The Dogs and Cats Howl
February 25th, 2007 | by Omnipotent Poobah |
It’s raining cats and dogs this morning and all that vicious howling and scratching is the harbinger of a mood as foul as the weather. Each day there is news of another fresh insult to our country - as usual made under the disguise of making us stronger. Each day, the audacity of these assaults becomes more brazen.
For six years we’ve engaged in a “War on Terror” built on a foundation of quicksand. The drumbeat of division and fear-mongering has made it impossible for the country to move forward. Education, Social Security reform, workable energy policies, and a huge don’t tax and spend mentality are only the tip of the globally-warmed iceberg. Meanwhile, Rome burns as George fiddles.
Until recently, his obstinance was mostly based on a fierce, unquestioning political protectorate and a tough Teflon hide. He did and said most anything he pleased because a weak-willed Congress handed his decrees to him on a platter.
Finally, the electorate awoke and spoke at the ballot box. However, George’s last true believers are still fiddling with the levers of power and the new electees have only grown a cartilage backbone. It looks like an adult backbone is still a way off, retarded by a shrinking minority who are still clinging to the deck chairs and drinking Kool-Aid cocktails.
What If?
And what if the new legislators had emerged with a fully functioning backbone?
It appears as if it would’ve made little difference. After the election, he cried out for a new era of bipartisanship even as he poked his opponents in the eye with a stick. He made it abundantly clear that he would defy the wishes of the electorate and Congress and push ahead with his failure of a war anyway.
Stop funding? Feh, nothing but the ramblings of traitorous cowards to be ignored.
Revoke the approval of his war? Doesn’t mean a thing.
Challenge his questionable legal measures? He’ll simply deny he’s breaking the law while assiduously playing a shell game to keep the challenges from coming to court.
Consolidating Power
The War on Terror is bad enough, but he’s consolidated his dictatorial power in other troubling ways. He’s damaged America’s standing and credibility on the world stage. He’s laid the foundations of many bad policies that will take years to unravel. He’s encouraged the erosion of our economic base to create an astonishingly wide and troubling gulf between the haves and have nots. He has pushed us down the already slippery slope of becoming a country that knows how to a country that knows nothing.
Recently, he’s gnawed at the legal underpinnings that might provide a brake on his voracious appetite for control. Despite his frequent criticism of judicial activists, he’s called their activism and raised the stakes by firing federal prosecutors who disagree with his positions. He doesn’t bother citing justifications for the removals aside from unspecified performance issues. And in one case, even freely admitted the removal was to pave the way for a political crony.
Slow Motion Coup
Far be it to suggest these actions are a slow-motion coup. It isn’t fair to accuse him of a conspiracy without proof, but his actions are troubling enough to at least ask the question, “could it be one?” Once, this question would have been laughable. Today, it seems a remote, but somewhat more valid question. After all, many dictatorships started the same way - small changes, one quietly piled atop the other so as not to panic the public. One day, the public awakens to find the levers of government firmly under the dictator’s control and the Stockholm Syndrome conversion of them complete.
True, it’s far-fetched and probably won’t happen. But, the process has gone far enough to be a concern and far enough that someday a dictator may appear and use George’s actions as a template for their own slow-motion coup.
And the day that happens the dogs and cats will truly howl up a storm.
This and other fine hypertext products cross posted at The Omnipotent Poobah Speaks!
[tag]politics, bush, crapweasels, omnipotent+poobah, bring+it+on[/tag]

7 Responses to “The Dogs and Cats Howl”
By manapp99 on Feb 25, 2007 | Reply
Poohbah has this to say:
“The drumbeat of division and fear-mongering has made it impossible for the country to move forward. Education, Social Security reform, workable energy policies, and a huge don’t tax and spend mentality are only the tip of the globally-warmed iceberg. Meanwhile, Rome burns as George fiddles.”
GWB teamed up with Ted Kennedy for the no child left behind act against the will of the conservatives. I agree that education is worse now but I don’t see how you lay this on the federal government or the President. Local school boards, liberal teachers and a strong union are far more responsible for the quality of the education or lack thereof our children receive. GWB put forth Social Security reform that the Dems proudly defeated. Did they come up with and alternative? have you seen anything out of the Pelisi/Reid congress? Hell no. Workable energy policies? When we should be drilling for the oil we own in Alaska and off our coasts we don’t. This is largely due to the eco wackos in our own country. GWB has called for searching for alternative fuels in many speeches. What have Pelosi and Reid called for? Energy taxes that will ultimately hurt the lower end wage earners the most. (as do all taxes in the long run). While I do agree that the Repulican controlled congress spent too much, they did cut taxes and the revenue to the federal governent has exceeded every prediction. We will see what the Dems can do to curb spending. But even with that. That is the congress not the president. The dow is at an all time high. Unemployment is low. Inflation is low. The economy is strong. Rome is NOT burning and the only fiddling being done is in congress.
By Omnipotent Poobah on Feb 25, 2007 | Reply
Manapp,
As I mentioned in the post, there’s plenty of blame to go around (including Congress and the voting public), but at the end of the day I believe it’s George who benefits most from the changes he’s pushed through, not me, not you, not the Congress.
I’m sure you’re aware that for each of the issues you mentioned, there are opposite statistical measures and judgments about their wisdom. All of the things you mentioned are issues that have two sides for which alternatives have been issued by both sides. It seems no matter whether it is a right or a left issue the cloud is always dark on the outside and silvery on the inside for someone. The best any of us can do is agitate for what we think is the truer measure of each issue.
I hope I’m wrong, but I don’t think I am. Apparently, many others are also coming around to my way of thinking. If it turns out we’re wrong, nobody will be any happier than me. If it turns out we’re right, at least I’ll be able to say I didn’t go along quietly.
By manapp99 on Feb 25, 2007 | Reply
Rest easy Poobah, I have it on good authority that you are indeed wrong. It is a good life and we are fortunate that our disagreements are limited minor issues in the great overall. I wish you well my friend and hope the gloom of your day be only out your window.
By steve on Feb 26, 2007 | Reply
Poobah… what did you expect after the election? This is the Bush Administration.
The ball is truly in the Democrats’ court now. What change could they really make though? An improvement in Bush’s popularity, since the whole country is distraught over the job he is doing? If anything that happens with the war in Iraq, that leads to a politically favorable, positive outcome in Iraq, regardless of who accomplished it, Bush would get the credit for it, especially if it was truly a bipartisan outcome.
The only move the Dem’s have is actually to take on Bush, vote against him and perhaps impeach him (if there actually was an impeachable offense). The problem with this stance is dreadful, unless you are a die-hard liberal. Middle America is not polarized to the left or right… just down the center. Anything that is seen as partisan bickering will be seen as partisan failure. Just ask the Republicans the last election day. The smart move for the Republicans is to sit back and watch the train wreck, and let Bush do what he is doing. In two years, if the Democrats haven’t advanced the situation, they will lose all of the political capital they gained in November.
Even though I am a conservative, that actually frightens me! I am going for the center next election… Unless that name is Hillary Clinton.
By christopher Radulich on Feb 26, 2007 | Reply
Just a note on the economy
U.S. economy leaving record numbers in severe poverty
By steve on Feb 26, 2007 | Reply
Weird. Record poverty alongside record homeownership. I wonder who is telling the truth?
By christopher Radulich on Feb 26, 2007 | Reply
I would go with both.