has the temerity to challenge us -- hell, even question us! -- we'll rename our French fries, talk solemnly about freedom, democracy and God, and revel in how easy it is to be right when you spend more on "defense" than the rest of the world combined. It's worth every penny, godammit!

Of course, all those ships and fighter jets and smart bombs can't really do much, in the long run. We've been fighting in Iraq almost as long as we fought in World War II. Iran is proceeding with its nuclear program, and North Korea has test-fired its ballistic missile.

In other words, we are now powerless against countries that we know pose a genuine WMD threat because we've squandered all our resources and become hopelessly bogged down in a country that had no WMDs and didn't threaten us at all.

Smart management, first CEO-president!

But hey, at least we killed Zarqawi, the worst terrorist of all the terrorists who were able to enter Iraq because we destabilized it.

Yes, Zarqawi is dead and Saddam is in jail. A little calculating here ... that's roughly $147 billion and 1,270 dead American troops each. Another bargain...

We'll be paying the price for allowing George Bush to become president -- in a weakened and demoralized military, in lost prestige and influence, in insurmountable financial shortfalls -- for decades. But for now, my fellow Americans, on this 230th anniversary of our democracy, let us pause and congratulate ourselves.

We finally got the government we deserve.


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