RSN Fundraising Banner
FB Share
Email This Page
add comment
Politics
Nobel Peace Prize Winner Bombs Afghan Hospital Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=20877"><span class="small">William Boardman, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Thursday, 08 October 2015 08:40

Boardman writes: "No, it's not really fair to blame President Obama personally for the waves of aerial bombing that took more than an hour on October 4 to destroy a neutral hospital operated by Doctors Without Borders in Kunduz, Afghanistan. But it's totally fair to blame President Obama for giving the world another six years of President Bush's policy of bringing chaos and devastation to whatever part of the Middle East happens to be annoying the folks who have decided these things since 2001."

President Barack Obama. (photo: AP)
President Barack Obama. (photo: AP)


Nobel Peace Prize Winner Bombs Afghan Hospital

By William Boardman, Reader Supported News

08 October 15

 

Tabloid headline (above) is a crystallization of present reality

o, it’s not really fair to blame President Obama personally for the waves of aerial bombing that took more than an hour on October 4 to destroy a neutral hospital operated by Doctors Without Borders in Kunduz, Afghanistan, even though it appears on its face to be yet another US war crime.

But it’s totally fair to blame President Obama for giving the world another six years (so far) of President Bush’s policy of bringing chaos and devastation to whatever part of the Middle East happens to be annoying the folks who have decided these things since 2001. Not that it was all bread and roses before that, given the century-plus of unrelenting Western subjugation of the region by direct force and by establishing vicious proxy dictatorships (exhibit #1 is Iran).

So when Donald Trump and people like him say that the Middle East was more stable under Saddam Hussein or Muammar Gaddafi, therefore the US should be supporting Russia’s effort to keep Bashar al-Assad in power in the bits of Syria his government still controls, it makes a kind of superficial sense – unless you actually believe the region is a better place now than it was 15 years ago. And if that’s your belief, maybe someone should explain their good fortune to those millions of refugees.

Trump’s argument would have been relevant in 2001, when he had nothing useful to say in opposition to the national predation our government proudly unleashed on the world as a war on “terrorism” and then claimed as a “mission accomplished,” even though there’s still no let-up as innocent people continue to be killed by American weapons in the hands of Americans and others. In 2011, Trump was equally ineffective in opposition to US engagement in Libya. To be fair to Trump, principled opposition to America’s permanent war on largely imaginary enemies (until we attack them, creating new ones) is hard to come by, and no principled opponent of the US warfare state is presently running for president or most other offices.

At any meaningful level, Trump’s notion of “stability” is absurd except for people who can imagine it being cool to live in an unimaginably brutal police state. That’s what they had in Iraq and Libya, and the US accomplishment was making it worse for Iraqis and Libyans. Will Syrians now reap the same benefits?

Slaughtered wedding parties, maimed children – Hey, stuff happens

Just as Jeb Bush is the “stuff happens” candidate now, his brother George (like his father George) were “stuff happens” presidents. Officially, as Defense Secretary Rumsfeld said, “Stuff happens” – describing US forces who protected only themselves as looting and revenge killings went unchecked in “liberated” Iraq. Rumsfeld himself fleshed put the full cynicism of the Stuff Happens Doctrine, explaining an American mentality that continues to shape decisions of state without a trace of its inherent, ugly irony: 

“Stuff happens, and it’s untidy. Freedom’s untidy, and free people are free to make mistakes and commit crimes and do bad things. They’re also free to live their lives and do wonderful things. And that’s what’s going to happen here.”

Seriously, the US occupation makes you free. How Orwellian is that? And how’s that working out across more than 4,000 miles of aggressive US intervention, military and otherwise, from Tripoli to Kunduz? The ghastliness of American behavior around the world has been plain to anyone with the wit to look at it, as Harold Pinter did in 2005 in his Nobel acceptance speech, which has a humanity long missing from American leadership. Reviewing past American crimes, and anticipating future American crimes, Pinter referred to the pitiless American assault on Nicaragua:

“The United States finally brought down the Sandinista government. It took some years and considerable resistance but relentless economic persecution and 30,000 dead finally undermined the spirit of the Nicaraguan people. They were exhausted and poverty stricken once again. The casinos moved back into the country. Free health and free education were over. Big business returned with a vengeance. ‘Democracy’ had prevailed.

