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Will the Democrats stop the war? Or is it up to us?

Posted on November 22, 2005
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While public opinion against the war is mounting everyday,
there has been debate within the halls of power over what direction to take in
the occupation of Iraq.
Many are hoping that the Democrats will end the occupation, and beginning to pin
their hopes on the 2006 elections.

The Call for World Can’t Wait ( Drive Out the Bush Regime! puts
it clearly: ‘There is not going to be some savior from the Democratic Party.
This whole idea of putting our hopes and energies into “leaders” who
tell us to seek common ground with fascists and religious fanatics is proving
every day to be a disaster, and actually serves to demobilize people.
‘

As the Bush regime is clearly having trouble continuing its
occupation of Iraq,
and debate is breaking out in Congress, we must ask ourselves what it will take
to stop not only the war, but the whole disastrous course the Bush regime is
taking us. This will require massive resistance of millions of people taking independent
political action (as laid out in our Call), and demanding ‘Bush: step down, and
take your whole program with you
.’

We want to encourage people everywhere to debate these
questions ( from chat rooms, classrooms, work, political discussions, and holiday gatherings ( and start
organizing to drown out Bush’s State of the Union speech in massive protest.

And, to give more substance to the above paragraph from our
Call , below are several articles:

12/8, antiwar.com: “Bird-dogging Hillary Clinton, The Antiwar Movement Steps Up” by Joshua Frank 

12/5, CounterPunch.com: “What Did the Democrats Know and When Did they Know It? The Lies of John Edwards” By JOHN WALSH

12/5, Revolution Newspaper: On the newfound
criticisms by some Democrats of aspects of the
Iraq war by Bob Avakian

Our ‘reason of the day ‘ to drive out the Bush
regime from 11/19 about the recent vote in Congress for troop withdrawal.

www.counterpunch.com by Jeremy
Scahill titled ‘This War Can’t Be Stopped by a Loyal Opposition’.

11/27, Revolution newspaper ‘Iraq:
Turmoil Among the Warmakers, Challenge For the People’

CommonDreams.org: War-Hawk Republicans and Anti-War Democrats: What’s the
Difference?
by Cindy Sheehan

 

 

Bird-Dogging Hillary Clinton

The antiwar movement steps up

by

Joshua Frank

One has to be pleased that the antiwar movement
is taking shape. Finally the target isn’t just George. W. Bush and gang. Last
night at a chic Manhattan fundraiser for Hillary Clinton, antiwar activists
staked out the senator and vowed to do so until she changes her position on
the war.

Sen. Clinton released a letter last week that clarified her (non) position
on Iraq. She said she wouldn’t accept any timetable for withdrawal and won’t
even embrace a “redeployment” of U.S. troops along the lines of Rep. Murtha.

“I take responsibility for my vote, and I, along with a majority of Americans,
expect the president and his administration to take responsibility for the false
assurances, faulty evidence and mismanagement of the war,” Clinton wrote in
her lengthy
letter
that amounted to nothing short of denial for her own culpability
in the mess.

[read more]  


http://www.counterpunch.com/walsh12052005.html

What Did the Democrats
Know and When Did they Know It?

The Lies of John Edwards

By JOHN WALSH

The apology of John Edwards, former
Senator and 2004 Democratic vice presidential candidate, for
voting for the Iraq war in 2002, has been widely praised. But
his apology is based on a lie, one that other Democrats are likely
to embrace and one which will serve their ambitions but hide
the truth. We should have no illusions about this, for to believe
otherwise is to set ourselves up for the continuation of Bush’s
war by a Democrat.

Edwards declared in an op-ed
column in the Washington Post on November 13, 2005: “The
argument for going to war with Iraq was based on intelligence
that we now know was inaccurate. The information the American
people were hearing from the president — and that I was being
given by our intelligence community — wasn’t the whole story.
Had I known this at the time, I never would have voted for this
war.” Sounds simple enough. “Had I known then what
I know now, etc.” Poor John Edwards was deceived. But
was he? How was it that 21 other Democratic Senators and 2 Republicans
were not deceived and voted against the war?

