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Re: Best speech Dubya ever gave

By: Cactus Flower in ALEA | Recommend this post (0)
Sun, 12 Sep 21 5:14 PM | 30 view(s)
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Msg. 43425 of 54959
(This msg. is a reply to 43423 by clo2)

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I also think that whatever it is that has gone wrong in America had already begun before he became president.

AQ hated something about America. Their methods were clearly wicked. But it's worth thinking what enraged them. I think the something was partly things we think of as good things which they think of as bad ones: cultural freedoms, which erode their own way of being. And partly America's sense of its exceptionallism, which means it doesn't always listen well. I hope that's something we can all learn to do better. We want folks to think doing things our way is a benign idea. Not something they are forced to adopt.

Much the same is probably true for the Republican party. If woke people would stop telling people how to behave, maybe Republicans would stop poking them in the eye.




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The above is a reply to the following message:
Re: Best speech Dubya ever gave
By: clo2
in ALEA
Sun, 12 Sep 21 11:18 AM
Msg. 43423 of 54959

Yes, I agree.

Unfortunately those that need to change, won't.

Yes, the Jan. 6 insurrectionists were terrorists. George W. Bush just indicted them.

Opinion by Jennifer Rubin
Columnist
Yesterday at 1:59 p.m. EDT

Few Americans expected wisdom from former president George W. Bush on the 20th anniversary of 9/11. Even fewer expected wisdom on the current state of our politics. That is nevertheless what we got from his remarks in Shanksville, Pa., today.

In perhaps the most important words spoken in his political career, Bush in his remarks at the crash site of United Airlines Flight 93 drew a straight line between the 9/11 terrorists and the 1/6 terrorists. “We have seen growing evidence that the dangers to our country can come not only across borders but from violence that gathers within,” he said. “There is little cultural overlap between violent extremists abroad and violent extremists at home. But in their disdain for pluralism, in their disregard for human life, in their determination to defile national symbols, they are children of the same foul spirit." He added, "It is our continuing duty to confront them.” Bush’s words were an indictment not only of the violent MAGA insurrectionists but also, implicitly, of his party that coddles them and the leader whom the 1/6 terrorists wanted to install by force.

The violent insurrectionists carried symbols of the Confederacy (the traitors whose rebellion resulted in more than 600,000 American deaths) in the Capitol, where they trashed the citadel of democracy and tried to hunt down House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. The Capitol, of course, was the suspected target of Flight 93; the heroes on board that plane spared the lawmakers and others who worked there from the fate of occupants of the twin towers and the Pentagon. The 1/6 terrorists breached the building the 9/11 terrorists could not. Both the 9/11 terrorists and the domestic 1/6 terrorists sought to destroy our democracy in service to a crazed ideology of intolerance.

....
Bush’s bluntness was a refreshing antidote to the usual blasé treatment of a radicalized Republican Party that embraces “children of the same foul spirit” as the 9/11 terrorists. The press, the ecosystem of donors, activists and operatives, and even, to an extent, the Democrats all treat Republicans as a normal political party within our democratic system, rather than as the enablers of a “foul spirit” and violent extremism. They shy away from labeling Republicans as “1/6 truthers” when the GOP’s effort to direct blame away from the actual terrorists is no better than claiming 9/11 was an inside job. (McCarthy and his cohorts insist it’s Pelosi who should be investigated.)

Our collective error may have been in refusing to consistently label 1/6 as a terrorist attack and its perpetrators as terrorists. If we do that, as Bush did, we would arrive at a much more realistic — and damning — portrait of today’s GOP. The media would be compelled to drop its false equivalence between the parties. We would, in short, reach the inevitable conclusion that today’s GOP operates outside of and is a threat to peaceful democratic governance and a multiracial democracy.

A course correction is still possible. Bush reminds us: It is never too late to recalibrate our perspective and revisit our language.
more:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2021/09/11/yes-jan-6-insurrectionists-were-terrorists-george-w-bush-just-indicted-them/


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