Originally posted by Ogie Oglethorpe
I see now,
Bravery equates to intelligence.
If one is smart enough to see that the fight is nonwinnable soon enough, then one is brave by not fighting.
OTOH, If one is unwise enough to attempt to fight the inevitable then one is a coward.
Finally, some would argue Clinton was brave to fight the good fight against the evil vindictive repubs.
Got it.
I see now,
Bravery equates to intelligence.
If one is smart enough to see that the fight is nonwinnable soon enough, then one is brave by not fighting.
OTOH, If one is unwise enough to attempt to fight the inevitable then one is a coward.
Finally, some would argue Clinton was brave to fight the good fight against the evil vindictive repubs.
Got it.
Had Nixon done the same path as McGreevey, I'd give him some marks for courage. Had, when the scandal broke, he had fessed up and stepped down, sure, I'd say he acted with some bravery. But he did nothing of the kind and put the country through the wringer to delay the inevitable. No, Nixon wasn't stupid, he was just power-hungry.
McGreevey's political future was by no means assuredly defunct, as far as we know. Even moreso not to the degree that he would be unable to finish his term. I'm sure many people, had they been his position (like Nixon, Clinton), would have clung on longer and tried to fight it, draggin the state through the mud.
So, Ogie, were McGreevey's reasonings as he stated instead of out of political cowardice, would appearances be any different? If not, isn't your harping on it just, oh, politically-motivated speculation? Seems so!
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