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Commentary: Why a Liberal Supports Bush's War (Very Moving)
Insight Magazine ^ | 4/10/2003 | Jeffrey Scott Shapiro

Posted on 04/17/2003 8:14:19 AM PDT by winner3000

Two years ago I voted for Vice President Al Gore in the 2000 presidential election. Upon George W. Bush's ascension into the White House, I found myself furious with him and vowed I would do whatever I could to campaign for the next future Democratic presidential candidate in 2004.

Today, I am convinced that Bush may go down in history as one of America's greatest presidents.

There's an old saying - a man doesn't make history - history makes the man. Nothing could be truer in the presidency of George W. Bush. When our enemies struck us in the heart and soul of our nation, we mourned. And when we realized that nearly 3000 of our fellow American brothers and sisters were murdered, we cried.

But when our president set foot upon the crumbled steel and shattered glass of the World Trade Center, he reminded us of our greatness and we cheered. It was at that moment, that this young Texas governor truly became the President of the United States and won the mandate and the hearts of the American people.

In the wake of Sept. 11, only one country had the audacity not to lower its embassy flag to half-mast. Expressing no sense of compassion, offering no words of support, Iraq flew its flag high and mighty as it's black and white stripes and emboldened green stars waved proudly in the New York City wind.

Since Sept. 11, the president has tried to make a case to the American people that our nation must remove Saddam Hussein from power. Although he convinced Congress, he failed to win the popular momentum of the American people and the world community. Forced to contend with an ineffective United Nations that refused to enforce its own resolutions, the president moved forward with the support of only a few democratic allies.

Now, recent polls show that America's feelings on the war have changed. In fact, most television news networks now report that over 75 percent of the nation supports the war. Perhaps the proof that the president was right came when the first Iraqi citizens encountering U.S. Marines refused to fire guns but instead threw up their hands and cheered for America.

Yet despite this wave of happiness and relief sweeping through southern Iraq, my fellow liberal Democrats still contend the war is wrong. They argue that the liberation of Iraq is unjustified. Street protesters cry out that our aim is to seize oil instead of freeing innocent people who have suffered under the iron rule of a sadistic dictator.

Allow me to respond: How could you? How could you be so cowardly? How can you portray yourselves as the champions of human rights yet lack the courage to do anything about it? Are you so afraid of conflict that you lack the conviction to stand before the world and denounce evil even when it exists in its most pure form? Do you not see the torture and heartbreak of a nation in despair? Do you care? Can you not put party politics aside and support our president in this unified struggle for freedom?

According to the Foreign & Commonwealth Office of London report on Saddam Hussein's Crimes and Human Rights Abuses, the Iraqi regime has openly engaged in state-licensed rape, acid baths, electric shock, eye gouging, the piercing of hands with electric drills and mock executions. Families whose members betray Saddam are forced to watch their sisters, daughters and wives raped repeatedly by soldiers whose professional job is to "violate a woman's honor." Those who openly condemn Saddam Hussein have their tongues cut from their mouths so they can never speak again.

Citizens held captive in the Mahjar prison in Baghdad are beaten twice a day and women are regularly raped by their guards. Those locked in the prison's underground are kept in rows of rectangular steel boxes roughly the size of a coffin until they either confess or die. The boxes are opened only for one hour a day and prisoners are fed only liquids to stay alive.

The human rights abuses perpetuated by Saddam Hussein and his regime go beyond the pale of cruelty. They are inhumane, incomprehensible and criminal. How can we, as Americans let such cruelty stand? Should we cower away at the fear of losing troops and surrender our resolve because we are without a quick and painless victory?

Think for a moment what America would be like today if President Lincoln had hesitated to send Union troops to free the slaves in the south. The Civil War was long and harsh, costing our nation the lives of hundreds of thousands. Yet, by challenging the Confederacy, Lincoln completed the next stage of the American Revolution and ended the diabolical institution of slavery.

I can think of no other place more sacred in this country than the temple we call the Lincoln Memorial. I will never forget how I felt as a child when I first gazed up at the marble frame of President Lincoln as he sat silently on his throne. It was a spiritual feeling I had never felt before in my life and it is something that I will never forget.

Although slavery has been abolished in America it still exists in many dark corners of the globe. Iraq is one of those places.

In the wake of Iraq's misery, one man rose above all others and said there would be no more. Many people listened to the cries of human rights organizations across the globe, but only one man did anything about it. Like President Lincoln before him, one man put the cause of freedom above himself and his political career. One man chose to liberate the people of Iraq when the world condemned him for it. One man initiated the next frontier of the American Revolution because he knew that revolution will not be over until every human being on this planet is free.