Part of the answer arrived
in another op-ed the Washington Post one week later, November
20, 2005, by another former Senator, Bob Graham, entitled: “What
I knew Before the Invasion.” Like Edwards, Graham was a
member, in fact the chair, of the Senate Select Intelligence
Committee in the period leading up to the war and on October
11, 2002 when the vote on the war on Iraq was taken. In a nutshell,
Graham tells us that everyone on that committee knew that Bush
was lying about weapons of mass destruction. Graham begins like
a good, loyal Democrat, telling us that his colleagues were deceived,
at least “most” of them. But he then tells us that
the Senate Select Intelligence Committee knew better. Here are
some of Graham’s words:

[click here for more] 


from http://rwor.org/home-e.htm, 12/5: 

On the newfound
criticisms by some Democrats of aspects of the
Iraq war:

An immoral and unjust act should be opposed because it is
immoral and unjust. To criticize it only for failing to succeed is the stance
of a scoundrel, and worse.

-Bob Avakian, Chairman, Revolutionary Communist Party,
USA


 

11/19 – today’s reason to drive out the Bush regime 

“There is not going to be some savior from the Democratic Party.
This whole idea of putting our hopes and energies into “leaders” who
tell us to seek common ground with fascists and religious fanatics is
proving every day to be a disaster, and actually serves to demobilize
people.”

The Democrats: “Full of sound and fury, signifying nothing”

After Democratic Congressman John Murtha’s speech calling for
withdrawal of US troops from Iraq for military strategic reasons,
Republicans pushed for a vote on an immediate troop withdrawal from
Iraq. It was soundly defeated 403 to 3 – despite all the anti-war
rhetoric coming from many of the Democrats these days, only three out
of the 202 Democrats in the House decided to vote for the resolution
supporting a immediate troop withdrawal from Iraq. Murtha himself voted
against the resolution, as well as other leading House Democrats like Dennis Kucinich.*

Some Congressional Democrats complained that this resolution was pushed
by the Republicans to force them between a rock and a hard place, and
it’s absolutely true – because there wouldn’t be a “hard place” if the
Democrats were really against this war! This vote has clearly showed
the Democratic Party’s position on the war and immediate withdrawal,
and also shows why we CANNOT rely on the Democrats to do anything but
capitulate when push comes to shove. It’s up to us!

The World Can’t Wait, Drive Out the Bush Regime!

Bush Step Down, and Take Your Whole Program With You!

*Source: house.gov


Vegetarian
Between Meals

This War Can’t Be
Stopped by a Loyal Opposition

By JEREMY SCAHILL

The refrain of the Democrats about being
misled into supporting the invasion of Iraq has become really
tired. And someone other than the White House smearmongers needs
to say it: The Democrats cannot be allowed to use faulty intelligence
as a crutch to hold up their unforgivable support for the Iraq
invasion. What is DNC Chair Howard Dean’s excuse? He wasn’t in
Congress and didn’t have any access to Senate intelligence. Still,
on March 9, 2003, just days before the invasion began, Dean told
Tim Russert, on NBC’s Meet The Press, “I don’t want Saddam
staying in power with control over those weapons of mass destruction.
I want him to be disarmed.”

During the New Hampshire primary
in January 2004, which I covered for Democracy Now!, I confronted
Dean about that statement. I asked him on what intelligence he
based that allegation. “Talks with people who were knowledgeable,”
Dean told me. “Including a series of folks that work in
the Clinton administration.”

A series of folks that work
in the Clinton administration.

How does that jive with the
official Democratic line that they were misled by the Bush administration?
Sounds like Howard Dean, head of the Democratic Party, was misled
by….the Democrats. Dean’s candor offers us a rare glimpse into
the painful truth of the matter. As unpopular as this is to say,
when President Bush accuses the Democrats of “rewriting
history” on Iraq, he is right.

None of the horrors playing
out in Iraq today would be possible without the Democratic Party.
And no matter how hard some party leaders try to deny it, this
is their war too and will remain so until every troop is withdrawn.
There is no question that the Bush administration is one of the
most corrupt, violent and brutal in the history of this country
but that doesn’t erase the serious responsibility the Democrats
bears for the bloodletting in Iraq. As disingenuous as the Administration’s
claims that Iraq had WMDs is the flimsy claim by Democratic lawmakers
that they were somehow duped into voting for the war. The fact
is that Iraq posed no threat to the United States in 2003 any
more than it did in 1998 when President Clinton bombed Baghdad.
John Kerry and his colleagues knew that. The Democrats didn’t
need false intelligence to push them into overthrowing Saddam
Hussein’s regime. It was their policy; a policy made the law
of the land not under George W. Bush, but under President Bill
Clinton when he signed the 1998 Iraq Liberation Act, formally
initiating the process of regime change in Iraq.

