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"If you’re in Congress and you know this war is going in the wrong direction, it is no longer enough to study your options and keep your own counsel."
The problem is, pal, that the war was going in the wrong direction before it even began; the war itself was wrong, in theory and practice, there simply was no justification for it, and frankly sir, you have not the moral weight to be speaking of it now.
"but also of our deeper obligations to one another and to the brotherhood of man".
Amazing how that only occurs to you now, after you helped to consign hundreds of thousands of Iraqis (of whom it can't be said often enough, offered us no threat, and had done nothing to us) to ongoing death, humiliation and displacement, and who you continue to pointedly ignore in your self-serving apologies.
Instead, we get the old "let's wash our hands routine" along with some sour rhetoric about teaching the Iraqis the meaning of responsibility. We might better teach them to be "responsible" by practicing it ourselves. I'm not sure what the solution is, but I'm sure that it doesn't involve going into the country, wrecking it, robbing it, polluting it, destabilizing it, and then, after we've "taken everything from it that we can possibly steal" getting the hell out while wishing our victims a hearty "good luck"! There has to be some pennace, there has to be recompense. It's not enough to simply say, sorry, the war is going badly, we have to get out now, you take care of it yourself; there has to be an understanding that we are the wrongful party, that the war was scripted and fake and entirely a product of choice and expediency and callousness, and that despite the flowery lies used to hypnotize people into believing in it, the war is a sham and the people who plotted it and helped implement it knew that it was a sham.
But we'll never get that. Instead, we get rubbish about how:
"Silence is betrayal. Speak out. Tell your elected leaders to block this misguided plan that is destined to cost more lives and further damage America’s ability to lead. And tell them also, that the reward of courage...is trust."
One has to wonder what your constituents told you, the Cassandras who told you exactly what was going to happen, the ones you so assiduously avoided, and to whose pleas your ears were shut.
If it is true that "the reward of courage is trust", then brother, you have niether shown the former nor earned the latter.
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