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It Reads — Why Now?
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It Reads

The Shrubbery read a speech, and CNN felt compelled to write about it. Their essay is titled: Bush will add more than 20,000 troops to Iraq [not exactly catchy].

Bush recognized that the progress of the war is “unacceptable to the American people — and it is unacceptable to me,” adding, “Where mistakes have been made, the responsibility rests with me.”

…snip

Emerging from their meeting with Bush about 3:15 p.m. ET, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California and Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada said they felt they were not able to give input to the Bush plan.

Their meeting “was notification, not consultation,” said Pelosi.

…snip

The Republican congressional leadership is standing behind President Bush’s new plan, and faulted Democrats for not offering their own plan for victory.

…snip

A number of Republican senators — including Sen. Gordon Smith of Oregon, Sen. Norm Coleman of Minnesota, Sen. Chuck Hagel of Nebraska, Sen. George Voinovich of Ohio, Sens. Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe of Maine and Sen. Sam Brownback of Kansas — have publicly questioned whether Bush’s plan to increase troop strength will help stabilize Iraq.

“A troop surge in Baghdad would put more American troops at risk to address a problem that is not a military problem,” Coleman said Wednesday on the Senate floor.

“It would put more American soldiers in the crosshairs of sectarian violence and create more targets. I just don’t believe this makes sense,” Coleman said.

When even Norm Coleman recognizes the problem, you know how bad things are.

There was talk before the speech about the Shrubbery admitting mistakes, but he doesn’t actually do that. It’s the standard “if there were mistakes,” which is an admission of nothing.

The Democrats don’t have a plan for victory, because victory in the common dictionary definition of of the word is not one of the options available in Iraq. Frankly from the point of view of someone who has been shot at by annoyed people, getting out alive is pretty much the most important thing at this point.

He is still refusing to talk to Iran or Syria, who might be able to help, but don’t respond well to constant threats.

He wants to spend another $16 billion that we don’t have and he is moving ahead with this before Congress has appropriated the money. Congress doesn’t respond well to threats, and, under their new rules, the Shrubbery is going to have to request a tax increase, or slash something else to pay for it. His line of credit ended on November 7th, 2006.

Someone needs to explain to these fools that the government of the United States is based on the consent of the governed, and as such, it is a “popularity contest.” The opinions of the people do matter and have to be taken into consideration. The phrase, “government of the people, by the people, for the people,” is not just a nice bit of rhetoric.

3 comments

1 Steve Bates { 01.11.07 at 12:06 am }

He is still refusing to talk to Iran or Syria, who might be able to help, but don’t respond well to constant threats. – Bryan

More than that… as I heard it, and William Arkin agreed in his blog on the WaPo, Bush actually issued threats to those nations in the speech. No one really talked about the possibility of such threats before the speech, but I had a feeling that might happen; that’s the main reason I subjected myself to a half hour of hell in watching it. This is one of those times I really hate being right.

The man is mad… neither stark, nor raving, but inarguably mad.

2 ellroon { 01.11.07 at 12:15 am }

Think Progress:
The New York Times notes, “One senior administration official said this evening that the omission of the usual wording about seeking a diplomatic solution [to the Iranian nuclear stand-off] ‘was not accidental.’”

Bush and his cohorts want a war with Iran so badly they can taste it. All part of the PNAC agenda.

I listened to ten minutes of the speech on the radio. He was surprisingly coherent. I wonder what drugs they use?….

3 Bryan { 01.11.07 at 10:49 am }

They are trying to start a wider war, and impeachment is becoming unavoidable. If they can’t be convinced to act like responsible adults, it time to look at serious intervention. I personally would like to get on with repairing some the damage that has already taken place, but we can’t avoid the need to stop the “bleeding” of the actions he seems determined to take.