War is a necessary function of freedom. Those who enslave others must be forced to step down from their despotic positions of power. They will not simply relinquish it. Although it was unpopular to do so, President Bush had the heart to do the right thing. He took action. He sent troops to free innocent people. He knew what it was to truly love humanity, and for that, the president has my admiration and respect. More importantly, he now has my vote.

Jeffrey Scott Shapiro is an investigative reporter who covered the Sept. 11 attacks in New York City. He is now studying law at the University of Florida and can be reached at jbsavenger@aol.com.


TOPICS: Editorial
KEYWORDS: bush; jeffreyshapiro; liberal; liberalcaseforwar; vote
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To: T'wit
I hope we dig out the truth.

Me, too, but I'm not holding my breath. Consider: Illegal registrations, registrations of drunkards and mental incompetents, and immigration scandals (the worst, because they are not reversible). Has GWB shown any inclination to seriously control the borders and control immigration to a legal and assimilable level?

Please understand that I think GWB is FAR preferable to any alternative in sight, but I don't see him (or Ashcroft) getting to the bottom of the many voting irregularities that occurred, or the causes that make future ones likely.

21 posted on 04/17/2003 8:56:08 AM PDT by Pearls Before Swine (South-south-west, south, south-east, east....)
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To: Mister Baredog; ohioWfan; rintense; Howlin; Mo1; gramho12; Miss Marple; kayak; Kath; ...
Do you care? Can you not put party politics aside and support our president in this unified struggle for freedom?

No they cannot. They are incapable of thinking in non partisan terms. Everything to the liberals and the Democrats is about power. Even though they have lost it they refuse to accept it. They Democrats are morally bankrupt.

WAY TO GO W PING!

22 posted on 04/17/2003 8:58:53 AM PDT by Wphile (Keep the UN out of Iraq)
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To: winner3000
Most liberals I know who have not given up supporting Saddam in disgust found themselves trapped in that rather anomalous role by two things: hatred (the word is not too strong) of Bush, and a cultural relativism that forced them to take a broad view of Saddam's known violations of human rights until the specifics became undeniable. In addition there is a Vietnam-era antiwar fantasy that has become ingrained in liberal mythology that trended them away from military activity of any sort at any time.

But most of my liberal friends found Saddam simply too repugnant to support for long even against their Republican enemies, and largely because he ran against the grain of other core liberal tenets: feminism, antimilitarism, and a distaste for police states that runs across the American political spectrum. True believers that are still active in the antiwar movement have incorporated serious denial about these things or have desperately clung to a relativism that projects such evils on Bush and the Republicans that Saddam isn't much of a monster by comparison. That, of course, is undergoing shocks to the foundation each time an underground prison opens up or its occupants take the microphone.

23 posted on 04/17/2003 9:00:31 AM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: winner3000
What a GREAT piece!
24 posted on 04/17/2003 9:03:06 AM PDT by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet (Did you liberals say something? It's all just clicks and buzzes over here.)
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To: jim35
You had the wisdom to look at what you had historically believed and realize that the party had changed.

So many just hold to what they knew the party to be as they grew up. Sadly - that party has been taken over by what I believe are socialists.
25 posted on 04/17/2003 9:04:14 AM PDT by ClancyJ
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To: smalltowns
Thank you for having the wisdom to look at what was actually going on in the Democrats mad scramble for power.
26 posted on 04/17/2003 9:05:37 AM PDT by ClancyJ
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To: jim35
Congratulations on leaving the Dems. Better late than never. My own evolution was a thirty year process starting with reading Solzhenitsyn's Gulag trilogy and finally being pushed over the fence by Clinton. But the Dems are also not the same party they were forty years ago. Until Carter, most Dems prez candidates tried to out-hawk the Republicans. Abortion, Gay rights, and food-nazism weren't even on the table. I firmly believe many Dems, like my parents, still think that their party is the party that looks out for the common man and cares for the underdog. They simply do not understand how far left their party has tilted.

And many more realize it, but don't have the courage of their convictions to change. My 83 year old father is a devout Catholic, pro-life, pro-gun, anti-affirmative action, pro-military (he's an ex-Army drill sergeant), pro-death penalty, and even anti-union. But he votes for Dems every election. I've told him he must think FDR is still the president.

27 posted on 04/17/2003 9:06:06 AM PDT by driftless ( For life-long happiness, learn how to play the accordion.)
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To: winner3000
Great post. I hope someone puts it on DU - love to see THAT reaction!!!
28 posted on 04/17/2003 9:12:38 AM PDT by rocky88
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To: ClancyJ
How could you? How could you be so cowardly? How can you portray yourselves as the champions of human rights yet lack the courage to do anything about it?

Awesome!!!!

29 posted on 04/17/2003 9:13:43 AM PDT by thepatriot1
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To: goodnesswins
I have found the likeness valid as well. Lincoln fought to save the Union, and is best remembered for freeing the slaves. Bush fought to protect the Union, but will likely be best remembered for freeing the Iraqis.