Manipulated intelligence is
but a small part of a bigger, bipartisan 15-year assault on Iraq’s
people. If the Democrats really want to look at how America was
led into this war, they need to go back further than the current
president’s inauguration.

[click here to read more] 


Iraq: Turmoil Among the Warmakers, Challenge For the People

Revolution #024, November 27, 2005, posted at revcom.us

Shortly
after September 11, 2001, Bob Avakian, the Chairman of the
Revolutionary Communist Party, spoke soberly to the efforts that had
been launched by the imperialist ruling class to “reshuffle the deck”
of world power in the wake of 911 and to radically remake U.S. society
itself.1
He went deeply into the ramifications of the imperialists’ “wild
ambitions,” while speaking to the ways in which the things they were
launching could cause them real problems.

“All
of this,” he said, “comes together and mixes wildly–that’s why I call
it a cauldron of contradictions–to produce a lot of potential for
things to go in many different directions and even to get out of their
control.”

The recent intense
conflicts within the U.S. ruling class point sharply to that
potential–and underscore the challenge facing people opposed to
imperialism.

The Cauldron Simmers

The
war in Iraq, to understate the case, is not going well for the U.S.
imperialists. The resistance to the U.S. occupation within Iraq has
spread and grown more capable. The conflicts between the many different
political, ethnic and class forces within Iraq show little
sign of resolution, and the puppet Iraqi army is still not able to
fight on its own. In response, the U.S. has escalated its tactics of
wholesale terror directed against the Sunni Muslim population as a
whole, which is the main (though not the only) base of the insurgency.
Making all this worse–from the imperialist standpoint, that
is–is the increasingly widespread and sharp sentiment against the war
within the U.S. itself. And interplaying with that is a growing
disaffection and anger within the army itself.

All
this is causing intense concern within the U.S. ruling class. To get a
sense of what is bothering some of these forces, it is worth quoting at
some length the editorial “A Timetable for Mr. Bush” that appeared in
the New York Times

“The
ultimate Iraqi nightmare, which continually seems to be drawing closer,
is a violent fracturing of the country in which the Kurdish north and
Arab Shiite southeast break away, leaving the west, dominated by Arab
Sunnis, an impoverished no man’s land and a breeding ground for
international terrorism. . .

The consequences of
such a breakup would be endless and awful: civil war, the persecution
of minority populations in the new states, an alliance between the
Shiites and Iran, and a complete breakdown of American moral and military influence in the Middle East. [emphasis added]”

Please
note and note well that nowhere in this editorial does the Times even
profess to be bothered by the wholesale slaughter that continues to be
carried out against the Iraqi population, the ongoing torture, the
recent revelations of the criminal use of white phosphorus against
civilians, and all the rest of the horror that goes with imposing
tighter U.S. domination. No, what has them bothered is the breakdown of
“American moral [sic] and military influence.”

Faced
with the intensifying discontent and anger among the people and the
restiveness within the ruling class, Bush has gone on the offensive. He
has forcefully reasserted his “vision” of a world dominated by the U.S.
and, in particular, a Middle East radically transformed in such a way
so as to deepen and ensure that domination. [See Revolution # 22, “Bush
Calls for Endless Borderless War Without Limits,” for an in-depth
analysis of Bush’s speeches in this period.] And he has increasingly
accused the opposition of encouraging “the enemy” and demoralizing the
troops.

In giving these speeches mainly on military
bases and to military families, Bush is trying to do three things.
First, he is attempting to firm up his base in the army; second, he is
trying to win back sections of the American people by waving the banner
of “supporting the troops”; and third, he is signaling to other forces within the ruling class that he does have
a base in the army, and that he will not hesitate to use it should it
come to that. That in itself is very heavy, and a sign of how deep the
contradictions run.

Nonetheless, contradictions
within the ruling class have continued to simmer. Much of this has been
taking the form of Democratic congressmen raising questions about the
intelligence that was used to justify the U.S. invasion. Last week, the
Senate passed a resolution that called for regular progress reports on
Iraq from the Administration and a “period of significant transition to
full Iraqi sovereignty.” Neither the criticism of pre-war intelligence
handling nor the call for progress reports got to the heart of the
question: that of the war itself and its utterly unjust and immoral
nature. And neither track exposed how the U.S. forces are escalating
their savagery in the face of the stubborn resistance. But while this
was mainly posturing–both Republicans and Democrats attempting to look
like they were “doing something” in the face of an increasingly acute
crisis, while essentially keeping things going on the same track–there
was a secondary element within it of expressing concern that things
were spinning out of control.

