Time to take a stand indeed! I'm working for a progressive, anti-war Democratic candidate for Senate, Jonathan Tasini, for precisely this reason. Now is the time to take a stand. You either support this immoral war or you oppose it. You can't have it both ways. Get off the fence, Democrats. Gen. Zinni was very clear on MTP today. He said he was shown no evidence for WMD and that sanctions were working. Why are Congressional Democrats still too skeered to speak out?
Good stuff at the end of this article about how George won't discuss anything but family matters with his old man.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12098907/site/newsweek/Time to Take a StandDemocrats have good reason to fear being tagged the antiwar party. But that doesn’t mean they should be afraid of bold steps.
Web-Exclusive Commentary
By Eleanor Clift
Newsweek
Updated: 3:42 p.m. ET March 31, 2006
March 31, 2006 - Democrats released their national-security plan this week. Like the proverbial talking dog, it’s not so much what it says, but that it says anything at all. Democrats have been in a defensive crouch for so long that when Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid previewed the plan at a breakfast with print reporters, he felt compelled to say that “Democrats are just as patriotic as Republicans”—as though that were in dispute.
“How did you get in a box where you have to make a statement like that?” a reporter asked Reid. Speaking in a voice barely above a whisper and tight with anger, Reid invoked the “Karl machine,” as in Karl Rove, the GOP strategist most responsible for turning the war against terror into a political windfall for the Republicans. Reid said it was time for Democrats who saw what happened to former Georgia senator Max Cleland, a triple-amputee Vietnam veteran, to take a more aggressive stand on national security. “They had the audacity to take him out,” Reid said, recalling the ’02 election when war with Iraq was on the horizon and patriotism was running high.
Cleland was accused of taking the side of the terrorists because he and other Democrats held up legislation creating the Department of Homeland Security in a dispute over labor rights. With another set of midterm elections just seven months away, Reid vows Democrats are not going to sit back and confine themselves to domestic issues, where polls show them comfortably ahead. They’re going to take stands. OK, they’re not major new groundbreaking stands—unless you count making the capture of Osama bin Laden a “priority” and “redoubling” efforts to stop Iran and North Korea from developing nuclear weapons. But it’s a start. The 10-page document, half in Spanish—a nice touch to counter the GOP’s immigrant bashing—is so noncontroversial that it may test the thesis that you can please all the people all the time.
There is no timetable for withdrawal from Iraq other than to repeat language from a November 2005 Senate resolution that passed with 79 votes declaring 2006 “a year of significant transition” for Iraqis to assume primary responsibility for their own security. Quoting Gen. George Casey, the top commander in Iraq, who has said he expects a drawdown of U.S. troops this year, Reid said, “It’s a matter of when, not if. Murtha was the first to mouth the words, but it’s been accepted by everybody.” Pennsylvania Rep. John Murtha, a hawkish veteran of the Korean conflict and the Vietnam War, created a sensation when he said on the heels of the Senate vote that U.S. troops should begin to withdraw. It was revolutionary to say at the time, but in the four months since—months that have seen an upsurge in ethnic violence—polls show the American public wants out of Iraq.
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