Freedom is on the march
Just not in our nation's capital.
And, of course, not among our "allies" in the GWOT.
Even the Crazy Church Lady thought the speech was over the top, and it's no mean feat to top her for over-the-topness.
Pegs calls this a sign of "mission inebriation" at the White House. I call it delusions of grandeur -- God isn't simply on "our" side, He's interning for Karl Rove.
And, of course, not among our "allies" in the GWOT.
President Bush's soaring rhetoric yesterday that the United States will promote the growth of democratic movements and institutions worldwide is at odds with the administration's increasingly close relations with repressive governments in every corner of the world.
Some of the administration's allies in the war against terrorism -- including Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and Uzbekistan -- are ranked by the State Department as among the worst human rights abusers. The president has proudly proclaimed his friendship with Russian President Vladimir Putin while remaining largely silent about Putin's dismantling of democratic institutions in the past four years. The administration, eager to enlist China as an ally in the effort to restrain North Korea's nuclear ambitions, has played down human rights concerns there, as well.
Even the Crazy Church Lady thought the speech was over the top, and it's no mean feat to top her for over-the-topness.
The administration's approach to history is at odds with what has been described by a communications adviser to the president as the "reality-based community." A dumb phrase, but not a dumb thought: He meant that the administration sees history as dynamic and changeable, not static and impervious to redirection or improvement. That is the Bush administration way, and it happens to be realistic: History is dynamic and changeable. On the other hand, some things are constant, such as human imperfection, injustice, misery and bad government.
This world is not heaven.
The president's speech seemed rather heavenish. It was a God-drenched speech. This president, who has been accused of giving too much attention to religious imagery and religious thought, has not let the criticism enter him. God was invoked relentlessly. "The Author of Liberty." "God moves and chooses as He wills. We have confidence because freedom is the permanent hope of mankind . . . the longing of the soul."
Pegs calls this a sign of "mission inebriation" at the White House. I call it delusions of grandeur -- God isn't simply on "our" side, He's interning for Karl Rove.
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