It is unfortunate that the world community takes no interest in freeing people in such nations. North Korea, Syria, Iran, China, Cuba, various African countries, etc. The list is long. But freedom is making progress. May it ever do so.
30 posted on 04/17/2003 9:18:27 AM PDT by TheDon ( It is as difficult to provoke the United States as it is to survive its eventual and tardy response)
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To: TheDon
Bush fought to protect the Union, but will likely be best remembered for freeing the Iraqis.

The people of Afghanistan might want an honorable mention. And to think BUSH has almost 6 years to go!

31 posted on 04/17/2003 9:25:08 AM PDT by Mister Baredog ((They wanted to kill 50,000 of us on 9/11, we will never forget!))
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To: driftless
"Dems, like my parents, still think that their party is the party that looks out for the common man and cares for the underdog."

Many people certainly do think that way. It is probably worth noting that most liberals explain their sympathy for leftist politics and "social justice" (aka "socialism," IMO) exactly the same way.

They don't quite get the point that when government begins to take responsibility for your life, they also begin to take control of your life. Once government and bureaucracy are able to make arbitrary decisions about the lives of their subjects, which they do in their pursuit of social engineering, the day approaches when government and bureaucracy have unlimited power.

32 posted on 04/17/2003 9:26:27 AM PDT by Sam Cree (Liberals are the axis of evil.)
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To: winner3000
I can think of no other place more sacred in this country than the temple we call the Lincoln Memorial. I will never forget how I felt as a child when I first gazed up at the marble frame of President Lincoln as he sat silently on his throne. It was a spiritual feeling I had never felt before in my life and it is something that I will never forget.

I had the same feeling while I was there. To see his image, and then read his speech on the wall to his left.. it brought tears to my eyes, I actually cried.

33 posted on 04/17/2003 9:48:02 AM PDT by Paradox
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To: jim35
During political arguments, I found that I couldn't justify my positions, logically. Ever. I can't believe I was ever a liberal. Mostly, I attribute my past liberalism to ignorance. I thought the Democrat party was the party of freedom. What a fool I was.

There are many of us with basically this same story. A Democrat at birth, I was one of those smarmy, pseudointellectual Liberals. I always dismissed the Right as a bunch of mean old Stupid people. I hardly engaged in real debate with any of them, I just ASSUMED they were wrong because, well, they were mean and stupid, as I saw on TV shows and the movies.

Then one day, I engaged a conservative (libertarian actally) in a gun control debate, and, I actually LOST. That is, for once, I tried to use Reason and Logic (I was always a fan of Spock), and I LOST!?

I felt sick, physically ill. Was it the humiliation? Was it the sheer SHOCK of having my world view challenged? I dont know, but that day began my slow metamorphosis.

Sometimes, getting over the cognitive dissonance is an exceedingly difficult thing to do.

34 posted on 04/17/2003 9:57:38 AM PDT by Paradox
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To: winner3000
grump bump
35 posted on 04/17/2003 9:58:43 AM PDT by grumple
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To: winner3000
Lincoln and W have something in common. They are both Republicans.
36 posted on 04/17/2003 9:59:20 AM PDT by Cacique
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To: Wphile
Allow me to respond: How could you? How could you be so cowardly? How can you portray yourselves as the champions of human rights yet lack the courage to do anything about it? Are you so afraid of conflict that you lack the conviction to stand before the world and denounce evil even when it exists in its most pure form? Do you not see the torture and heartbreak of a nation in despair? Do you care? Can you not put party politics aside and support our president in this unified struggle for freedom?

No because they like Commie Dictatorships ..

37 posted on 04/17/2003 10:18:56 AM PDT by Mo1 (I'm a monthly Donor .. You can be one too!)
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To: Coop
"That's why so many protesting liberals out on the street are high school and college students. They really don't know any better..."

How true. A little thing called "reality" has a way of opening the eyes of many misguiuded youngsters.

A favorite Churchill quote:

"If you're 20 and conservative, you have no heart. If you're 40 and liberal, you have no head."

38 posted on 04/17/2003 10:29:34 AM PDT by LincolnLover
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To: LincolnLover
Yep! I like that quote, as well as the one that says:

A conservative is simply a liberal who has been mugged!

39 posted on 04/17/2003 10:34:53 AM PDT by Coop (God bless our troops!)
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To: LincolnLover
A favorite Churchill quote:

"If you're 20 and conservative, you have no heart. If you're 40 and liberal, you have no head."

Churchill never said it. It's not clear who did. And in any case, to Churchill, "Liberal" and "Conservative" essentially meant the opposite of what they do to Americans.

Snidely

40 posted on 04/17/2003 11:49:57 AM PDT by Snidely Whiplash
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