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quote I didn't say either of those things, did I? In fact, I didn't think either of those things.
Jeremy, I'm glad to hear that. But your original post didn't say, "it's against America to vote for George Bush." (I think there are plenty of good arguments to be made that that's the case, and I'm sure we'll be hearing many of them from Adam soon.)
However, your post _did_ say, in essence, "it's against America to make the argument that not voting for Bush is against America." So I was perfectly entitled to assume that you were trying to place a certain argument outside the realm of patriotic discourse, and call bullshit.
I didn't enjoy voting for George Bush; I care a lot about legal abortions, gay marriage, faith-based initiatives, and the new Republican affinity for big government. And as someone who would like to live forever, I also want to see lots of stem-cell research, and other science that causes religious handwringers to form disingenuous "ethics panels"--led by self-anointed ivory-tower pseudophilosophers like Leon Kass--that exist more to obstruct science than consider it.
However, I also plan to live in Manhattan some day, and all the stem cell research in the world won't mean a goddamn thing if a nuclear bomb detonates a mile from where I live. I think we're in a real sorry mess when the only remotely hawkish candidate on the ballot is Bush, but that was the ballot I faced, and I voted accordingly.
I've heard all the Objectivist arguments that Kerry would fight a better (i.e. more secular) war, and I don't buy them. Forget his line about the "global test." Were you watching during the debates when he said we need to buy Iran off by giving them nuclear fuel and open bilateral talks with the North Koreans? What does he want to say to Kim Jong-Il that he can't say in front of South Korea, Japan, or hell, even China?
And Kerry's domestic agenda isn't all peaches-and-cream, either. Sure, Bush has his lame-assed attempts to pass an FMA, and his faith-based initiatives are a joke that ought to be defunded in order to buy bullets for our troops. But Kerry refuses to reform Social Security or Medicare, and even said we should commit ourselves to making them "pay-as-you-go" entitlements; he wants to further socialize American health care, which will cause far more harm than Bush's refusals to fund stem-cell research; his campaign rhetoric is riddled with protectionist nonsense, including the demagoguing of outsourcing and attacks on "Benedict Arnold CEOs"; he is all but guaranteed to accelerate the federal land grab by designating new wilderness areas and swamps (ahem, "wetlands") off-limits. I could go on. Hell, he can't even say he's pro-choice without spending 3/4ths of his time equivocating and blathering on about his Catholic faith. (And if there's one thing I respect less than a Christian, it's the poseurs who know that religion is horseshit and still manage to keep shovelling it in their mouths, all the while grinning as if it is the best thing they've ever tasted.)
RussK cites what he believes are Bush administration blunders in the war on terror, I suppose as reasons why we should either refrain from voting, or vote for Kerry or Badnarik, so we can switch from tactical blunders to outright strategic self-flagellation and retreat. Yes, the Bush administration let the Northern Alliance do much of our fighting for us. If they hadn't, post-war Afghanistan might have been much less welcoming toward a large occupying U.S. force. There may still be some religious elements in the new Afghani government, but if the recent elections--where women comprised 40% of the turnout--are any indication, it won't be recede into another Taliban-style theocracy. He states that Iraq "was not linked to Al Qaeda in any way," apeing a manufactured media lie. On this matter, see page 66 of the 9/11 Commission's report, www.9-11commission.gov/report/911report.pdf One of the many damning pieces of evidence: Iraq offered Osama bin Laden safe haven in 1998.
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