Bring It On!

GOP: The New American Jingoists

September 3rd, 2008 by Windspike

Is it me, or does any one else find the use of a Navy Seal’s heroic story to sell us a President and Vice President a reprehensible practice? Of course, the W, Rove and Co perfected this tactic long ago - using slain soldiers as rationale to toss more flag draped bodies onto the C-130’s headed for American soil. The McSame/Palin camp are following the well worn GOP political playbook.

This nasty political practice is not only real dirty, a ruse to spur patriotism among ordinary people, but outright offensive. The piece that makes the use of Michael Monsoor’s story particularly despicable is that Mike Monsoor died in Iraq when he really didn’t have to - Iraq is the war we didn’t need, shouldn’t have entered, and was brought to you by the GOP.

That Michael Monsoor is a hero is not in doubt. Indeed he was. But using his story for political gain? Disgusting. Showing this video at the GOP convention has obvious political aims. In short, it demonstrates how shameless those leading the GOP are. They are using a hero’s story to foist their political agenda. Instead of standing on the shoulders of great men, they are stepping on the boddies of our fallen heros. For that, I say, shame on them.

In the end, the “America or Country First” slogan places jingoism at the fore of the whole Republican modus operandi. But using it to tout their candidates as the best for America is also offensive. This is more of the dualistic practice perfected by the W, Rove and Co. political propaganda machine of the “you’re either with us, or against us” fame (where did that put Switzerland in 2001, btw?).

The implication the GOP convention slogan is that if you are not for McSame and Palin, you are not for America. Don’t fall into that trap people. It’s a simple political parlor trick. Add the slogan to the shameful use of heroes (our war dead and injured, caused by a war we didn’t need) into the political cocktail the GOP are pouring in Minnesota over this week, and you have a lot of drunk republicans: the New American Jingoists, who believe George Bush was Right (despite all evidence to the contrary), and McSame and Palin can do no wrong as long as it’s in the name of “America” or “Country First.”

This political practice (using soldiers for political gain) is shameful and the slogan is divisive set out to polarize our great nation even further. I’m not for McSame or Palin, but I’m definitely for America, but don’t hate me because I disagree with you (but I expect some of you will, which is just QED).

I’ll leave you with this report just for fun…

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Any More Questions?

September 3rd, 2008 by Ken Grandlund

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(photo courtesy of Pensito Review)

Damn. How can America say “No” to this? I mean, not only is she classy enough to wear the Stars and Stripes as a bikini, she had the presence of mind to remember to bring the rifle to the local swimming hole.

Screw experience! Let’s all go hunting, Alaska style!

(cross posted at Common Sense)

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The Trouble Is That The Laws A Vice President Palin Would Vote For In Congress Would Inflict Her “Morality” Into Our Private Lives

September 3rd, 2008 by Windspike

I think this sums up the fundamental problem with the GOP Platform regarding the boondoggle Bristol Palin put her family in:

The point is that the Palins were able to make all these decisions according to the dictates of their own consciences, formed by their own religious convictions, within the privacy of their own family and according to its values and traditions. What they decided is nobody’s business but theirs; the fact that they were free to arrive at their own decision is everybody’s business.

The particular brand of social conservatism in which Sarah Palin quite evidently believes deeply would deny other American families and other American women the freedom to make these same intimate decisions according to the dictates of their own consciences, religious convictions and traditions.

So you see, the hypocrisy is clear. It’s okay for the Palin Family to make such dramatic decisions in private. The GOP position is clear as well. They don’t want you to have the same liberty. I suggest a new slogan for the GOP: Vote GOP: The Anti-Liberty Party.

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Funny Quote Of The Day

September 3rd, 2008 by Cranky Liberal

“John McCain’s character has been tested like no other presidential candidate in the history of this nation,” Thompson said, contrasting him with Obama, whom he labeled the “most liberal, most inexperienced nominee to ever run for president.”

Of McCain, he said: “It’s pretty clear there are two questions we will never have to ask ourselves, ‘Who is this man?’ and ‘Can we trust this man with the Presidency?’”

TV Actor Fred Thompson.

You are right Fred. We don’t have to ask who he is. He’s the man who votes with Bush over 90% of the time, wants to stay in the Middle East for decades like we did Europe after WWII (though of course then it was to protect them from the Soviets vs. protecting us from high gas prices) and doesn’t know how many homes he has.

He’s the man that thinks the fundamentals of the economy are fine, middle class means someone making 200,000 dollars a year and who picked a lightweight nobody to be his running mate.

He’s the man who  called his current wife a cunt, cheated and divorced his first wife while she was sick, and oh yeah just happens to have a horrid temper.

Did I mention we have him on tape supporting the draft?

Yes we know who Mr. McCain is and we don’t have to ask do we trust him with the Presidency. The answer is a resounding NO.

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2008 Election: Seeking Reason Amidst The Rhetoric

September 2nd, 2008 by Daniel DiRito

For the most part, I’ve been in a funk since the Democratic National Convention. The question I’ve been unable to answer is why. Even as I write this posting, I remain unsure of the cause of my malaise. Regardless, it seemed appropriate to attempt an explanation…for myself and my readers.

