Membership: Join Now : Login

» Friday, May 17, 2002

Bush decries "second guessing"

Now that the Bush administration has revealed it had specific warning in August 2001 that Al-Qaida wanted to hijack one or more US airplanes, after eight months of saying there was no warning at all, Bush says criticism has a "whiff of politics." The Florida Republican who chairs the House Intelligence Committee says that criticizing Bush is morally wrong: "The only thing that this uproad does is give aid and comfort to the enemy."

This is the same group of GOP incumbents that has said if you oppose anything on their agenda, from giving billions to oil companies to restricting free speech in high schools, you're "aiding the enemy." The same group that has tried repeatedly to blame it all on the Clinton administration even though Gore's task force called for increased airport security (the GOP-led house, backed by airline money, killed that inconvenience). The same group selling pictures of Bush looking concerned on Air Force One on September 11 while he flew around the country in panic. (As Salon reminds, the White House insisted for weeks that there was "confirmation" that Al-Qaida was trying to slam a jet into Air Force One and the White House, a story proved false by CBS and AP.)

The GOP has used 9/11 to ram regressive reactionary policies down the nation's throat for eight months, most having nothing to do with real national security or with the investigation, and any criticism is "helping the enemy." Now there's evidence that some dots could have been connected, and they have the gall to complain about "politics."

I'm not advocating this, but it needs to be pointed out: If the Supreme Court hadn't stopped the vote-counting in Florida and Gore had been inaugurated President (not just elected), and had announced Wednesday night that his White House had warnings of Al-Qaida hijackings before the attacks, the GOP House Judiciary Committee would be voting on the impeachment resolution today, if not yesterday. There would be attack ads against Gore and every other Democrat running in every contested election district today. And anyone who complained it was "politics" would be shouted down by the far-right monopoly on cable and radio "news" programs.

The same crew who said lying about sex threatened national security thinks actual threats to national security are just "political" ploys. Can politics get any worse in this country?

# - Posted to Politics on 5/17/02; 12:30:03 PM - Discuss (1 response) -

Why some days are harder than others

In the past 23 hours, I have:

  • Slept for five hours
  • Finished four days' worth of news coverage and published MDJ
  • Driven to OKC and back with my mother to honor a family tradition (We go to every Star Wars movie on opening day, for she used to pull me out of school for the first three movies, and it's not too much to ask every three years or so)
  • Dealt with Cox Communications moving the entire hub for my city tonight with absolutely no advance warning, leading to a multiple-hour internet outage
  • Once the Net came back up, waited to receive work from someone else who sent a message but forgot to attach a file
  • Watched and weathered a severe thunderstorm at 1:30 AM with 70+ mph winds and potential golfball-sized hail (the winds blew, but the hail did not fall)
  • Watched and took notes on Apple's Xserve introduction to try to answer the slew of questions MDJ readers have been sending

I think I ate something in there somewhere, too. I've got a lot of my answers for my articles, but my sentences are starting to show some pretty strange syntax, which means it's time for bed. I have an appointment tomorrow night, too, so there may not be much sleep now, but there needs to be some.

I didn't feel this tired when I was 26.

# - Posted to Admin on 5/17/02; 3:39:29 AM - Discuss -

[ Print This Page ]