The Crack Widens

But
even that small crack could not be tolerated by the Bush Regime, lest
it begin to widen beyond the intent of even the Democratic politicians.
So Bush, Cheney and their minions continued on the counteroffensive in
a series of speeches that not only defended the war, but attacked any
criticism at all as undermining the troops and “emboldening the enemy.”

Then
John Murtha, a very right-wing Democratic congressman with ties to the
military, put forward a resolution for U.S. withdrawal in six months.
Murtha framed his move entirely in terms of the toll that the war was
taking on the army: “The threat by terrorism is real, but we have other
threats that cannot be ignored. We must prepare to face all these
threats. . . The future of our military is at risk. Our military and
our families are stretched thin. . . Many say the Army is broken.”
That is a rather sharp statement! Murtha went on to say that his “most
important point” was that “incidents have increased from 150 a week to
over 700 in the last year. Instead of attacks going down over a time
when we had additional more troops, attacks have grown dramatically.
Since… Abu Ghraib, American casualties have doubled.”

All
this was made more significant by who Murtha is and who he speaks for.
According to David Gergen, a former adviser to four different
presidents, Murtha is “very close to a lot of generals in the army. . .
and when he speaks many think they are hearing the voice of those
generals.” Murtha, in other words, is a gung-ho servant of imperialism
who serves as a mouthpiece for some forces in the army. He backed the
war from the beginning and is only now criticizing it on the basis that
it has been and is being poorly led, and damaging larger imperialist
interests in general, and the stability and effectiveness of the army
in particular.

The regime hit back hard. The House
Republican leadership then took Murtha’s proposal, changed it to call
for immediate withdrawal, and put it on the floor for an immediate
vote. This was extremely unusual–bills are supposed to go through
hearings in sub-committee and committee before coming on to the floor.
Murtha likely counted on that, and may have mainly intended to use the
bill to argue for changes in how the troops were deployed, equipped,
and so on. There is a whole school of thought, which includes many
leading Democrats as well as the influential Arizona Republican (and
war criminal) John McCain, that calls for more troops to “do the job right.”2

But
the Bush crew, and the Republicans more broadly, sensing that the
dynamics were going against them, tried to turn this against their
critics by demanding that people either vote for immediate withdrawal
or not. One Republican Congressman said essentially that now other
politicians are not going to be able to say they were misled, or
continue to criticize–they had to go on record, and if they voted for
the war, they basically had to shut up.

The House then voted down the resolution to withdraw by 403 to 3–with even Murtha voting against it!

Think about it: 403 to 3. What the hell kind of “opposition” is that?

Their Interests–And Ours

Friday’s
vote made very clear there is no real sentiment in the ruling class for
an immediate end to the war. There is no dispute over militarily
dominating Iraq and the Middle East more broadly; rather there is a
dispute over how to best do that. This is not an argument
between those for imperialism and those against it. This is nothing but
slaveholders arguing how best to maintain and expand slavery; nothing
but mass murderers, torturers and war criminals arguing over “the right
mix” of each.

Right now Bush’s main critics within the
ruling class are arguing, from different angles, that he a) put more
focus on more effective military domination of Iraq, b) more forcefully
and attentively restructure the Iraqi puppet government, and c) more
effectively mystify and mislead the American people into backing, or at
least tolerating, the war. This is why McCain reiterated his call for more troops
in Iraq, in a very highly publicized recent speech; this is why the
Times editorial called for Bush to “set clear goals” for the Iraqi
government to get into firmer control, and made a number of concrete
proposals as to what the Iraqi government must do to that end; this is
why even pro-war politicians and columnists complain that Bush is “not
communicating well.” But the overarching ruling class consensus right
now is that there is no alternative–again, from the vantage point of
imperialism–to the continued military occupation and domination of
Iraq, despite the risks and real costs to their interests, as pointed
to by people like Murtha.