“But this ‘policy’ was by no means restricted to Central America. It was conducted throughout the world. It was never-ending. And it is as if it never happened.

“The United States supported and in many cases engendered every right wing military dictatorship in the world after the end of the Second World War. I refer to Indonesia, Greece, Uruguay, Brazil, Paraguay, Haiti, Turkey, the Philippines, Guatemala, El Salvador, and, of course, Chile. The horror the United States inflicted upon Chile in 1973 can never be purged and can never be forgiven.”

In the United States, Chile is hardly remembered and rarely discussed, except perhaps when our leaders confer honors on a fellow war criminal like Henry Kissinger.

“Hope and Change” fooled people in 2008, what will work in 2016?

Peace is not yet at hand, but the world continues to wait, rather fecklessly for the most part, while the US peace prize president pursues the same deluded war polices (sometimes watered down) that produce the same disastrous results. Meanwhile a numbed homeland populace is encouraged to fret about its own security, to accept the cost of stuff happening to other people and to ignore fifteen years of failed leadership’s repeated failures.

Still there’s some restlessness in the land and Trump speaks to that, however irrelevantly, blaming the past while offering nothing new for the future. In that, he’s not alone. No one among Republicans and Democrats takes on the US warfare state of today – that empire has no clothes and everyone admires its exceptional wardrobe. Even Bernie Sanders, with his actually revolutionary proposals on other issues, has yet do much more than imply that he might be less militaristic than the rest, which is pretty much where the Green Party is. For serious anti-militarism, one has to go to the Socialist Party, which doesn’t seem to be happening.

In late September, the Russians became at least the tenth country to send its warplanes to bomb people in Syria. Since the Russians’ targetsinclude elements of the Islamic State (aka ISIS, ISIL, Daesh, etc.), one might have expected, if not a warm welcome, at least a tacit acceptance of one more player in the crowded Syrian battlefield thatthe US holds so important, albeit so ill-defined. According to the US, the Islamic State is a grave threat to US national security, at least when its potential strength is projected uncheck into an indefinite future based on little rational analysis. For now, the Islamic States serves mainly as target practice for most any interested air force, since the Islamic State has little or no air defense and there’s no one to make any distinction between dead civilians and dead enemy combatants.

So why wouldn’t President Obama at least tolerate Russian participation in a low-cost war of attrition? After all, the Russians have a huge Muslim population in Russia and neighboring countries, a population that, if radicalized in significant numbers, really could threaten the Russian government. The cynical explanation would be that the US considers radical Islam a proprietary American enemy necessary to maintain maximum fear at home with minimum danger; any Russian poaching on our national security threat is against our rules.

Don’t do stupid stuff, like have mutually exclusive goals

More likely, Russian support for the Syrian government is resented because it exposes the pointlessness of US policy. The Russians, as well as the Iranians, are supporting Syrian president Assad, whose survival in power this long was not thought possible by the West. So US policy for ending the multi-faceted war in Syria has long required a non-negotiable precondition: that Assad must go. But that is not a negotiating position, it is a non-negotiating position, and the Russian presence makes that all the more obvious and stupid.

President Obama, having spent years doing stupid stuff all over the Middle East, responded to Russian air strikes by warning (wink, wink) the Russians that coming into Syria could lead to their being stuck in a “quagmire.” Could be. But the president did not seem to be invoking the irony of America’s primal “quagmire” in Viet-Nam. And he certainly wasn’t intentionally calling attention to his own inherited quagmires prolonged in Afghanistan and Iraq with no end in sight. Nor was he calling attention to the US role in the Yemen quagmire, which may turn out not to be a quagmire but a genocidal war.