As the convention closed on Thursday, I found myself inspired by the words of Barack Obama…but I also found myself even more cynical about the political process and the motivations of its participants. At one level, it seems appropriate to confine my criticism to the political sphere. At another level, I see no way to distinguish my discouragement with the political process from my ever increasing doubts about our discordant identities.

I’ve long argued that we’ve become a society of individuals who live in two parallel perceptions. On the one hand, we adopt the inane belief that our nation can be reduced to the rhetoric of right versus left, good versus evil, liberal versus conservative. On the other hand, our day to day realities are frequently devoid of the dynamics that define these distinctions. In other words, the rampant rhetoric is rarely relevant to our actual reality…and yet rhetoric rises while reality recedes.

In many ways, we’ve reduced our lives to a list of focus group tested talking points…pretending that our propensity for partisanship is a direct extension of our daily experiences…when it is actually little more than a lamentable lesson in the limitations of latching oneself to the self-deception that accompanies our lip service lives.

While the discourse of our democracy is so eloquently defined as an affirmation of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, an abundance of our actions abrogate this idyllic ideation in favor of inconsistent and inconsequential ideologies. Unfortunately, when the veils of our compartmental caricatures are pulled back, the view reveals a virtual vacuity. In the end, our allegiance is to intransigence…which is ironically matched by our unexplored rejection of the merits of vicissitude.

Should there be any doubt as to the degree to which we ascribe to unenlightened utterances in the pursuit of political power…and therefore mindlessly attach our personal worth to well-crafted words of suspect substance…one need look no further than the proclamations of John McCain’s campaign manager, Rick Davis. Davis, in attempting to define the 2008 election, offered, “This election is not about issues. This election is about a composite view of what people take away from these candidates.”

In other words, that which is unstated has now eclipsed that which can be deduced or discovered. Politics is no longer an exercise in objective observation but an unmitigated effort to nurture nuance in order to foster nascent innuendo. Such is the logical progression of a decision to divorce oneself from reality in favor of parlance and platitudes.

That brings me to the brouhaha about the pregnancy of Bristol Palin, the daughter of John McCain’s vice presidential selection, Sarah Palin. Rightly so, the Obama campaign has cautioned that the personal lives of the children of candidates should have no place in the political arena. However, there is both a need and a purpose in seeking to distinguish essence from expression…and therefore find that which unites us as Americans…and more importantly…as human beings engaged in the human experience.

All too often, the victims of our seemingly inviolable values are those innocents who are forced to reconcile our calculated manipulations of morality with their own advancing awareness of the unrelenting complexity of the human condition. What distinguishes the pregnant daughter of the conservative Christian from the pregnant daughter of the non-spiritual secularist? Does not the incontrovertible impact of the pregnancy exceed the exhortations of the underlying ideologies? Are not these daughters equal in their human frailty and therefore indistinguishable in their moral fitness?

As such, are our efforts to identify ourselves as distant and distinct points on a contrived continuum not merely the means by which we seek to stratify and separate us, one from the other? Does our need to define one doctrine superior to the other in any way alter the inevitable difficulty that will accompany an unanticipated pregnancy? That pregnancy need not be a moral disqualification.

The Palin’s undoubtedly see great worth in their daughter…just as they and all parents should see the worth in all daughters…whether they adhere to similar or dissimilar value systems. At what point will we decide that our fragile human similarities exceed our need to exaggerate our dogmatic differences in the pursuit of political power?

At what point will we cease our efforts to evaluate the wherewithal and worthiness of our political opponents by tabulating how many of their cohorts have succumbed to the human condition? In this attempt to establish relevant value and measurable morality, we divorce ourselves from each other and therefore our shared humanity.

This years election, like so many before, has seen the emergence of two competing slogans. On the one hand, John McCain presents himself as the “Straight Talk Express”. On the other, Barack Obama, when speaking of change, tells us, “Yes We Can”. Regardless, unless and until we unite our unexamined external personae with our shared…though often suppressed…internal and innately human identities, our politics will be about a distinction without a difference.

Bristol Palin is every American’s daughter. This election and all others ought to be about the promises we make to her and and the children her generation will raise. The difficulties she and her family will face are not unique to Republicans or Democrats…Christians or secularists. Neither party and neither ideology has a monopoly on morality. Those who assert as much do so as a matter of political expediency.

If we care about our future, we’ll begin the process of admitting as much. If we don’t, I expect that each future election will seem increasingly disconnected and disconcerting. I for one have had enough.

Cross-posted at Thought Theater

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Steve O’s Thoughts on the RNC Convention

September 2nd, 2008 by Steve O

Disclaimer: These are my thoughts and not the thoughts of others on BIO and I know how to celebrate!!!

The RNC are just a bunch of goosestepping motherfuckers with gray hair just sitting around wondering where their lives have gone and would it have been more fun to be a liberal. The place isn’t even filled. What’s worse is the boot licking that CNN is doing, what ever happened to fair and balanced? I forgot that’s the other network.