Yet immediate withdrawal is
the only just thing, the only thing in accord not only with the
interests of the great majority of people in both Iraq and the U.S.,
but increasingly with their sentiments. Friday’s Lou Dobbs show on CNN
ran a poll of its viewers–and Lou Dobbs is far from
liberal–on what the U.S. should do in Iraq. Dobbs said that they had
an overwhelming response and that 11% voted to do whatever was
necessary to win, 2% voted to “stay the course,” and 87% voted for
immediate withdrawal! Lou Dobbs, of course, can rig his polls any way
he likes–and polls in general are set up to create, rather than
reflect, public opinion–but that kind of number at minimum amounts to
someone like Dobbs raising very serious concern that “the public is
being lost.” It also poses a huge opportunity–and, as we shall speak
to, a very significant challenge–to those who are burning to change
this society in a progressive direction.

So the top
Democrats speak out against Bush “around the edges,” for two reasons.
First, they do hope to influence the policy. Second, they need to
convince people that they, the Democratic leaders, are doing the most
that is reasonable to oppose the war.

Bob Avakian has
compared the ruling forces in society to a pyramid, with the top
Republicans and Democrats contending at the apex.

“Who
are the people that [the Democrats] try to appeal to(not that the
Democrats represent their interests, but who are the people that the
Democrats try to appeal to at the base, on the other side of this
pyramid, so to speak? All the people who stand for progressive kinds of
things, all the people who are oppressed in this society. For the
Democrats, a big part of their role is to keep all those people
confined within the bourgeois, the mainstream, electoral process. . .
and to get them back into it when they have drifted away from–or
broken out of–that framework. Because . . . [the Democrats] just sell
out these people every time–because they don’t represent their
interests. They represent the interests of the system and of its ruling
class. But they have a certain role of always trying to get people who
are oppressed, alienated and angry back into the elections. You know:
“Come on in, come on in(it’s not as bad as you think, you can vote,
it’s OK.” This is one of the main roles they play. But the thing about
them is that they are very afraid of calling into the streets this base
of people that they appeal to, to vote for them. The last thing in the
world they want to do is to call these masses of people into the
streets to protest or to battle against this right-wing force that’s
being built up.3“

Right
now, there are intense pressures pulling on the pyramid. On the one
hand, there are sharpening differences within the ruling class over how
best to deal with real difficulties in carrying through their murderous
imperialist war. On the other, there is the widening gulf between the
Democratic Party leadership, which supports the war (as evidenced by
the 403-3 vote), and the people they claim to lead (and are supposed to
corral), who grow more sharply opposed to the war by the day.

So
the top Democrats speak out against Bush “around the edges,” for two
reasons. First, they do hope to influence the policy. Second, they need
to convince people that they, the Democratic leaders, are doing the
most that is reasonable to oppose the war.

But that is a lie. The Democratic leaders are not doing the most that can be done to oppose the war; again, the vast majority support the continued occupation of Iraq. They
are in fact working to demobilize and detour the real opposition to the
war and keep it confined within very limited terms; they want to blunt
the demand for immediate withdrawal into a plea for some phased
withdrawal that couldn’t even begin until imperialist interests are
secured. They aim to keep things politically under control, while the
imperialists maneuver and bludgeon their way through a situation that
grows more difficult and dangerous for them by the day.

Two Contending Dynamics

The
Democratic politicians aim to divert the growing sentiment to END the
war NOW and to constrain the limits of the debate and blunt the edge of
people’s anger. They, and their supporters, pose lining up behind them against action
from below demanding an end to the war, and to the whole program of
which it is a part. Yet it is only mass struggle, on its own terms,
that can compel progressive change.

There is a bitter
lesson here in the 2004 elections. There had been a huge antiwar
groundswell both before the war and then at the Republican Convention
in August. But people were persuaded to pour that energy into backing
Kerry–Kerry who, while posing as the “moderate alternative” to Bush,
nevertheless firmly supported the war and played up his military
qualifications as potential “commander-in-chief.” The dynamic set in
where people essentially abandoned the stands they held most
essential–including their opposition to the war–in the name of being
realistic and reasonable.

That was, and is, a deadly dynamic.

We
need to bring a whole different dynamic into play, particularly as the
“election season” begins to gear up. We need a dynamic where the people
who OPPOSE the war, along with people who oppose all the other
depradations of the Bush Regime and the whole fascist direction of
society, act in their own interests and for their own demands, in a mass political way. We
need a dynamic where the people against this regime, by dint of their
numbers and determination, compel every other force in society to
respond to them. This in fact is the only “realistic and
reasonable” course–that is, if you wish to change the reality of a war
without end, borders or limits, and an increasingly fascist social
order at home that corresponds to and reinforces that.