At his October 2 press conference, the president was busy spinning reality to suit his own situation. For example, he framed Syria this way: “What started off as peaceful protests against Assad, the president, evolved into a civil war because Assad met those protests with unimaginable brutality.” How does this differ from Bahrain, where peaceful protests were met with unimaginable brutality? Well the Bahrain dictatorship survived because its allies included the US and Saudi Arabia. It’s never about good or bad, it’s always about “ours” or “theirs,” and we don’t care what unimaginable brutality it takes to care for ours. As President Obama made clear, it’s only their behavior that’s up for moral scrutiny:

“… the reason Assad is still in power is because Russia and Iran have supported him throughout this process…. They’ve been propping up a regime that is rejected by an overwhelming majority of the Syrian population because they’ve seen that he has been willing to drop barrel bombs on children and on villages indiscriminately, and has been more concerned about clinging to power than the state of his country…. And I said to Mr. Putin that I’d be prepared to work with him if he is willing to broker with his partners, Mr. Assad and Iran, a political transition – we can bring the rest of the world community to a brokered solution – but that a military solution alone, an attempt by Russia and Iran to prop up Assad and try to pacify the population is just going to get them stuck in a quagmire. And it won’t work. And they will be there for a while if they don’t take a different course.”

So the calculation for President Putin is whether his warplanes will be stuck in Syria as long as the US has been stuck in Iraq and Afghanistan, and will that be worth it? Has it been worth it to the US not to take a different course for 15 years? And what does any empire use to measure worth?

US combat role ended in Afghanistan – only it didn’t

The end of the US combat role in Afghanistan was never more real than a three-card monte hustle. The US would base more than 10,000 troops in Afghanistan indefinitely, but they wouldn’t have a “combat role” on paper. But there was never any question that these troops would be fighting whenever and wherever someone in authority considered it necessary, as authorized by the commander-in-chief. US military activity in Afghanistan in 2015 included regular air strikes against presumed “insurgents.”

Despite US and other coalition support for Afghan government forces, the Taliban made significant gains during 2015. By September, in an eerie echo of Viet-Nam, the Taliban controlled most of the Afghan countryside while the government still controlled the cities. One of those cities, Kunduz, in the northeast of the country, came under Taliban control on September 28 and has had extreme fighting ever since. US bombing of Kunduz began September 29.

Also in Kunduz, in 2011, Doctors Without Borders had established a hospital that treated anyone who was hurt: civilians as well as combatants from any side. The hospital was well marked as a hospital. Doctors Without Borders made sure that authorities on all sides, including Kabul and Washington, knew the hospital’s coordinates. It’s the only hospital of its kind in the region. It was outside the Taliban-controlled area when the US bombed it. Hospital staff notified the US and Afghan forces that they were bombing a hospital, after which the bombing continued for another half hour.

When the bombing started, there were 80 staff and 105 patients in the hospital. The death toll was 12 staff and 10 patients (three children), some of whom burned to death in their beds in the critical care unit. More than 35 others were injured. Doctors Without Borders calls the attack a war crime. And they have closed the hospital.

The first US lie in response was that they bombed the hospital because there were Taliban inside. That would still be a war crime. But there were no Taliban inside, and no Taliban shooting at Americans nearby, and there were no Americans nearby, as other US lies variously claimed. Now US officials have acknowledged that, after a “rigorous US procedure,” the US bombed the hospital intentionally.That is a war crime.

Is an unprosecuted war crime still a war crime?

So far, the American public’s reaction to this war crime is of a piece with public reaction to almost all American atrocities – stuff happens. Harold Pinter described the process a decade ago:

“It never happened. Nothing ever happened. Even while it was happening it wasn’t happening. It didn’t matter. It was of no interest. The crimes of the United States have been systematic, constant, vicious, remorseless, but very few people have actually talked about them.

“You have to hand it to America. It has exercised a quite clinical manipulation of power worldwide while masquerading as a force for universal good. It’s a brilliant, even witty, highly successful act of hypnosis.”

