headscratcher4
Philosopher
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2002
- Messages
- 7,776
Just saw Lieberman on CNN, being interviewed by Soledad O'Brien.
She asked him if he will drop out if the party leaders come to him and ask him to drop out, because his indy run will hurt the party. He responded that he's running for the good of the party because he didn't want the party to be captured by extremist elements*. This is why Democrats like me hate Lieberman. Not only is Lamont not an extremist of any kind, but this is just another example of how Lieberman parrots Republican talking points to undermine his party. This is why Sean Hannity, Bill O'Reilly, Ann Coulter, etc want Lieberman to remain in the Senate. They support no other Democrat but the one who undermines the party from within.
The challenge is that "extremist element" now represents by every poll a majority of the people in the country. The war is unpopular, it seems to me, for a couple of reasons that the Leiberman lovers fail specifically to deal with.
EVEN IF WE WERE JUSTIFIED IN GOING INTO IRAQ (a dubious conclusion at best) AND EVEN IF THE INTELIGENCE WE HAD WAS BELIEVABLE AND NOT OVERTLY AND POLITICALLY MANIPULATED (arguable) -- the war has been mismananaged from the outsed.
Bush -- and his supporters like Leiberman -- focused on a big picture that they have failed to sell to the American people. Why? Because all of their predictions and brave words have proven to be holllow. Cake-walk, greeted as liberators, insurgency in its last throes, Mission Accomplished, etc. all ring hollow to a growing number of people -- people who begin to see that the danger to national security isn't "extremist elements" in the democratic party (though there is hardly a more main-stream person than Lamont...businessnessman, preppy sort of like what George bush clamied to be) it is the incompetence of the people who got us into war and are running it.
Who has been fired? Who has paid a political or professional price for the incompetence? Is the money we are throwing at the problem well spent? Have the lives lost been lost in a noble or even salvagable cause?
Methinks Bush likes to think of himself as Linconln. Assuming again that victory is the object, Lincoln continually fired people till he got the right general in the right place and a strategy to match. Rummy is still there. Rice is still there. Cheney is still there and on and on. So, even if you give Bush the benefit of the strong defence doubt, he has blown-it to the detriment of our nation...he has few options in his quiver other than "stay the course" -- a sort of Thelma and Louise solution at the present time.
In the end, Leiberman forgot he represented a state. Leiberman forgot he had to answer to voters -- both in his party and beyond. Leiberman turned a blind eye to the fact that the Presidnet he supports wasn't interested at all in Moderate, bi-partisan solutions on foriegn policy or any issue. Leiberman was too comfortable with his role as a "national" leader." It isn't a victory for extremism, in the end. Leiberman was out hussled, out talked, out grass-rooted, out prepared and voted out by people he had abandoned -- he never explained himslef to his own party, he didn't think he had to. That is why he lost. It is why he will lose in November.
The nation will not miss Joe Leiberman's leadership. The crockadile (sp?) tears the GOPers will cry over this are hypocrytical in the extreme.