We
should learn from the way that both the Bush regime and the Democrats,
in their different ways, are showing fear in the face of the alienation
of the people and even within parts of the army itself. Why are they
scrambling? Why are they lashing out, both at the people and at each
other? What are they scared of? Well, they are scared of many things
right now, but not the least of their fears is the anger and resistance
of the people they rule right here. They are scared that we will
realize our own potential power– if and as we dare to get out
from under their control, and take mass independent political action,
in our own interests and, more than that, in the interests of the
world’s people. They are scared that people, in the words of the Call
to drive out the Bush regime, will “refuse to be ruled in this way.”

The question right now is not whether to vote or not. It is whether to rely on voting,
or instead to pour your energies into winning over and rallying
millions to their true interests, channeling their discontent into a
course that will not once again betray them, but will result in really
changing the direction of society and the course of history. It is
whether to seize politically on the cracks that are beginning to appear
and, through mass independent political action from below, open them up
into a whole different future, or whether to allow ourselves to be
gathered back into the fold and reduced to another passive “pressure
group,” as the authors of this war figure out how to patch up those
cracks and continue their reign of white phosphorus and secret torture
cells.

Very immediately, the urgent challenge is to
throw in everything to mount massively powerful protests at the time of
Bush’s State of the Union address in January, forcefully demanding that
Bush himself step down and take his regime and his whole
program–including this brutal and reactionary war–with him. Protests
massive enough, and determined enough, to make nothing less than this
the central political question in the country.

We must meet this challenge.

NOTES:

1. “The New Situation and the Great Challenges,” by Bob Avakian, at revcom.us.

2.
This would almost certainly require a reimposition of the draft, which
Murtha, by the way, supports but which would almost surely intensify
the opposition to the war among the people.

3. “The Coming Civil War and Repolarization for Revolution in the Present Era”, p. 3.

This article is posted in English and Spanish on Revolution Online
http://revcom.us
Write: Box 3486, Merchandise Mart, Chicago, IL 60654
Phone: 773-227-4066 Fax: 773-227-4497


 

Published
on Tuesday, October 4, 2005 by CommonDreams.org
War-Hawk Republicans and Anti-War Democrats: What’s the Difference?
by Cindy Sheehan

(excerpts): 

The War-Hawk Dems
I met with were equally, if not more, disheartening. Although my
meeting with Sen. Clinton (D-NY) went well, I don’t believe she will do
anything to alleviate the suffering of the Americans in Iraq or the
Iraqi people. I don’t believe that sending more troops is the solution,
it will only aggravate an already untenable situation. We met in NYC
with Sen. Charles Schumer’s aide, who told us that the Senator thinks
the occupation of Iraq is a “good thing for America” but he wouldn’t
elaborate on why. The aide was asked if the Senator had a vested
interest in keeping this war going, because the Senator is certainly
not stupid enough to believe that this misbegotten, misadventure in the
Middle East is good for anyone. I don’t think the people of Louisiana,
Alabama, and Mississippi would agree with the Senator that this illegal
occupation is a “good thing.”

The
“Anti-War” Dems perplex me the most, however. Except for the good guys,
like the members of the Out of Iraq Caucus and a few Senators, the Dem
party line is that we must allow Iraq a window of two months time and
after the referendum on the constitution this month and the
parliamentary elections in December, it will be time to attack the
failed policies of George and his cabal of liars.

In
my meeting with Howard Dean, he told me that the Iraq issue was “hard”
and the new Dem “Contract with America” is going to have 10 points and
the first one is going to be “Universal Health Care.” I told Mr. Dean
that if the Dems didn’t come out strongly against the war and against
George’s disastrous policies, we were going to become irrelevant as a
party (which is already happening) and the “hard” issue should be the
one that is worked on the hardest! I’ll admit that the issue doesn’t
seem so hard to me: George and his sycophantic band of criminals lied
to the world; too many people are dead for the lies; too many people
are in harm’s way for the lies; it is time to bring our troops home. I
am just hoping against hope that the war is on the Dems’ contract
somewhere. George is always pulling out the old saw that what he does
in sending our children to die and kill is “hard work.” I hate to see
that same adjective used to describe bringing them home. The war issue
is not complicated: wrong to invade and wrong to stay. Bring our troops
home. Simple.

[click here to read the whole article]

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