Everyone:
I mean, c'mon, am I the only one who is beginning to think that this might be the case?
How did I get into this mind-set? Well, I began thinking this way in the weeks leading up to the 2004 presidential election in the United States, when bin Laden released one of his "infamous" audiotapes threatening to do this and that. Not only did that help Bush by showing the American electorate — well, those who bothered to vote — that the author of Sept. 11, 2001, was still out there, but it also helped bin Laden when Bush began using that tape as an example of why his administration should remain in power to pursue the war on terrorism (is that trademarked yet?).
Basically, the tape got Bush's supporters — Christian fundamentalists and otherwise — up in a lather and, when Bush used that tape to do whatever it was he did to hit al-Qaida and its allies, it got all the Islamic fundamentalists up in a lather for bin Laden.
Hmm. Does anyone see where I'm going with this? It seems like Bush and bin Laden depend on each other in order to rile up their base, which then ensures that there'll be no end to the war on terrorism in the foreseeable future.
Fast-forward to now. Another bin Laden audiotape surfaces, where he's once again threatening the U.S. and its interests. Now Bush is using this as part of his arsenal for defending the domestic spying program. Odds are operations are under way along the Pakistani border and elsewhere in the world that are riling up Islamic fundies once again, thereby helping bin Laden.
I don't think any of this is intentional by any means, but what it reveals to me is a worrisome picture, one where there's a never-ending war until one side utterly wipes out the other, and you're sh*t out of luck if you're caught in the cross-fire.
It seems folks will be forced into the extremes in order to avoid getting caught in the cross-fire. Which, of course, harkens back to a belief I've held for some time — extremists who turn to subversion, intimidation and violence to get their way, no matter their ideology, are harmful in the long run to humanity's future.
Why can't more folks be like Mahatma Gandhi or Martin Luther King Jr.? Sure, they had their personal foilables, but at least they brought about change with something other than the business end of a weapon.
Gatekeeper
P.S. And, yes, I'm aware that I did go off on a somewhat unrelated tangent toward the end.
I mean, c'mon, am I the only one who is beginning to think that this might be the case?
How did I get into this mind-set? Well, I began thinking this way in the weeks leading up to the 2004 presidential election in the United States, when bin Laden released one of his "infamous" audiotapes threatening to do this and that. Not only did that help Bush by showing the American electorate — well, those who bothered to vote — that the author of Sept. 11, 2001, was still out there, but it also helped bin Laden when Bush began using that tape as an example of why his administration should remain in power to pursue the war on terrorism (is that trademarked yet?).
Basically, the tape got Bush's supporters — Christian fundamentalists and otherwise — up in a lather and, when Bush used that tape to do whatever it was he did to hit al-Qaida and its allies, it got all the Islamic fundamentalists up in a lather for bin Laden.
Hmm. Does anyone see where I'm going with this? It seems like Bush and bin Laden depend on each other in order to rile up their base, which then ensures that there'll be no end to the war on terrorism in the foreseeable future.
Fast-forward to now. Another bin Laden audiotape surfaces, where he's once again threatening the U.S. and its interests. Now Bush is using this as part of his arsenal for defending the domestic spying program. Odds are operations are under way along the Pakistani border and elsewhere in the world that are riling up Islamic fundies once again, thereby helping bin Laden.
I don't think any of this is intentional by any means, but what it reveals to me is a worrisome picture, one where there's a never-ending war until one side utterly wipes out the other, and you're sh*t out of luck if you're caught in the cross-fire.
It seems folks will be forced into the extremes in order to avoid getting caught in the cross-fire. Which, of course, harkens back to a belief I've held for some time — extremists who turn to subversion, intimidation and violence to get their way, no matter their ideology, are harmful in the long run to humanity's future.
Why can't more folks be like Mahatma Gandhi or Martin Luther King Jr.? Sure, they had their personal foilables, but at least they brought about change with something other than the business end of a weapon.
Gatekeeper
P.S. And, yes, I'm aware that I did go off on a somewhat unrelated tangent toward the end.
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