We knew this was coming, we just did not know when and how hard.
Everyone in the country, regardless of political persuasion, feels an accounting of the George W. Bush years is unavoidable. For Republicans to gain back respectability for the conservative cause from the general electorate, they have no recourse but to reject the policies of run-away deficits for wars that were built on lies. Everyone should agree: the Iraq policy was not worth the money and lives.
Any Republican candidate to be taken as a serious conservative must explain to their voters how they are different than the Bush conservatives. There is just no avoiding it.
If conservatives want to be taken seriously, they have to start weeding out the congressional partisans who led the party so astray under Bush and essentially find an entire new slate of leaders. Nobody in the party seems willing, or able, to do this.
For Democrats and their liberal base, they want the sins of the administration exposed for everyone to see how it went against every notion of what it means to be “American” that this country teaches its children to believe.
And the games begin
Now, amidst the cacophony of Teabaggers, Birthers, Screamers and Deathers, Dick Cheney adds to the hysterics that remind America’s short attention span how far off the mainstream path the Republican party has driven itself.
Eight months into the Obama administration, and the gloves are off in ways many liberals had hoped: in-fighting and tell-alls by the progenitors of one of the most failed and divisive Presidencies in U.S. history.
The kicker is the Dick Cheney tell-all, just as George W. Bush is writing his own memoir. Cheney’s promises not to be kind to Bush. Barton Gellman at the Washington Post broke the Cheney book story:
Cheney’s imprint on law and policy, achieved during the first term at the peak of his influence, had faded considerably by the time he and Bush left office. Bush halted the waterboarding of accused terrorists, closed secret CIA prisons, sought congressional blessing for domestic surveillance, and reached out diplomatically to Iran and North Korea, which Cheney believed to be ripe for “regime change.”
Some of the disputes between the president and his Number Two were more personal. Shortly after Bush fired Donald H. Rumsfeld, Cheney called his old mentor history’s “finest secretary of defense” and invited direct comparison to Bush by saying he had “never learned more” from a boss than he had as Rumsfeld’s deputy in the Ford administration.
The depths of Cheney’s distress about another close friend, his former chief of staff and alter ego I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, have only recently become clear. Bush refused a pardon after Libby’s felony convictions in 2007 for perjury and obstruction of an investigation of the leak of a clandestine CIA officer’s identity. Cheney tried mightily to prevent Libby’s fall, scrawling in a note made public at trial that he would not let anyone “sacrifice the guy that was asked to stick his neck in the meat grinder.” Cheney never explained the allusion, but grand jury transcripts — and independent counsel Patrick J. Fitzgerald — suggested that Libby’s false statements aimed above all to protect the vice president.
Here is a collection of comments from around the web that give you what you need to know about the reaction to the Cheney Bites Back bit in WaPo:
“Yesterday brought news that Karl Rove was more involved in the firing of a New Mexico federal prosecutor than he has previously let on. This morning brings tidings that Dick Cheney believes the “statute of limitations” for secrets from the Bush White House is over and that he can begin to vent his frustrations with his former boss. In Obamaland, you can hear the champagne corks popping because the best way to portray yourself as centrist and reasonable is to have Rove and Cheney as your political opponents.” – Michael Sean Winters, America Magazine
“Bush has notably become more quiet and reflective, not speaking out to defend himself. By contrast, Cheney’s guns-blazing approach to protecting his own reputation makes Bush almost seem like a lovable old softie.” Chris Rovzar, New York magazine’s Daily Intel
“But perhaps even more impossible to fathom is that with each passing day Cheney makes Bush look more and more like a sympathetic character. If things keep going the way they’re going now, it’s entirely possible that history will come to judge Dick Cheney as the best and worst thing to ever happen to George W. Bush’s legacy — worst because Bush’s misplaced trust in him during his presidency more often than not led to unfortunate consequences, and best because Cheney’s post-presidency attacks on him are enough to make even the most dedicated Bush-hater feel sorry for him, even if only just a bit. ” – The Cajun Boy, Gawker.com
“Mr Cheney’s memoir, which he is reportedly writing on legal pads in long hand, is due for release in 2011. Robert Barnett, who negotiated the book contract, has told potential publishers the memoir would be ‘packed with news’. He also reportedly said Mr Cheney himself had declared, without explanation, that “the statute of limitations has expired” on many of his secrets.” – Brad Norington, The Australian



Wikipedia photos to be deleted
NYC Wedding March – September 26, 2010
Joaquin Phoenix is a poser
Flushing Meadow Corona Park skate park
East Village Park and Williamsburg Bridge photos
100 People I Photographed for the Creative Commons
Pakistan flood devastation statistics
Cordoba House / Ground Zero mosque protest photos
The void in my blogging (and some photos)
Rihanna video with Eminem about Chris Brown?


