I agree with you on Al Gore...as South Park put it in a show about electing a school mascot, the choice was between a douche and a shit sandwhich. Kerry was a loser too. I don't personally like Hillary and I think that 24-28 years of two families running this country back-to-back is not a good idea. I'd perfer Obama or Edwards (or really Biden, but he doesn't stand a snow ball's chance in hell). I can't say I'd really like any of the Republicans...but I'd go with Guliani out of that field.
There is no one else on the democratic side with the wisdom to make the right compromises and the Republicans won't win the next election... The elections are usually close and the winds of favor are filling other sails.
I don't like the same families running things either. But sadly to win you need to control campaign machines and those campaign machines are passed down from from one member of family to the next like armies...
I don't see how to nullify the situation and looking at the people that would take over instead doesn't make me very hopeful that it would be a good thing. We need entirely new blood.
We also need people wise enough not to go changing everything. Change a little or simply do very little such that you don't break anything. There is far more right about america then wrong and thus more to lose through change then to be gained.
That being said, with Iraq that nation has not had a stable democratic government ever in its entire history. The real question is whether Iraq CAN have a stable democracy...and how many people have to die to answer that question. In the end, tens of thousands maybe even hundreds of thousands of Iraqis are going to die whether we stay or not (the US news media focuses on the US death toll, but the Iraqi people don't have body armor or anywhere near the level of medical treatment our soldiers get). If we wanted true-self determination for the Iraqis, then we ought to leave now and let them decide what they're going to do with their country (by now I mean begin withdrawing now, I know that several months would pass before the last of our troops got out). If we want a sure bet of making Iraq stable we should put in a dictator, but that would get rid of the last credible explanation for going into Iraq in the first place. I'm not saying Iraq is an easy question. My answer is to leave Iraq and let the Iraqis deal with the problem of living together themselves. Even if we win a military victory over the insurgents...how long will our soldiers have to stay before the different factions are truly reconciled? A telling story comes from the on-going UN peacekeeping force in Bosnia. When UN troops came to a Bosnian village the Bosnians were cheering and welcoming the soldiers. They told the soldier something along the lines of "don't ever leave! The moment you leave the killing will start again!" Its been almost a decade since UN troops went in and there is no word on when they will get out. Iraq is much bigger than Bosnia and, cold-blooded as it may sound, the US may not be able to fund an indefinite occupation of Iraq.
Except that if we leave they won't be left alone. We'll be giving them to the Iranians.
The Iranians are one of our real problems. The long term goal is to turn Iraq into a weapon against Iran and radical islam. But first we must make them strong.
It can be done... they get stronger every day. Every day the Iranians have to try harder to screw things up. Currently that's no so much a problem for htem as they have resources to burn. But we're squeezing Iran. Slowly choking them. And they'll have less resources for that sort of thing into the future. Especially as Iraq becomes strong enough to deal with the more insidious elements. Iraq should become an Arab Israel. A fortress of freedom in a sea of fanatic death squads. And being arab... and muslim... they will not be able to attack it as being "jewish" or some racist element.
Even if we could, those soldiers would not be available should they desperately be needed somewhere (like in Afghanistan or if a convetional war with China broke out). In the end those troops will HAVE to leave. And if the Iraqis can't reconcile their differences, then the only difference of when we leave is how many American dead is added to the Iraqi dead. The only course which I believe has even the slight possibility of forming a stable non-dictatorial Iraq is Joe Biden's loose federation plan. I don't believe the chances are good that it will work, but that is the only plan which I know of that I would be willing to keep US troops in Iraq for, at least for a while.
If in three or four years Iraq still needs US forces policing the streets then I'll admit it's time to go. By then we should be able to pull back to staging basis that make surgical strikes on enemy hot spots or simply make it clear to Iran that it cannot survive an invasion.
Then 10 years after that we should be able to have a few bases that exist purely to serve our own interests in the area while Iraq more or less able to take care of itself.
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Modern Islam = Nazi party.
No... radical islamofacists can be called nazis... but islam itself can't be. You've crossed the line.
Just wait until Packistan gives someone else the Bomb, like they have givin the ability (how to)to build one to Iran.
We'll cross that bridge when we come to it. It important to walk the line between order and chaos.
Order allows for growth... for health... and chaos allows for learning and evolution... change.
We have had quite a bit of chaos lately... A bit or order would do us all well. Stabilize all situations as best as possible and try to calm everything down. Changing things isn't as important right now as simply holding things together and keeping people safe enough for there to be some healing.
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Say rather how long until we teach those idiots not to use (naked) force as political tools. I sincerely doubt anyone, even the biggest of idiots, thinks for a second that the democratic and republican parties could ever be "reconciled". Yeah, I know, thats not really a valid analogy, but teaching them to work from within the framework of a government is a much better (and possible) option than trying to get them to get along. If nothing else, when a new group arises you don't have to do it all over again.
That's an interesting point. Channel the conflict into democracy... interesting.