Saturday, May 24, 2008

Karl Rove and the Right Have Blinders On

So, here's an editorial from Karl Rove in the Wall Street Journal. I'm going to examine some of the details of this editorial. It's baffling how blind those people are who agree with our current policies. They can't seem to view the past with critical eyes, admit that they were wrong, and try to figure out how best to go about fixing things, which will obviously be no easy task, but will certainly be much harder if we--to use a phrase once widely used by the Bush administration, now abandoned--stay the course.



One of Iran's top foreign policy goals is a precipitous U.S. withdrawal from Iraq. This happens to be Mr. Obama's top foreign policy goal, too. Why should Iran or other rogue states alter their behavior if Mr. Obama gives them what they want, without
preconditions?


Does Karl Rove think that Obama's--and many others--foreign policy of leaving Iraq is based on Iran's wishes? Has it maybe crossed his mind that this is the wish of a majority of U.S. citizens: to get out of this war that Karl Rove had so much influence in creating? Wouldn't it be succumbing to Iran or other rogue states if the U.S. started making decisions based on those countries and in lieu of what is best for us?



Is he so naïve to think he has a unique ability to make this
even clearer?


Can someone show me what Rove was saying back during the Clinton administration, please? This is a lame way of trying to look like he is bipartisan on this issue, while being able to attack the current Democrat in his sights. "Oh, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush delivered this message, but Obama is naïve." I'm sure Rove was never full of compliments for Clinton's foreign policy. That is, until it is convenient to him.


He also needs to explain why unconditional, unilateral meetings with Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad or North Korea's Kim Jong Il will not deeply unsettle our allies.


What allies? Don't you think we've already unsettled our allies by starting a war that has put the whole world at greater risk? A war to which our allies have sent troops, and therefore, lost troops.

And, in closing:


If Mr. Obama fails to do so, voters may come to believe that he is asking them to accept that he has a "Secret Plan," and that he is hopelessly out of his depth on national security.


Hmmm, interesting. Anyone know any other people who are secretive about their tactics? How many times have we been subject to the idea that revealing certain aspects of the Bush administration would hurt national security, and therefore, have to remain secret, knowledge privy to the small few "protecting" our nation.

As far as national security goes, well, this topic has been discussed a myriad of times, but here's an article about how we are, in fact, not safe.

I tried to read this with an open mind, partly out of respect for the person who sent it to me, partly because there was an ernest request from the person who sent it to her, acknowledging his understanding that Rove came from the Right, but pleading to try to see his "wisdom." So, I tried. Maybe I'm not capable anymore, because this is just the same old thing to me. Rove, like so many who share his opinions, is looking at all the wrong things. Instead of recognizing that the decisions this administration has made over the last seven years, decisions that Rove had a very large part in making, have not made the world better, nor our country safer. If fact, they have done the opposite. To state explicitly that a new approach is naive, is to imply that the former approach was not. And, I for one can think of no better word to describe the Bush presidency.

(There are just too many gems in this Karl Rove editorial. I keep going back and finding more and more issues; there's something wrong with damn near every sentence. Like this, referring to Libya:

These programs, incidentally, were more advanced than Western intelligence thought.


So, let me get this straight: Libya worse than we thought; Iraq, not actually as bad (no WMD). Intersting.

And lastly, this:

Reagan knew he must not squander the prestige of the American presidency and the authority of the United States by meaningless meetings that serve only as propaganda victories for our adversaries.


No, the best way to do that is through meaningless wars that serve only to make a few men rich and alienate us from the rest of the world.

Unbelievable.)

Thursday, May 22, 2008

If You Don't Know, Now You Know

In case anyone was wondering, this is how you do it. Just in case you were wondering.

How You Do It>>>

Monday, May 19, 2008

Some Sad News

St. Paul author Daniel Hardy died of a heart attack on Saturday (Read his obituary here).

Daniel had been working on a book about a man who he thought--and had pretty strong evidence to back it up--was the basis for Fitzgerald's Gatsby. According to the obituary Daniel had just finished the book, which is little consolation, but if you are involved with writing, you know that this fact offers at least some.

I had talked to Daniel about possibly excerpting part of this book in InDigest when talks with publishers got further along. According to the obituary, his wife, Mary, is going to try to publish the book posthumously. I hope she can. I was always severely interested in Daniel's updates on the progress of the book. I would see him in a local coffee shop or bookstore and he would excitedly--well, as excitedly as he got, he seemed a pretty laid back guy--tell me some far fetched story that he had learned through his research about his Gatsby's escapades.

It really does seem like a fascinating book. Maybe InDigest will still have the opportunity to publish an excerpt.

But that's for another time.

Now is a time to offer our condolences. To say our thoughts are with all of Dan's loved ones. To mourn the loss of a literary St. Paulite. And to celebrate his life's work and passion.

Sunday, May 18, 2008

Saturday, May 17, 2008

To Save Myself Some Time...


I'm just going to re-post something from another blog I blog on. Blog.

A travel diary with Sam Osterhout and Geoff Herbach at The Front List, brought to you by mnartists.org. The two are traveling the country in honor of Geoff's first novel, The Miracle Letters of T. Rimberg, and will be at Common Good Books on June 12 for a welcome-home bash. If you're in the Twin Cities, you should definitely come by.

About Me

David Luke Doody is a freelance writer and editor. He is a founding editor of InDigest Magazine (www.indigestmag.com), an online literary magazine and the blog editor for Guernica Magazine (www.guernicamag.com). His writing and interviews have appeared in those magazines as well as in The Huffington Post, mnartists.org, The Minnesota Twins Yearbook, and Intentionally Urban Magazine, among others.

This is how my nephew loves me

This is how my nephew loves me

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