Nobody seems to be asking the hard questions, and I'm not sure why. It's a bad thing for democracy. I especially appreciated the first three questions, some of the remainder made me feel uncomfortable. But for this reason they are questions that need to be asked, because the people making the decisions have never experienced war, which is partly why they were so willing to enter into one.
Great commentary – especially in light of Scott McClellans new book.
ReplyDeleteMy comments are on his blog.
Thanks for the recommendation.
Nobody seems to be asking the hard questions, and I'm not sure why. It's a bad thing for democracy. I especially appreciated the first three questions, some of the remainder made me feel uncomfortable. But for this reason they are questions that need to be asked, because the people making the decisions have never experienced war, which is partly why they were so willing to enter into one.
ReplyDeleteBud, be honest, did you write that article? It has
ReplyDeleteyour "touch."
Sandy
No, I didn't write this. I found it only the other day at a website I stumbled upon while looking for something else.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the compliment.