Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Dishonesty is strength

Dick Cheney is a man of short declarative sentences. He packs a lot of venom and a lot of mendacity into each one.
"What I find disturbing is the extent to which he’s gone to Europe and seemed to apologize profusely, been to Mexico and seemed to apologize there,” said Cheney to Raw Story's David Edwards. “The world out there, both our friends and foes, will be quick to take advantage of that… I don’t think we’ve got much to apologize for."
"Seemed to" shouldn't slip past the reader unnoticed, since it's an attempt to elevate a convenient assumption to the point where his baseless argument can pivot on it. To be equally as curt and declarative: Cheney lies. It didn't seem so to me or to those who listened to all the words, rather than the tendentious extracts wrapped in tactical opinion we got from Republican sources.

It doesn't seem beyond the pale to recognize that swaggering "kiss my ass you dirty wogs -- I'm AMERICA" foreign policy that has been the joy of the thundering classes who see the world as ungrateful and arrogant for wanting some measure of independence. It doesn't seem like an unqualified, abject and grovelling approach when Obama says we haven't been fair to the world all the time either. It sounds, in fact, like honesty and of course to the man of the perpetually undisclosed location, who keeps his lunch and shopping list in a vault, that's a sign of "weakness."

It's "weak" to disclose that we tortured people to death and lied about it. It's weak to shake hands with Chavez, says Cheney -- but only if a Democrat does it -- and of course any sign of honesty, humanity or willingness to promote peace that does not depend on unqualified, abject and grovelling acceptance of American Empire can be a fatal weakness.

I have trouble understanding the level of fear Cheney lives with; the kind of fear that drove him and his puppets to military aggression, pathological secrecy and a domestic paranoia that led him to think the suppression of civil rights and constitutional law is "nothing to apologize for." It's harder to understand than starting a war on false pretenses for his own profit.

Paranoia: the feeling that even our friends will take advantage of us if we're not unrelenting in our refusal to admit mistakes and uncompromising in our rage for dominion; law, morality, truth and justice notwithstanding. Quite an opinion and what better place to discuss it than with Sean Hannity and what better audience than the people who still watch Fox News and who are sure to fail to notice just how Cheney and his party equate ganging up on a new administration in time of extreme crisis as patriotism, but of course these are the people who accused the Democrats of caving in to terrorism in 2001 even after they voted unanimously to support George W. Bush.

Accepting the consequences of your actions is so unmanly.

11 comments:

  1. I've found that one of the hardest things to do in life is admit when I've made a mistake. It takes true strength to do that. Only the weak never admit fault.

    The same is true of nations.

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  2. You are correct, Brian, only those truly strong of character can admit when they make a mistake. Only those who are strong in their values, beliefs and convictions are those that will evaluate and admit they were wrong. It’ll be interesting to see how Obama handles himself WHEN he makes a mistake. And he WILL. It’s inevitable. ALL presidents do; ALL humans do. How we handle our mistakes is what separates us from the ethically feeble.

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  3. I'd say he's already made some significant mistakes.

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  4. Obama has already acknowledged to mistakes and he was up front and honest about it. He took the responsibility and moved on.

    GWB and Cheney have yet to acknowledge anything. GWB 'regrets' the Mission Accomplished banner and has decided to leave everything else up to historians.

    Cheney on the other hand has decided not to wait for the historians and has started his low level attacks...

    Then you have Meghan McCain who is calling Rove a "Twitter Creep" just got to love that girl...she's adorable.

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  5. Low attacks, but not entirely low level. The spectacle of a former VP spending all his time trashing the current administration should be getting more attention. When has any other VP done this? Most at least express best wishes and pledge full cooperation, but this snarling troll is out there growling "he's gonna get us all killed."

    Even if that were true, I'd rather die with the brave and free than live under a rock with the likes of Cheney.

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  6. I'd rather die with the brave and free than live under a rock with the likes of Cheney.I'll second that.

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  7. Cheney had his time and now I wish he'd crawl back under the rock he came out of!

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  8. The President, the American government and the American people have declared what happened, torture.

    Cheney wants us to hear the other (information received) side of the results of this torture. Why? To justify an illegal act.

    If a bank robber is successful, is that an excuse for his breaking the law?

    Cheney cannot admit he did a wrong, so he tries to excuse himself under the false claim of patriotism.

    He needs a stiff prison sentence, to ensure he learns a lesson, along with all the followers of his "dark side" delusion.

    History should record that it was a crime, and it was prosecuted.

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  9. "He needs a stiff prison sentence, to ensure he learns a lesson, along with all the followers of his "dark side" delusion. "

    Yes indeed. One of the problems with letting Nixon slink away un-prosecuted (and Agnew for that matter) was that it enabled a comeback of sorts and years of re-interpretation designed to show he wasn't really a bad guy.

    I agree -- we need prosecution.

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  10. When the old administration leaves office, it is usual practice for the officials to go home and play golf, write their memoirs ... whatever. Carter monitors elections abroad. Clinton has his Global Initiative charity. Bush returned to Texas.

    Cheney has remained in Washington. This can't be good. Maybe there are sleeper cells throughout the federal establishment awaiting a secret encoded message from the Pacemaker-in-Chief. Maybe Sy Hersh is right.

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  11. Dick Cheney is the Jeremiah Flintwinch of the Republican Party.

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