Sunday, November 12, 2006

It's the War, Stupid

To me it seemed pretty clear. The recent election seemed to be, in the main, a repudiation of President Bush's war in Iraq. This "faucet dripping blood" (to steal Paul Harvey's description of Vietnam before American blood flow became a gush) is going nowhere, is doing us--and the Iraqis--no good, and is not going to do us any good. It's the biggest of two losing wars we're currently conducting, and our Prexy seems to want us to be in two more. Just today he was in Seoul attempting to pressure South Korea to apply sanctions against North Korea. As well, an attack on Iran any day by either ourselves or Israel would not come as a great shock.

American voters are aware that the reasons given for invading Iraq were bogus. Our body count, now approaching 3000, is published regularly. And we can extrapolate to estimate roughly the number of those troops who have been severly maimed. How many blinded? How many limbs blown off? How many vegetables? And for what? For nothin', that's what.

Come January, what are the victorious Democrats going to do about it? Very little if anything, I'm afraid. Now both parties are denying that the war was a major concern of the electorate. George W. Bush is even talking of throwing another division or two into the fight. The Democrats are claiming what we, the voters, were really saying was that what we truly want is more of their grand socialistic schemes, what our biggest concern about our nation is is that the minimum wage is a bit too low. How crazy. And the faucet keeps dripping. For how long? For how long? And for what? Specifically now, tell us for what.

I Wasn't Going To Waste My Vote

You know, the Democrats will in power and make everything worse, so people throw them out of office by electing Republicans. But, of course, things continue to get worse and they, the Republicans, end up being replaced by Democrats again. And so it goes. I, then, didn't want to waste my vote this time by picking anybody in either major party.

The election day was last Tuesday, but I voted pretty early during the early voting period. The Libertarian party is the only party other than the main two to get on the ballot in Texas. That was good enough for me. I pressed the button for the straight Libertarian ticket. And I only overrode it in three places. First, I voted for Ron Paul to stay in congress. I'm go glad we got moved into District 14 in the last redistricting. Second, I picked independent Kinky Friedman for govenor of Texas. The Houston Chronicle called him totally unqualified. Coming from them, I'd say it was a pretty strong positive recommendation. An entertainer, Kinky calls his band the "Texas Jewboys." You just have to go for somebody like that. And Kinky was the only real independent in the race. And finally I voted for another Republican for Land Commissioner. He's Jerry Patterson, a fellow Sons of Confederate Veterans member.

No, I don't really feel too guilty about voting for those two Republicans.