The Bungled War
by Charley Reese
March 24, 2008
We have passed the
five-year anniversary of George W. Bush's bungled war in Iraq. What has it
gained the American people? I'm afraid the answer is nothing. Let's look at the
accomplishments.
We delivered a new ally to
Iran. We lost nearly 4,000 American lives and suffered another 29,000 wounded.
We spent $400 billion, by Pentagon accounting. We increased the federal deficit
to $9 trillion. We've made the Middle East more, not less, unstable. American
prestige is in the trash can. Oil is more than $100 a barrel. The military is
strained to the breaking point, so we are now recruiting high-school dropouts
and people with criminal records. The American economy is on the tipping point
of disaster. Bush's disapproval rating is at 65 percent.
Iraq is by no means stable.
The destruction of infrastructure and loss of life in Iraq have, many say,
permanently wrecked the country. The so-called rebuilding of Iraq has, from the
beginning, been a cluster-blunder marked by greed, corruption, no-bid contracts
and incompetence. To a large extent, we have lost our economic independence.
Most of the brands you see advertised on television are Japanese; most of the
stuff we buy is made in China. We are the biggest debtor nation in the world.
The product of our public education system sucks when compared with most of the
industrial world. If it weren't for foreigners with Ph.D.'s in the sciences and
engineering, many of our faculties would be lacking enough warm bodies to teach.
You might think about that before you gripe about Muslims. The dollar has lost
so much purchasing power, foreigners are beginning to demand payment in
euros.
We've had some incompetents
as president. I've always thought Jimmy Carter was the champion incompetent, but
by golly he's been dethroned by George Bush. The Chinese, the Japanese and the
Russians think we are stupid. They may be right at the present time, but
America's ace in the hole has always been the ability to change. We do not face
a single insoluble problem.
However, since all of our
problems are self-created, we are going to have to change ourselves in order to
solve them. I won't say, as Henry Hull said in an old movie about Jesse James,
that the first thing we have to do is take all the lawyers out in the street and
shoot them down like dogs. I will say we should close about three-quarters of
the law schools in the U.S. We already have a surplus of lawyers, far more than
any other three nations combined. Lawyers do not create wealth; they transfer it
from their clients to themselves.
On the other hand,
engineers and scientists, of which we have a shortage, do create wealth. I once
argued that a new American missile should be sited on law-school campuses on the
grounds that their destruction would at least provide a silver lining to a
nuclear war. Lawyer-politicians in Washington, however, thought cornfields in
the Middle West were more expendable than law schools. Therefore, one thing you
can do is make a solemn pledge to never vote for a lawyer running for public
office.
We also need to regain the civic courage that our ancestors had. That means the
courage to face tough questions without regard for the special pleaders who
claim they will be "offended" if you discuss it. It means the courage to demand
of the schools that they educate and not entertain students. It means the
courage to demand that students study and study hard, because learning is hard
work. It means the courage, if necessary, to toss the television and the
electronic games in the garbage can. And it's necessary if parents can't control
the amount of time their children spend on these time-killers.
Lastly, we should all post
on our refrigerators the immortal words of Pogo Possum when he said, "We have
met the enemy and he is us."
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