Email



Need a link for research? Go To:

RESEARCH LINKS & BLOGS


FIND YOUR REPRESENTATIVES
AND WRITE:

 

Congress.org

 

Senate

House of Representatives

Find Legislative Info

Vote Smart

Act Now

 


READ:

Common Dreams

CounterPunch

Media Matters

The Nation

Truthout


BLOG:

Dailykos

Firedoglake

LiberalOasis

TalkingPointsMemo

Think Progress


LISTEN:


HELP:

RED CROSS

UNICEF


RSS 2.0


Famous Quotes

"Every government degenerates when trusted to the rulers of the people alone. The people themselves, therefore, are its only safe depositories. "
Thomas Jefferson, 1781


"In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist. "
Dwight D. Eisenhower


"How many legs does a dog have if you call the tail a leg?
Four.
Calling a tail a leg doesn't make it a leg."
Abraham Lincoln


"See, in my line of work you got to keep repeating things over and over and over again for the truth to sink in, to kind of catapult the propaganda."
George W. Bush, May 24, 2005


About "Researcher"

What are you reading?


This day in history

Article of the Day

Today's birthday

Quotation of the Day

Word of the Day

From:The Free Dictionary

Monday, September 12, 2005

4 years after

From Juan Cole on Informed Comment

On top of the failures in the fight against al-Qaeda and the quagmire in Iraq, the US suffered a major blow with Hurricane Katrina and the Great Flood of 2005 in New Orleans (or what used to be New Orleans). The blow was not primarily to the US economy, which is resilient and enormous ($13 trillion?), and which will recoup-- though the economic recovery may slow. The blow was psychological and political. The abysmal job that Bush and Co. did in responding to the disaster, which cost so many lives, will not soon be forgotten. What, many security experts are asking, if this had been a terrorist strike? Unpreparedness of this epochal sort could sink the government.
Bush has given us the worst of all possible worlds-- a half-finished job against al-Qaeda, an Iraqi imbroglio that could still explode into civil or even regional war-- and which serves as an al-Qaeda recruiting tool--, a government starved for funds, an enormous windfall for the rich at the expense of the middle class (which saw average wages actually fall recently), and an inability to respond effectively to a major urban catastrophe.Four years after September 11, al-Qaeda's leadership should have been behind bars or dead.
Four years after September 11, Afghanistan should have been stabilized. Four years after September 11, the government should have been ready to save lives in an urban disaster.
Bush recently started likening his poorly conceived and misnamed "war on terror" to World War II.
What his handlers have forgotten is how long World War II lasted for the United States.
Four years.
In four years, Roosevelt and allies defeated Nazi Germany and imperial Japan. In four years, Bush hasn't managed even to corner Bin Laden and a few hundred scruffy terrorists; or to extract himself from the deserts of Iraq; or to put the government's finances in good order so that it can deal with crises like Katrina.
Four years.
I think about the victims of 9/11, and now 7/7.
We have let you down.

Comments on "4 years after"

 

post a comment