Why would the US, even at Afghan request, deliberately commit a war crime? A cynic might speculate that, since they were losing Kunduz to the Taliban, they might as well deny the Taliban the use of the only available hospital.

Like President Obama, Doctors Without Borders has won a Nobel Peace Prize. Unlike the president, Doctors Without Borders has not established policies responsible for killing thousands of civilians in dozens of countries.

What happened in Kunduz is dwarfed by the horrors that happen in the US-supported Saudi coalition total war on Yemen. On September 29, coalition airstrikes there killed more than 130 people in a wedding party. At his press conference three days later, the peace prize president did not have the grace to mention it, much less to call it unimaginable brutality.



William M. Boardman has over 40 years experience in theatre, radio, TV, print journalism, and non-fiction, including 20 years in the Vermont judiciary. He has received honors from Writers Guild of America, Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Vermont Life magazine, and an Emmy Award nomination from the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
Alabama Puts Up More Hurdles for Voters Print
Thursday, 08 October 2015 08:36

Excerpt: "Alabama has a long and ugly history of racial discrimination in voting. From 1965 on, at least 100 voting changes were blocked or altered by Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act."

A voter casts their ballot. (photo: Butch Dill/AP)
A voter casts their ballot. (photo: Butch Dill/AP)


Alabama Puts Up More Hurdles for Voters

By The New York Times | Editorial

08 October 15

 

arely one year after Alabama’s voter-ID law went into effect, officials are planning to close 31 driver’s license offices across the state, including those in every county in which blacks make up more than 75 percent of registered voters.

It’s ostensibly a cost-cutting effort, but coupled with the voter-ID law, these closings will make it even more difficult for many of the state’s most vulnerable voters to get one of the most common forms of identification now required to cast a vote.

Like voter-ID laws elsewhere, Alabama’s version requires voters to bring a government-issued photo ID to the polls. The rationale is that these laws are necessary to stop voter fraud. The problem is that in-person fraud — the only kind that voter-ID laws could conceivably prevent — almost never happens. Still, these laws have proliferated around the country, nearly always enacted by Republican-controlled legislatures at the expense of minorities, the poor and other groups who tend to vote Democratic.


READ MORE

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
The Gun Control Movement Needs Its Own Pro-Life Fanatics Print
Thursday, 08 October 2015 08:33

Pareene writes: "We've good reason to feel numb. After the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre, in which twenty small children were murdered, a couple of pathetically limited gun control proposals went nowhere in Congress and ten states passed 17 laws weakening gun restrictions. The gun control movement in this country is a pathetic failure."

Gun control activists march at the NRA offices on Capitol Hill. (photo: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA)
Gun control activists march at the NRA offices on Capitol Hill. (photo: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA)


The Gun Control Movement Needs Its Own Pro-Life Fanatics

By Alex Pareene, Gawker

08 October 15

 

he other day, there was a mass shooting in the United States. The president said, entirely accurately:

Somehow this has become routine. The reporting is routine. My response here at this podium ends up being routine. The conversation in the aftermath of it. We’ve become numb to this.

We’ve good reason to feel numb. After the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre, in which twenty small children were murdered, a couple of pathetically limited gun control proposals went nowhere in Congress and ten states passed 17 laws weakening gun restrictions. The gun control movement in this country is a pathetic failure.

There is, I think, only one realistic way forward for advocates of stricter gun control, and it involves adopting the tactics of one of the most despicable groups in contemporary American politics: the anti-abortion movement.

Things surely seemed similarly hopeless for the anti-abortion movement after Roe v. Wade. But within three years, with deft lobbying and the instrumental support of Catholic bishops, Congress passed the Hyde Amendment, forbidding poor women from using Medicaid to cover the cost of an abortion.

That was the prelude to a series of impressive victories. The number of abortion providers in the United States peaked in 1982, and fell precipitously over the next twenty years. By 2005, 87 percent of U.S. counties lacked an abortion provider. In 2010, a wave of ultra-conservative politicians swept into state legislatures across the country. They passed more abortion restrictions in two years than were passed in the entire previous decade.

