History, Hypocrisy, and the Bush Fanatics
If you think the Bush fanatics and criminals-about-to-be-exposed (and that includes all the way up to and through the White House and the Oval Office) aren’t lethal enough to hire their own terrorist to do the deed at Virginia Tech to take the focus off the trail of malfeasance that is rapidly moving in their direction, then you have not been paying attention.
Bush, using his preacher persona, lamented the passing of 30-some young future scientists—that’s SCIENTISTS—the arch enemies of the Christian fanatic set, while daily, and without conscience, consigning scores of our young to the meat grinder of Iraq—which, in case anyone forgets, is a false war based on false information (lies) to make the Bush 1% base richer.
If you think these folks incapable of this bloody act, you have not been paying attention.
If you think the Bush fanatics don’t have the sheer hubris to commit acts of horror on the American public—for the most blatantly self-serving reasons—then you have not been paying attention.
I hope I am wrong and that the seeds of my paranoia sowed from years of closely following the Bush mess are groundless and sterile. I hope that a time comes when, without a doubt, I can think that elected officials and their assistants in Washington, D.C. had nothing whatsoever to do with something like the horrific deaths of 30 kids in Blacksburg, Virginia.
I hope the time comes, again, when I don’t automatically inspect our tragedies for political motivation.
That time is not yet here.
Bush, using his preacher persona, lamented the passing of 30-some young future scientists—that’s SCIENTISTS—the arch enemies of the Christian fanatic set, while daily, and without conscience, consigning scores of our young to the meat grinder of Iraq—which, in case anyone forgets, is a false war based on false information (lies) to make the Bush 1% base richer.
If you think these folks incapable of this bloody act, you have not been paying attention.
If you think the Bush fanatics don’t have the sheer hubris to commit acts of horror on the American public—for the most blatantly self-serving reasons—then you have not been paying attention.
I hope I am wrong and that the seeds of my paranoia sowed from years of closely following the Bush mess are groundless and sterile. I hope that a time comes when, without a doubt, I can think that elected officials and their assistants in Washington, D.C. had nothing whatsoever to do with something like the horrific deaths of 30 kids in Blacksburg, Virginia.
I hope the time comes, again, when I don’t automatically inspect our tragedies for political motivation.
That time is not yet here.