My Big Fat Beef With Politics
Here's what I hate about politics...
Remember My Big Fat Greek Wedding? When Toula Portokalos couldn't change jobs without her father's consent, her mother had to make him think it was his idea. The result: Old man Potokalos thought he was brilliant; Toula went to work in the travel agency; and her mother sported a knowing smile.
That's politics. Slower than a molasses- soaked Christmas...
Gallup: 50% of Americans Now Say Bush Deliberately Misled Them on WMDs
By E&P Staff
Published: April 26, 2005 11:45 AM ET
NEW YORK Half of all Americans, exactly 50%, now say the Bush administration deliberately misled Americans about whether Iraq had weapons of mass destruction, the Gallup Organization reported this morning.
"This is the highest percentage that Gallup has found on this measure since the question was first asked in late May 2003," the pollsters observed. "At that time, 31% said the administration deliberately misled Americans. This sentiment has gradually increased over time, to 39% in July 2003, 43% in January/February 2004, and 47% in October 2004."
Also, according to the latest poll, more than half of Americans, 54%, disapprove of the way President Bush is handling the situation in Iraq, while 43% approve. In early February, Americans were more evenly divided on the way Bush was handling the situation in Iraq, with 50% approving and 48% disapproving.
Last week Gallup reported that 53% now believe that the U.S. invasion of Iraq was "not worth it." But Frank Newport, editor in chief at Gallup, recalled today that although a majority of the public began to think the Vietnam war was a mistake in the summer of 1968, the United States did not pull out of Vietnam for more than five years, after thousands of more American lives were lost. LINK
Politics is the art of the possible.
Otto Von Bismarck, remark, Aug. 11, 1867
While it's possible that Toula's father might have drawn a different conclusion and decided against allowing his daughter to change jobs (and thereby advancing the film's plot)...
No lives would have been lost, the national treasury would not have been looted, and our global reputation as the good guys would not have been destroyed.
Heavy sigh...
But too many lost lives for a knowing smile.
Otto Von Bismarck, remark, Aug. 11, 1867
While it's possible that Toula's father might have drawn a different conclusion and decided against allowing his daughter to change jobs (and thereby advancing the film's plot)...
No lives would have been lost, the national treasury would not have been looted, and our global reputation as the good guys would not have been destroyed.
Heavy sigh...
But too many lost lives for a knowing smile.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home