Wow, Reagan's daughter- absolutely decimates Little Bush.
Does Anyone Care?
During the height of the Vietnam War, a bumper sticker asked, WHAT IF THEY GAVE A WAR AND NO ONE CAME? Here's a 2006 alteration of that: WHAT IF THE PRESIDENT VETOED A BILL AND NO ONE CARED?
The veto comes as no surprise; that battle line was drawn years ago. But it's hard to believe that the 70 percent of Americans who support stem-cell research really care what President Bush does.
This is a president who has no currency left with the majority of Americans who, polls have shown, do not trust him. We won't totally shrug off his intransigence, but we won't waste too much time mulling over his reasons either. Why? Because we don't care.
White House Press Secretary Tony Snow said, about the impending veto, that President Bush "thinks murder is wrong." But apparently, the destruction of fertilized eggs--flushed away as if they're useless--doesn't count as murder. Only using those fertilized eggs for valuable scientific research that could eventually save people's lives counts as murder in this president's mind. No one in this administration, with all their wordplay and posturing, has been able to dance around that stunning lack of logic.
We are being asked to believe that this president's opposition to embryonic stem-cell research has deep moral, religious and ethical roots. As we heard, the word "murder" is tossed around freely.
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Yet this is a president who led us into a war with a patchwork quilt of lies. Thousands of American soldiers have died. Thousands more have returned horribly wounded, and we don't even know yet what toll posttraumatic stress disorder will take on those who obeyed their commander in chief and went to fight in Iraq. We may never know the complete death toll of Iraqi citizens, but we certainly know that some were raped and brutally executed. There have been many beheadings, sometimes of Americans who simply went to Iraq to help the people there, not to fight. Let us please not forget 26-year-old Nick Berg who was beheaded in May 2004. Where is President Bush's grief over all those deaths? He directs his moral outrage instead to the idea of using fertilized eggs, that would otherwise be destroyed, for potentially life-saving scientific research. He tells us it's because he cares so deeply about life.
Where was his care in the aftermath of Katrina? This president, when he finally did touch down in Louisiana, made a smirking remark about the good times he used to have in New Orleans. As if alluding to his hard-partying past was appropriate while people were suffering and dying in the Superdome, while bodies were lying bloated in the streets.
We won't care about this veto because we don't really believe this president cares about us. Stem-cell research is going to go forward, obviously without this administration's help. People like Bill Gates and Warren Buffet have shown us that there is some serious money in this country and there are dedicated, humane citizens willing to put their money where their beliefs are. If anything, President Bush's veto of the stem-cell bill may galvanize people even more.