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commentary by
Michael L. Bromley |
Bromleyisms

... of Automobiles
... and Politics
...and of history, of society, and a whole lot more.
| he, he... |
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Pages: More entries: see Index |
... of Politics
And so what if, as the AP gently reminds us,
And so what if they argued over which language to use, couldn't settle on any leadership, and generally squabbled over this, that & everything else. It's a legislature, and that's what they're supposed to do! And so what if they meet behind the Green Line, the U.S. safety-zone. They never would have met at all if it weren't for the U.S., and they might as well meet where they can. Whatever the details, it comes on the 17th anniversary of Saddam's WMD massacre of Kurds in Halabja. It's altogether sweeter for the coincidence:
And next up for good news is a dispatch from the upper tundra, by way of the U.S. Senate:
(See my celebration in the Graphics of the Week section.) While both events in Iraq and in Alaska are works in progress, each marks crucial advance for America and for the world. I won't equate environmentalism with terrorism, but neither will I apologize for mentioning them in the same sentence. Both are reactionary, and both stand against freedom and self-government. Environmentalism has become a movement of regress. While it's gains cannot be denied, its excesses have become abuse, and this knee-jerk denial of breaking tundra gets today a deserved slap. I don't give a damn if all the oil in Alaska doesn't bring the price of crude down a penny, much less ten bucks. I'm just supremely glad, yes, smug and satisfied, to see the ransom hold broken, if for a moment. Hope is so much stronger than fear. Thank you, Mr. President. Here for previous entry |
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