Mitt's excellent adventure.
Did you hear it last week, over the noise emanating from the London Olympics? That collective groan from points east? That was the world reacting to the man who might be president next January. There are, I'm sure, millions in Europe and the Middle East thinking, Really, America? So soon after Bush, you're going to elect yet another ham-fisted idiot? Really? In many respects, our president is president of the world, if only because he (and thus far, it's always been "he") wields enormous power - military, economic, and diplomatic - over virtually everyone else. (They should probably get a vote in the matter, but then here in America we're not even guaranteed that right, depending upon which state we live in.)
Though his spinmeisters have been working overtime to put a positive gloss on it, Mitt's softball trip to friendly nations was an unmitigated (or un-Mitt-igated, perhaps) disaster, from the crypto-racist tone of the adviser referencing our shared "Anglo-Saxon heritage" with the British, to the Olympic gaffe, to name-checking MI6 (psst, Mitt: it's supposed to be a secret), to blaming Palestinian poverty on their "culture" or lack of same. That last comment is something of a bookend to the Anglo-Saxon trope he started off with, making Romney seem strangely fixated on issues of ethnic identity. (He later doubled down on the Palestinian remark in an essay in National Review online.)
Of course, the stop was another opportunity to signal his willingness to countenance war with Iran, whether started by Israel or by the United States. In this we hear his neocon Bush-era advisors speaking, such as Dan Senor, former military flack during the early days of the Iraq invasion, who said on Romney's behalf that the governor would "respect that decision" if Israel chose to strike Teheran militarily. No doubt. I hope everyone over here is listening closely to what Romney and his campaign are saying about foreign policy. They seem anxious to get another war started, having tasted what they seem to consider "success" in the Iraq catastrophe. And for those who say the economy is the only issue that matters, it's worth considering what yet another pointless war would do to the federal budget.
Mitt's got FoxNews syndrome - too much time spent with friendly media. He just doesn't know how to behave in the real world. Ergo, his press availabilities were practically zero during this trip. I'll bet he's glad to be back home, in the comforting embrace of Sean Hannity.
luv u,
jp
Though his spinmeisters have been working overtime to put a positive gloss on it, Mitt's softball trip to friendly nations was an unmitigated (or un-Mitt-igated, perhaps) disaster, from the crypto-racist tone of the adviser referencing our shared "Anglo-Saxon heritage" with the British, to the Olympic gaffe, to name-checking MI6 (psst, Mitt: it's supposed to be a secret), to blaming Palestinian poverty on their "culture" or lack of same. That last comment is something of a bookend to the Anglo-Saxon trope he started off with, making Romney seem strangely fixated on issues of ethnic identity. (He later doubled down on the Palestinian remark in an essay in National Review online.)
Of course, the stop was another opportunity to signal his willingness to countenance war with Iran, whether started by Israel or by the United States. In this we hear his neocon Bush-era advisors speaking, such as Dan Senor, former military flack during the early days of the Iraq invasion, who said on Romney's behalf that the governor would "respect that decision" if Israel chose to strike Teheran militarily. No doubt. I hope everyone over here is listening closely to what Romney and his campaign are saying about foreign policy. They seem anxious to get another war started, having tasted what they seem to consider "success" in the Iraq catastrophe. And for those who say the economy is the only issue that matters, it's worth considering what yet another pointless war would do to the federal budget.
Mitt's got FoxNews syndrome - too much time spent with friendly media. He just doesn't know how to behave in the real world. Ergo, his press availabilities were practically zero during this trip. I'll bet he's glad to be back home, in the comforting embrace of Sean Hannity.
luv u,
jp
Comments