John King, the racist-map-dick-bag that he is (i.e. this city will go to Obama as I point out it’s HUGE black population) is sitting here talking about his visit to John McCain’s cell in Vietnam and talking to the Vietnamese guard and how McCain discussed the rights and wrongs of the Vietnam war with him.

What does that tell you? How many POWs have you heard of that were able to talk politics with their capture without having a finger nail pulled out?

Sheeple. Sheeple. Sheeple.

You want to talk about service to country and how you somehow own it but it’s a farce!!! Let’s do a Congressional roll call and see who served. Lets do a census and find out how many of you keyboard Republican actually served in the military.

By the way, when John gets around to it he owes the American people one aircraft carrier and five jets. Once he pays that back he can proclaim his service to our country.

Oh look they’re handing out Fixodent and Ensure. Let’s get this party started!!!!

Oh Jesus, GWB is speaking about his outstanding command and control of Hurricane Katrina Gustav. You are a sad, sad, little man.

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What’s Wrong With The Big Dick?

September 2nd, 2008 by Windspike

Any one else out there wondering why The Big Dick Cheney is not slated to speak at the GOP love-fest for McSame and Palin?

Republicans awarded one-time Democratic vice presidential candidate Joseph Lieberman, a Connecticut senator, a prime-time speaking slot Tuesday night as they courted millions of independent voters essential to McCain’s presidential hopes.

Bush — not so much.

And Vice President Cheney not at all.

You have got to wonder what’s up with the GOP when they can’t trot out their own leadership for fear of losing an election. Since when has a sitting president and Veep become a liability? When they have the track record of Bush/Cheney.

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A Sign Of The Times

September 2nd, 2008 by Windspike

Snapped this picture today. In case you can’t read the sign, it says, sadly:

We have discontinued complimentary coffee and tea
Due to State Budget Cuts
In order to use funds to offer students as many courses as possible.
Hot & Cold water are available
Thank you for understanding these tough budget choices.

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What If You Were Mitt or Joe?

September 2nd, 2008 by Windspike

Just wondering at this point, given McSame’s super quality pick for Veep, what it might be that Mitt and Joe were feeling given they lost the post to Palin. Or any other of the possible Veeps on the short list, for that matter:

Two senior Republican officials close to Mitt Romney and Tim
Pawlenty said they had both been rudely strung along and now “feel manipulated.”

“They now know that they were used as decoys, well after McCain had decided not to pick them,” one Republican involved in the process said.

The subliminal message of McSame’s selection of Palin is that the others on the list were of a lesser quality. Imagine that? What could be so offensive about Mitt, Lieberman or the others that put Palin ahead of them? I wouldn’t want to guess.

The trouble is that there is a legion of self-righteous right wingers who were quick to label teens who were pregnant as something like the spawn of Satan, and now have jumped to the aid of McSame and Palin obviating their own hypocrisy. Of course, if you criticize Palin for her position, the reichwingers are in full tilt trying to spin you as some kind of loon. For example, just look at the title of this news paper article I found linked on johnmccain dot com:

Ignore the Chauvinists. Palin Has Real Experience.

So, if I don’t think that Palin is fit to be Veep, I’m a chauvinist by default? I don’t think so. Of course, those who were bashing Hillary would not stand for being labeled as such, but insist on flogging those who don’t like Palin with much more demonizing terminology.

Did you ever wonder why that when the GOP types get criticized about their decisions they feel they need to use derogatory labels to foist upon us their holier than thou stance? I’m constantly mystified as to that line of argument, but I understand the tactic. The reason they use it is because they have no plausible line of argument to pursue. With out slinging the hate, they have nothing on which to stand.

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Sarah Palin Lied About Her Visit to Ireland

September 2nd, 2008 by Steve O

In an attempt to bolster Sarah’s foreign policy experience, aside from living next to Russia, the McCain/WTF08′ campaign has stated that Sarah visited three countries in the past; Kuwait, Germany and Ireland. But what they fail to tell you is that Ireland wasn’t so much a diplomatic visit but more a stop over for fuel at Shannon Airport (which many military aircraft do on the the way to Middle East). I have a friend that is Peruvian, does that count as foreign policy experience?

How far does the McCain/WTF08′ have to stretch the truth to make Palin look like an experienced candidate that can step in and take over the country in less than a heart attack minute? They might as well just claim that every country that Palin flew over on the way to Kuwait counts as foreign experience, that got me thinking.

Knowing that Sarah Palin is a little smarter than the average bear (what other reason would McCain have chosen her for VP), I did a little digging around to see if I could come up with Sarah Palin’s flight path to Kuwait and this is what I found;

Now that’s what I call “covering all your bases”!!! I’ll bet she used one of those CIA rendition planes to make this trip so that it couldn’t be traced back to her until she absolutely needed to play her trump card of proving she had foreign experience.

But seriously, none of this is funny. None of this is a joke. None of this is funny anymore. At the end of the day I don’t care what anyone thinks because a majority of us, Republican or Democrat, cannot afford the mistakes these millionaires have made or are going to make in the upcoming future.

If you really love this country you would stop trying to justify Palin’s nomination and start demanding that McCain take this election and this country seriously.

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