Clichés
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
It's fun sometimes
to collect current clichés, which are worn-out uses of the
language, such as "at the end of the day." Why can't we
just say at twilight or after the sun sets?
Another cliché
is "you can run but you can't hide." Osama bin Laden has
disproved that, and indeed there are literally thousands of fugitives
in the U.S. who have successfully both run and hidden.
Usually when
some politician says "the reality is" or "the facts
are," the reality isn't and the facts are fiction. The Bush
administration continues to claim that Iran is pursuing a nuclear
weapon. There is no evidence to support that claim. It continues
to claim that the Iranians have called for the destruction of Israel.
They have not. They have called for a change of government in Israel.
The Republican
candidates for president, with the exception of Ron Paul, seem to
be competing to see who will start a war with Iran first. They,
like the president, repeat the same lies.
The reason
our so-called diplomacy hasn't worked is because the Bush administration
position is this: Iran, unless you stop what you are legally entitled
to do (enrich uranium for nuclear fuel), we won't talk to you about
not doing what you are legally entitled to do. You can't have talks
if your position is that the other side must give in to your demands
as a precondition.
Russian President
Vladimir Putin's recent and successful visit to Iran seems to have
so rattled Mr. Bush that he is prattling on about World War III.
If he would read the joint statement issued at the end of the meeting,
he would see that the meeting was mostly about doing business. Russia
and Iran have the right to do business with each other. Putin, who
also doesn't want Iran to develop nuclear weapons, said making threats
is counterproductive. He also said that he sees no evidence that
the Iranians are pursuing nuclear weapons.
Bush, as if
to contrast his lack of knowledge, said that people who want to
avoid World War III should want to prevent Iran from getting "the
knowledge" to make a nuclear weapon. That knowledge has been
available to practically the whole world for decades. The real difficulty
is the engineering.
Bush is starting
to scare me. His disconnect with reality seems to be growing. Hopefully,
he's not really delusional; it's just the way he mangles the English
language that creates that impression.
We should
keep in mind that Iraq's Saddam Hussein kept saying he had no weapons
of mass destruction and the Bush administration kept insisting that
he did and was about to use them on us. Turns out, of course, Saddam
was telling the truth and the Bush administration was not.
Now the Iranians
keep saying they are not pursuing nuclear weapons and have no desire
to acquire nuclear weapons, while the Bush administration keeps
insisting that they are and that Iran represents an imminent danger
to Israel and to the U.S. As sad as it is to say, the credibility
at this point rests with the Iranians.
And
if you are curious as to why the Bush administration and the Republican
presidential hopefuls are so fixated on the alleged threat posed
by Iran, it's because Israel is pushing the U.S. to attack Iran.
Israel, unfortunately, seems to have grown paranoid, even though
the idea that Iran could threaten Israel, which already has plenty
of nuclear weapons, is absurd.
But at the
end of the day, the reality is that truth has an uphill struggle
in America these days. Know what I mean?
October
24, 2007
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2007 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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