These victories were not easy. Americans are broadly pro-choice, with a comfortable majority supporting legal abortion. But the few who ardently oppose abortion have been able to skillfully exploit a certain squeamishness most Americans feel about the procedure that leads them to tell pollsters that abortion should only be legal “in certain circumstances.” Stuck with the fact that abortions are, for the foreseeable future, a Constitutionally-protected right, the conservative movement has decided to make it as difficult as possible for as many women as possible to exercise that right.

They have succeeded, politically, in making incoherent compromises (abortion is murder but we shouldn’t jail women for it, abortion is murder but we should allow women who’ve been raped to receive abortions) sound like the “moderate” positions in the public debate. They have taken over state legislatures and the entire Republican party. They have passed broadly unconstitutional laws to force legal challenges. They have passed narrowly constitutional laws designed to make getting abortions difficult and expensive. They have intimidated and terrorized abortion providers and pregnant women. They have shut down every single clinic in Mississippi but one, and they have passed a law designed to shut that one down, too. The Supreme Court might, in its upcoming term, allow Republicans to end abortion in every state in which they hold power. If the court doesn’t do that, Republicans will just try again in a few years.

These are the political victories, again, of a tiny movement that does not actually have public opinion on its side. But they fight harder than almost any other political movement in the United States, because it is, for them, a moral crusade. If you believe, as this small core of anti-abortion crusaders do, that a fetus is a human infant, then unwavering fanaticism absolutely makes sense.

Meanwhile, a first-grader is self-evidently a human being. Yet when it comes to the slaughter of walking, talking persons, cut down helplessly by weapons specifically designed for killing, we behave as if nothing can really be done. When it comes to protecting the lives of actual children from gun violence, fanaticism seems to be in order.

This doesn’t just mean marches and protests. It means constant marches and protests, and open and blatant harassment of your political opponents. It means protesting at the homes of gun manufacturing company executives and trying to shut down gun stores. It means very publicly making a scene at as many gun shops as possible, and personally attacking—verbally, but bordering on physically—people trying to enter those stores to legally purchase guns.

After all, the point of screaming at women outside a clinic isn’t to erect a legal barrier to abortion access, it’s to prevent that woman from getting an abortion, and to dissuade others from even considering it. It’s to prevent abortion from being considered a legitimate option. Aren’t there a couple thousand gun control activists out there passionate enough to want to stand outside gun shops and provoke confrontations with open-carry wingnuts?

It also means going all-in on gore. It means waving gruesome photos of dead children in the faces of Republican legislators, gun store owners, and gun manufacturers. This is where the conservatives shine. Good liberals are too squeamish to look past the police tape. They worry that if they focus, up close and without flinching, on the goriest details of the carnage, it’ll glorify violence, or worse, inspire future killers. Maybe, but it’ll also scare the shit out of future killers’ mothers before they fill their houses with guns, to feel safe.

Anti-abortion activists revel in gore. They want to get their cameras in the room to capture the most stomach-churning images possible and broadcast them to the world. Gun control advocates hoist signs with pictures of smiling cherubic kids, taken before their lives were cut short. Anti-abortion activists put up billboards with graphic photos of blood and fetal tissue. There will need to be graphic photographs of bullet-riddled corpses. There will need to be more of this:

Our lawsuit was not frivolous. Our Jessi was shot multiple times with high-velocity, armor-piercing bullets that were designed by our military to inflict maximum damage on enemy combatants.

One of the six, steel-jacketed bullets that killed her slammed through a theater seat, entered her left eye and left a five-inch hole in her face as it blew her brains out on to the theater floor. The other five specially designed bullets tumbled when they tore through her flesh and did devastating damage to both legs, arms and intestines.

Changing things means focusing, as Slate’s Justin Peters did for years, on children who die in “accidental” gun deaths—and calling those “accidents” what they actually are: criminal negligence by irresponsible parents or guardians. It means publicizing and nationalizing every single disgusting story like this and publicly vilifying parents who keep loaded guns within the reach of children.

