Sunday, March 14, 2004

t. and heading for Armor Officer Basic.


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by TOTALLY COMMITTED on 03/14/2004 08:05:53 AM EST

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MAUREEN DOWD HITS ONE OUT OF THE PARK!
I'm starting to wonder if there are not (maybe) two Maureen Dowds... and they switch off writing their Op-Eds, depending on the subject matter. This is the same Maureen Dowd who went after poor Wes for the Argyle Sweater at a point in his campaign when he really could have used a more TOPICAL Op-Ed, politically. This is also the same Maureen Dowd who was not, shall we say, FRIENDLY to Bill Clinton in the Monica Lewinsky days.
Anyway, here is a DANDY excerpt from her Op-Ed in this morning's NY Times. She ALMOST redeems herself in one fell swoop with this one:
The Politics of Self-Pity
By MAUREEN DOWD
"Mr. Bush has been in office over three years. It's time to start accepting some responsibility.
Republicans have a bad habit of laying down rules for other people to follow while excluding themselves. Look how they beat up Bill Clinton for messing around with a young woman, while many top Republicans were doing the very same thing.
Mr. Bush's whingeing was infectious. The very House Republicans who greased the skids for the cheeseburger bill got in a huff over John Kerry's overheard comment to some supporters in Chicago that his Republican critics were "the most crooked, you know, lying group" he'd ever seen.
These tough-guy Republicans, who rule the House with an iron fist, were suddenly squealing like schoolgirls at being victimized by big, bad John Kerry. J. Dennis Hastert, the House speaker, said Mr. Kerry would have his "upcomeance coming." Tom DeLay sulked that the public was getting "a glimpse of the real John Kerry." The Hammer was talking like a nail.
Marc Racicot, Mr. Bush's campaign chairman, accused Mr. Kerry of "unbecoming" conduct and called on him to apologize.
Oh, the poor dears. The very Bush crowd that savaged John McCain in South Carolina, that bullied and antagonized the allies we need in the real war on terror, that is spending a hundred million dollars on ads that will turn Mr. Kerry into something akin to the Boston Strangler; these guys are suddenly such delicate flowers, such big bawling babies, that they can't bear to hear Mr. Kerry speak of them harshly.
Mr. Bush is not believable in the victim's role. He and Dick Cheney have audaciously imposed their will on Washington and the world.
We are not yet sure who is behind the horrendous bombings in Spain, but they have already underscored how vulnerable our trains and subways are. And they have reminded us that the administration diverted resources from the war on terror and the search for Osama to settle old scores in Iraq, building a case for war with hyped and phony claims on weapons.
In an interview with The Guardian, the weapons sleuth David Kay said it's time for Mr. Bush to take personal responsibility: "It's about confronting and coming clean with the American people. . . . He should say: `We were mistaken and I am determined to find out why.' "
In other words, Mr. Bush, look in the mirror."
Entire Op-Ed:
 http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/14/opinion/14DOWD.html?hp  
WOO-HOO for Ms. Dowd!

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