it’s 2003, what prospects for 2004?
I didn’t vote for George W. Bush, so it’s hardly a surprise that I’m not his biggest fan. Mind you, I don’t dislike the man himself so much. I’m sure he’s a nice fellow and a fun guy to meet at a party, but he stands for everything I disagree with, and I am hard pressed to think of anything positive he’s done for this country since being selected for the office of President. For example, in the last three years, he has:
a) the detention of approximately 1,200 Arabs and Muslims (no exact number has been released) indefinitely and with no access to legal counsel. None of the detainees were proved to have any real connection to the events of September 11.
b) the implementation of special registration, which requires non-immigrants males from only a handful of Mid-Eastern countries to register with INS and be fingerprinted, all the while absolving nationals of other countries from the inconvenience.
c) the empowerment of federal agents to wire tap, obtain library records, and detain people if there is any suspicion of terrorism or terrorism-related activities. The agents are allowed full discretion as to what they consider “suspect” actions.
d) the launch of Total Information Awareness, a system that essentially violates the privacy of citizens and spies on them for the government, and in a wonderful twist of irony, the choice of a convicted liar to head this DARPA program.
Given all this, I’ve been quite curious about what the rest of the political class is doing. But I am not very optimistic because on the issue of Iraq, for example, the House and the Senate both gave the President the right to attack without so much as a debate, and they look likely to follow the leader all the way. And now that Gore has (thankfully) dropped out of the race for the Democratic nomination, is there anyone who might offer an alternative? What is needed is someone who can actually stand his ground and dare to disagree with Bush, not someone who can say “my policies will do the same,” like Al Gore.
So far, the names of Sens. John Edwards of North Carolina, John Kerry of Massachusetts, Joe Lieberman of Connecticut, and Tom Daschle of South Dakota have been mentioned. Yet, all of these Senators voted “Yes” for the war on Iraq. One surmises that they are too afraid to disagree, afraid to be called unpatriotic for questioning the direction that the country is taking, even though that is precisely their role.
It’s clearly too early to tell, and there could yet be others who jump into the race later in 2003. And there is also Vermont Governor Howard Dean. But I’ll be interested to see whom the Democrats will choose. Otherwise it’s back to the Greens again in 2004.