The one thing America’s local news is good at is scaring the hell out of parents. If television can successfully make parents nationwide terrified of the mostly imaginary threat of stranger-abductions, it can surely manage to whip up a comparable (and much more reality-based) fear that your neighbor’s kid might have easy access to a loaded handgun. The government isn’t going to seize anyone’s guns any time soon, but with a few years of concerted fear-mongering, mothers across the country could begin work on that project themselves.

If the gun control movement actually, really wants to change America’s gun culture, they will have to put the least reasonable and the least accommodating activists they can find in charge of directing the entire movement. In order to achieve a realistic outcome, the anti-gun movement needs to fight, passionately and vociferously, for an unrealistic goal. Don’t campaign to expand background checks. Fight like hell to ban all private gun sales, and watch as expanded background checks becomes a politically palatable compromise. Keep fighting, and eventually “I support banning handgun ownership for everyone besides childless victims of domestic assault” becomes the politically palatable compromise position.

These passionate activists will have to seize complete control of the Democratic Party and force it to adopt a position that is significantly more hardline than most of its actual constituents might be comfortable with, damn the supposed electoral consequences, just as the anti-abortion movement has done to the Republican Party. That means getting to the point where Democrats in Congress feel expected—effectively forced by their base—to call American small arms manufacturers and their lobbyists before Congressional committees to publicly abuse them and threaten endless, expensive investigations into their practices.

Now, in 2015, an all-encompassing and inflexible opposition to abortion is a requirement for anyone seeking office as a Republican. That is actually a recent and fairly remarkable political victory.

One generation ago, the Bush family, the standard-bearers for the Republican mainstream, were not just pro-choice, they were ardent supporters of Planned Parenthood. George H. W. Bush changed his position for political expediency, but did little to actually make the complete elimination of legal abortion more likely. George W. Bush went a bit further, signing the “partial-birth abortion” ban. Jeb Bush is even further to the right than either of them. He has promised to make opposition to Roe v Wade a litmus test for his Supreme Court nominees. An equivalent judicial litmus test for gun control is the most obvious initial demand to be made of the Democratic Party.

And until the balance of the court is shifted, there are numerous gains to be made at state and local levels, just as the anti-abortion movement chips away at abortion access, working slowly toward the big prize. Sufficiently motivated state legislatures could regulate gun sellers practically out of business. Licenses to sell guns could be made nearly impossible to obtain. Gun stores could be required to comply with onerous “security” and “safety” laws making it practically impossible to make money selling guns.

This is obvious enough stuff, and it is already happening in a (very) few liberal enclaves. It is the sort of stuff Michael Bloomberg’s anti-gun group was supposed to work toward. But Bloomberg came at the problem like a rich person: He spent a lot of money. This is, generally, a successful strategy in American politics. And Bloomberg is smart enough to spend that money building political infrastructure in various states, rather than wasting it on pointless television ads or parachuting into congressional districts to support hopeless candidates.

But the anti-gun movement doesn’t need money as much as it needs fanatics.

Almost every single clinic in the United States that performs abortions has reported experiencing at least one incident of harassment. There are 130,000 gun stores in the United States. It’s time for gun control activists to get familiar with them.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
George W. Bush Enjoying New Status as Smarter Bush Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=9160"><span class="small">Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker</span></a>   
Wednesday, 07 October 2015 13:48

Borowitz writes: "Speaking to reporters at his home in Dallas, George W. Bush said he was deriving 'quiet satisfaction' from a new poll showing that ninety-one per cent of the American people now consider him the smarter Bush."

George W. and Jeb Bush. (photo: AP)
George W. and Jeb Bush. (photo: AP)


George W. Bush Enjoying New Status as Smarter Bush

By Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker

07 October 15

 

The article below is satire. Andy Borowitz is an American comedian and New York Times-bestselling author who satirizes the news for his column, "The Borowitz Report."


fter years of being subjected to unfair ridicule, former President George W. Bush is now enjoying his newfound status as the smarter of the two Bush brothers to have achieved elected office.

