Excerpt from an editorial by Mark Bowden, author of Blackhawk Down
[...] Truth in public life has always been a slippery commodity. We expect campaigning politicians or debating journalists to pitch and spin. Facts are marshaled to support arguments and causes; convenient ones are trumpeted and inconvenient ones played down or ignored. This is the political game.Posted by thorswitch at May 30, 2003 06:41 AM | TrackBackBut when the President of the United States addresses the nation and the world, I expect the spinning to stop. He represents not just a party or a cause, but the American people. When President Bush argued that Hussein possessed stockpiles of illicit and deadly poisons, he was presumably doing so on the basis of intelligence briefings and evidence that the public could not see. He was asking us to trust him, to trust his office, to trust that he was acting legitimately in our self-defense. That's something very different from engaging in a bold policy of attempting to remake the Middle East, or undertaking a humanitarian mission to end oppression. Neither of these two justifications would have been likely to garner widespread public support. But national defense? That's an argument the President can always win.
[...] It suggests a strain of zealotry in this White House that regards the question of war as just another political debate. It isn't. More than 100 fine Americans were killed in this conflict, dozens of British soldiers, and many thousands of Iraqis. Nobody gets killed or maimed in Capitol Hill maneuvers over spending plans, or battles over federal court appointments. War is a special case. It is the most serious step a nation can take, and it deserves the highest measure of seriousness and integrity.
When a president lies or exaggerates in making an argument for war, when he spins the facts to sell his case, he betrays his public trust, and he diminishes the credibility of his office and our country. We are at war. What we lost in this may yet end up being far more important than what we gained.
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Slow blogging ahead 1 of 8 Muriel said: I don't know RUSH. I'm probably one... More on comment spam 1 of 9 Barom said: What's a pretty blog!!!... Metablogging into Literature 1 of 2 kriselda jarnsaxa said: Thank you! :)... A thirty-year-plus legacy 1 of 10 kitty said: What happened to Ken Parnell? Was h... Yet he still wants them kept as far away as possible, eh? 1 of 1 Tom said: "I'm so pleased to be going to a co... |

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