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Lazy Lob
04-10-2007, 05:45 PM
Dangerous demagoguery

By Thomas Sowell

Published March 31, 2007


One of the dangers in being a demagogue is that some of your own supporters -- those who take you literally -- can turn against you when you start letting your actions be influenced by realities, instead of following the logic of your ringing rhetoric. That is what seems to be happening to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other liberal Democrats in Congress.
Antiwar protesters in Washington and outside her home in San Francisco denounce Mrs. Pelosi and other congressional Democrats for not cutting off the money to fight the war in Iraq. If the war in Iraq is such an unnecessary and futile expenditure of blood and treasure as Mrs. Pelosi, et al., have said, why not end it?
To do so would mean taking responsibility for the consequences -- which would be disastrous and lasting, probably into the 2008 election season.
The Democrats cannot risk that. They have taken over Congress by a very clever and very disciplined strategy of constantly criticizing the Republicans without taking the risk of presenting an alternative for whose results they can be held responsible. There is no sign they want to change that politically winning strategy, which their nonbinding resolutions express perfectly. These resolutions put them on record as against the war without taking responsibility for ending it.
Unfortunately for the congressional Democrats, their left-wing supporters have taken the antiwar rhetoric of Mrs. Pelosi, Rep. John Murtha, et al., at face value and consider it a betrayal that they talk the talk but will not walk the walk.
It has been painfully clear Speaker Pelosi was serious only about scoring political points. Her big grin when she won a narrow vote for a nonbinding resolution was grotesque against the background of a life-and-death issue. You don't grin over a political ploy you have pulled when men's lives are at stake.
It is not just congressional politicians who are so preoccupied with scoring points against the administration that they show no sign of concern for the actual consequences of their words or actions for troops in the field, nations in the Middle East, or the global war on terror. Much of the media are similarly caught up in scoring points on Iraq. For example, the cover of the March 18 issue of the New York Times Magazine featured a story about women in the military who said that they had been raped in Iraq. A week later, the Times had to print a correction, after discovering one of these women had not even been to Iraq.
But any unsubstantiated charge against the American military rates headline coverage, even if there is no space for anything positive in Iraq. There is apparently no space even to assess the extent to which the increase of American troop strength in Iraq has reduced the deaths of our troops from terrorist attacks. Nor is there apparently much space to discuss the implications of the return of Iraqis from the less violent provinces to their homes in Baghdad. Indeed, there has apparently never been any space to discuss the fact that most provinces in Iraq have not had the levels of violence featured every day in the media.
The demagoguery of the Democrats has already put them in the position where a successful conclusion of the Iraq war before the 2008 elections can be a political disaster for them. If the recent increase in our troops in Iraq, and their freer hand in dealing with the terrorists there, reduces the violence enough to stabilize Iraq enough for American troops to start coming home before the 2008 elections, the Democrats will have lost their gamble.
Only an American defeat in Iraq can ensure the Democrats' political victory next year. Their only strategy is to sabotage the chances for a military victory in Iraq without being held responsible for a defeat. That is the corner they have painted themselves into with their demagoguery that even their own supporters see through.

http://washingtontimes.com/functions/print.php?StoryID=20070330-082351-5752r

2Sheds_Jackson
04-10-2007, 06:15 PM
They have taken over Congress by a very clever and very disciplined strategy of constantly criticizing the Republicans without taking the risk of presenting an alternative for whose results they can be held responsible. There is no sign they want to change that politically winning strategy, which their nonbinding resolutions express perfectly. These resolutions put them on record as against the war without taking responsibility for ending it.

Very well put. This strategy has been painfully obvious for at least the last 24 months.

PPSH41
04-11-2007, 12:05 AM
Great article. Personal feelings aside, the dems that got elected by promising to end the war should put their votes where their mouth is. They got what they wanted, but now they're stuck between a rock and a hard place. Stop fundung for the war and be blamed for the mess? Or keep the status quo and piss off your voter base.

Rictor
04-11-2007, 01:56 AM
Very well put. This strategy has been painfully obvious for at least the last 24 months.
For once we agree. The Democrats are spineless and unprincipled for not taking real, effective measures to deliver the single issue on which they were elected - ending the war ASAP. Vague, non-binding resolutions and empty rhetoric are equivalent to asking an alcoholic to please stop drinking. And if they don't, you'll go off and pout and give them dirty looks for a week.

As Ron Paul has pointed out, there is more than enough money in the pipes to withdraw the troops safely and securely without authorizing further funds. Approving continued funding under the guise of protecting the soldiers is so obviously a diversionary tactic, I wonder how anyone buys into it.

Hollis
04-11-2007, 01:58 AM
I guess Kerry will say, "I voted for the war, before I voted against, I am voting for the war again. Under Democratic leadership Victory will be ours, as soon as the draft gets reinstated."

a_very_ex_STAB
04-11-2007, 05:20 AM
It's a lot easier to start a war than it is to end it :roll:

Lazy Lob
04-11-2007, 06:13 AM
It's a lot easier to start a war than it is to end it :roll:

It may be so……………….iiiif they had a plan. Your statement doesn’t invalidate the article or even excuse Pelosi’s duplicity.

a_very_ex_STAB
04-11-2007, 06:30 AM
It may be so……………….iiiif they had a plan. Your statement doesn’t invalidate the article or even excuse Pelosi’s duplicity.

So what do you expect them to do? Cut off funding just like that? And what happens when the troops in Iraq run out of bullets, batteries, beans and water? All the warboys on here would really be whinging then!

Jobu
04-11-2007, 12:54 PM
So what do you expect them to do? Cut off funding just like that? And what happens when the troops in Iraq run out of bullets, batteries, beans and water? All the warboys on here would really be whinging then!

If they cut off funding "just like that" the boys won't run out of bullets and water, they'll be on planes coming back home while Al Sadr and Al Aqeda in Iraq hold victory parades.

Lazy Lob
04-11-2007, 01:06 PM
So what do you expect them to do? Cut off funding just like that? And what happens when the troops in Iraq run out of bullets, batteries, beans and water? All the warboys on here would really be whinging then!

Moi? I'm not paid to think.

Anyway I didn't put them in that predicament. She can sort herself out.

The article infers "put your brain in gear before you open your mouth".