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Tue 23 Aug, 2005 10:01 am
Bush's Iraq Exit Strategy Runs Through Iran
By Chris Floyd
Bush Watch
Now is the summer of discontent for President George W. Bush, a man beset on every side -- by a failing war and falling popularity, by scandal, suspicion and rising hostility, even in the red-state heartlands. With each passing day of his long vacation in the Texas wastes, his presidency is shrinking palpably before our eyes, his wildly inflated public image shrivelling like a punctured balloon.
The fountainhead of his trouble, of course, is the murderous quagmire he has created in Iraq. Some say he has no exit strategy, no way to escape the corrosive effects of this gargantuan disaster, which is draining his support and destroying the aura of the all-conquering "war leader" that he used to impose his radical right-wing agenda on the country. The tide has turned against him at last, some say; he's a lame duck crashing to the ground.
But those writing Bush's political obituary have "misunderestimated" him once again. For it's becoming increasingly clear that Bush does have an exit strategy from Iraq -- and it runs through Iran.
Bush Changes Words to further War On Environment
Big Bush Words: Bush Changes Words to further War On Environment
By Jerry Politex
Bush Watch
The Bush ministry of propaganda, helmed by PR people such as his close friend Karen Hughes, knows that words help win wars. For example, using "Death Tax" instead of "Estate Tax" went a long way in the shifting of the terms of debate. Similarly, getting the media to use "Climate Change" in place of "Global Warming" both muddies the ideas being debated and puts a less grim face on it.
Here are two news stories that exemplify the difference, followed by an explanation of the linguistic strategy being used:
Global warming: Will you listen now, America?, McCarthy
Climate change to blame for changing bird populations: report, Vinograd
Framing 101: How Republicans Change Words, Lakoff
GOP Words: DEMOCRATIC ALLY, n. Any democracy, monarchy, plutocracy, oligarchy or dictatorship--no matter how ruthless--that verbally supports American diplomatic and economic goals. (by L.J. Klass, Concord, New Hampshire)