Re: Everyone Knew that Iraq Didn't Have WMDs
It's funny, lately I've been thinking just the opposite.
I watch as the congressional debate over health care reform turns on the CBO's scoring of each element of every proposal for cost impacts. But does anyone still remember the expansion of Medicare to include a prescription drug benefit? Nobody gave a fig what the CBO said it would cost and the Bush Administration threatened to fire Medicare's chief actuary over his cost estimates. Its cost vastly exceeds the projected costs of the Senate's latest proposal and was financed solely through deficit spending in the middle of two wars. But here we are, demanding that the Democratic version be deficit neutral and wringing our hands about a state takeover of the health care system. Nary a whimper over the previous Administration's stewardship of public health care programs and costs.
Here's another recent example: Obama increases the troop count in Afghanistan and the right-wing commentariat taunts him to admit that he was wrong about Bush's "surge" in Iraq. Yes, the Obamanistas are understandably reluctant to call its policy a "surge" lest it draw too much attention to his former opposition to Bush's surge. But where is the outrage that the Bush Administration allowed the Afghan-Pakistan-Pashtun-Taliban situation, replete with Al Qaeda safe havens within a one-day's drive of nuclear weaponry, to fester for eight years while he led an underequipped, undermanned military to struggle in Iraq? Oh, but let's all hold Obama's feet to the fire for being wrong about that surge, shall we?
I'm a pretty conservative guy, but I'm furious with the right wing in the American body politic. I think its political resurgence is the biggest danger facing this country. I remember thinking the same in the 70s with respect to the left wing. And if there were such a thing as political accountability the right would be quiescent for at least a decade for how it led this country into the ditch on so many fronts.
Originally posted by Raz
View Post
I watch as the congressional debate over health care reform turns on the CBO's scoring of each element of every proposal for cost impacts. But does anyone still remember the expansion of Medicare to include a prescription drug benefit? Nobody gave a fig what the CBO said it would cost and the Bush Administration threatened to fire Medicare's chief actuary over his cost estimates. Its cost vastly exceeds the projected costs of the Senate's latest proposal and was financed solely through deficit spending in the middle of two wars. But here we are, demanding that the Democratic version be deficit neutral and wringing our hands about a state takeover of the health care system. Nary a whimper over the previous Administration's stewardship of public health care programs and costs.
Here's another recent example: Obama increases the troop count in Afghanistan and the right-wing commentariat taunts him to admit that he was wrong about Bush's "surge" in Iraq. Yes, the Obamanistas are understandably reluctant to call its policy a "surge" lest it draw too much attention to his former opposition to Bush's surge. But where is the outrage that the Bush Administration allowed the Afghan-Pakistan-Pashtun-Taliban situation, replete with Al Qaeda safe havens within a one-day's drive of nuclear weaponry, to fester for eight years while he led an underequipped, undermanned military to struggle in Iraq? Oh, but let's all hold Obama's feet to the fire for being wrong about that surge, shall we?
I'm a pretty conservative guy, but I'm furious with the right wing in the American body politic. I think its political resurgence is the biggest danger facing this country. I remember thinking the same in the 70s with respect to the left wing. And if there were such a thing as political accountability the right would be quiescent for at least a decade for how it led this country into the ditch on so many fronts.
Comment