Speaking to reporters at his home in Dallas, Bush said he was deriving “quiet satisfaction” from a new poll showing that ninety-one per cent of the American people now consider him the smarter Bush.

“I know that no one’s saying I’m a genius,” he said, modestly. “But I look pretty good when I’m graded on a curve.”

Bush pointed with particular pride to the fact that seventy-four per cent of those polled said that, of the two Bush brothers, he had a “far superior command of the English language.”

“When I was President, I got a lot of grief from people who didn’t think my English was too good,” he said. “I think now they’re realizing it could have been worser.”

The former President said that he hoped the American people’s view of him as the smarter Bush would soon be shared by his parents, George and Barbara Bush.

“At Thanksgiving, Mom and Dad would never let me carve the turkey because they thought I’d screw it up somehow,” he said. “Something tells me I’ll be carving that turkey this year.”

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
Ben Carson: Now Rivalling Donald Trump in the Stupid Department Print
Wednesday, 07 October 2015 13:47

Excerpt: "He's a Republican presidential candidate, you see, and is now jostling Donald Trump at the top of the polls, thanks to some rather Trumpy comments."

Republican presidential candidate Ben Carson. (photo: Carlos Osorio)
Republican presidential candidate Ben Carson. (photo: Carlos Osorio)


Ben Carson: Now Rivalling Donald Trump in the Stupid Department

By Guardian UK

07 October 15

 

The retired neurosurgeon and Republican presidential candidate is not keen on gay marriage or having a Muslim president – and now he has put his foot in it over the Oregon shooting

ame: Ben Carson.

Age: 64

Appearance: Twinkly, gentle.

Occupation: Retired neurosurgeon.

So he’s clever and kind? You’d think so, but both are now in doubt. He’s a Republican presidential candidate, you see, and is now jostling Donald Trump at the top of the polls, thanks to some rather Trumpy comments.

Such as? On being asked by Fox News how he would have handled the gunman in Oregon, who required victims to state their religion before being shot, Carson said: “Not only would I probably not cooperate with him, I would not just stand there and let him shoot me. I would say: ‘Hey, guys, everybody attack him! He may shoot me, but he can’t get us all!’”

So he’s saying that people might have saved themselves if they weren’t so spineless? Yes.

That’s tactful. It’s also ignorant, as one army veteran is in hospital after trying to attack the gunman and being shot several times.

Stupid Carson. That’s a good summary. He has also said that a Muslim would have to renounce their faith in order to become US president since, in his view, Islam is “against the rights of women, against the rights of gays … subjugates other religions, and [advocates] a host of things that are not compatible with our constitution”.

Doesn’t the constitution itself say: “No religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office”? Why yes, it does.

And what is Carson’s religion? The Seventh Day Adventist Church.

Are they against gay rights? It depends how you interpret: “Seventh-Day Adventists are opposed to homosexual practices and relationships.”

That’s not very ambiguous. In his book, America the Beautiful, Carson says that gay marriage is “a slippery slope with a disastrous ending”.

Stupid Carson. I fear so. Except he’s become incredibly popular.

How does that work? People are so disgusted with manipulative politicians that they now actually prefer incompetent ones, on the basis that you’d only say something stupid if you meant it.

Interesting logic. Can you think of any parallels in British opposition politics? No. No, I can’t.

Do say: “Guns aren’t dangerous! And anyway, I’d like to see the government try to take them away from millions of heavily armed gun-owners!”

Don’t say: “Erm …”

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
<< Start < Prev 2301 2302 2303 2304 2305 2306 2307 2308 2309 2310 Next > End >>

Page 2308 of 3432

THE NEW STREAMLINED RSN LOGIN PROCESS: Register once, then login and you are ready to comment. All you need is a Username and a Password of your choosing and you are free to comment whenever you like! Welcome to the Reader Supported News community.

RSNRSN