Posted on Sunday, August 10, 2008 by Dillon MacRae
Few Americans could have been as deeply disappointed as me to hear John Edwards’ recent admission of an affair two years ago — confirming tabloid rumors that, like many, I had refused to believe. An early and ardent supporter of his candidacy, I had considered him above such indiscretions. Yet, I cannot get past the outright disgust over the needless waste of time and attention now devoted to what is in truth a moot issue, with probably the most critical election in decades quickly bearing down on us. Read full post »
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Filed under: 2008 Campaign, General Politics
Posted on Friday, August 8, 2008 by Dillon MacRae
As the American economy sinks ever-deeper into the budget hole dug by the reckless pursuits of the Bush administration — caused in no small part by so-called “Operation Iraqi Freedom,” this week’s news that Iraq is now poised to be sitting on a $79 billion budget surplus by year’s end is understandably raising many eyebrows. Many Americans must be hoping for an Operation American Freedom to free our own nation from the burdensome chains of this war that seems to have no end. Read full post »
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Filed under: 2008 Campaign, Economy, Military
Posted on Wednesday, August 6, 2008 by Dillon MacRae
If there were ever a year in which the last defenders of civility cry out for a truth-in-advertising law for politics, 2008 apparently will not be it. Washington Post columnist Ruth Marcus today laments the pervasive untruths swirling around this election season — destroying in their path any hope we may have had for an honest campaign. You know the routine: mock, lie, distort, mislead, feign insult — then repeat often enough until the message is accepted as fact. Read full post »
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Filed under: 2008 Campaign, General Politics
Posted on Tuesday, August 5, 2008 by Dillon MacRae
A startling new book released today and reviewed on Politico offers perhaps the most disturbing account yet of the gross malfeasance that a growing parade of critics and ex-insiders alike say seems to permeate the current executive branch of our government. “The Way of the World,” written by author and Pulitzer Prize-winning former Wall Street Journal reporter Ron Suskind, goes far beyond various past accounts that have claimed the White House in the run-up to Operation Iraqi Freedom intentionally ignored any intelligence or evidence that interfered with its own predetermined war mindset. If only they had stopped there. Read full post »
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Filed under: Foreign Policy, Military, National Security