Bombs away
In response to today’s news that “U.S. launches largest Iraq air assault in 3 years,” MSC writes a powerful diary containing scripture plus photos.
read more...In response to today’s news that “U.S. launches largest Iraq air assault in 3 years,” MSC writes a powerful diary containing scripture plus photos.
read more...In the midst of today’s enthusiastic hubbub that Al Gore is likely to endorse Howard Dean for the Democratic presidential nomination, Nathan in MN at Daily Kos provides my favorite quote of the day —
Dean’s campaign is not just about changing presidents, it is about changing the entire social fabric of this country.
Yes. The whole feel of this emerging drama is mercifully different than in 2000. There is pneuma in it this time, I think.
Thanks, Nathan.
2003-12-09 update: Indeed it’s happened, and I am jubilant about what an ascendant Dean candidacy means; the whole phenomenon is breathed through with hope.
As reported by CNN, Al Gore endorses Howard Dean —
Gore said part of the reason he chose to endorse Dean was his ability to appeal to the nation’s “grassroots” elements, a reference to Dean’s success in organizing and raising funds on the Internet and in small voter gatherings.
The Dean phenomenon has proven that grassroots works. You can, I can, anyone can truly make a difference. This is, in fact, what democracy is. $2000-per-plate campaign fundraisers as the price of admission — what you have to pay to play, which means hardly any of us can play — have now become optional.
Side benefit to this grassroots approach:
There is much less beholden-to-big-money sludge accumulating in this campaign.
Gore also praised Dean’s opposition to the U.S.-led war in Iraq. The former vice president called the Iraq war a “catastrophic mistake” by the Bush administration, a move that leaves the United States less effective in the nation’s battle against terrorism. …
“He was the only major candidate who made the correct judgment about the Iraq war,” Gore said. “And he had the insight and the courage to say and do the right thing. And that’s important because those judgments — that basic common sense — is what you want in a president.”
Yes, sound judgment arising from basic common sense is what I want. It is a baseline requirement in a president.
Our societal abandonment of basic common sense, a lapse we displayed so vividly in the buildup to this Iraq debacle, will be markedly less likely in the future, I think, if we’re listening to truth-telling, insightful, courageous, sensible elected leaders who credibly exercise a commitment to democracy and social justice. I am certain we’re not stupid, but we are too easily duped. It’s a bug, and we can fix it.
“When we set this event up,” Dean said to loud laughter at the rally’s start, “I had absolutely no idea that we were going to have the elected president of the United States here with us today.”