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Why
Do So Many Americans Hate America?
by
Charles Davis
No
matter where one turns these days, it seems impossible to avoid negative
news stories about President Bush and his mission to bring peace and
freedom to the people of
Iraq
. All
too often the liberal media, which has wanted our troops to fail from the
start, has reported only the bad things happening while completely
avoiding all of the positives. For
instance, while 30 people may have burned to death in a
Baghdad
market as the result of an ongoing wave
of sectarian violence, what about all the people that did not erupt in
flames or watch a cherished loved one agonizingly die before their eyes
– shouldn’t the media cover them as well?
Furthermore, in their ongoing war against
America
and its values, liberals and others of
dubious patriotism have even gone so far as to question our leader’s
policies and conduct in a time of war – a clear act of treason.
The president’s critics must realize that he is only doing what
is best for
America
, and questions are best saved for the
end of the conflict, which, as Vice-President Cheney has told us, should
be in just a few short generations.
To
further their anti-American agenda, many critics of the Bush
administration have made extremely outlandish claims, such as claiming
that the president lied the nation into launching a war on a country that
posed no discernible threat. These
critics point to statements made by people like former Bush Treasury
secretary Paul O’Neill, who stated that the administration discussed
plans for invading Iraq from the very first cabinet meeting in 2001, and
said that "it was all about finding a way to [invade].
That was the tone of it. The president saying 'Go find me a way to
do this.’” Others point to
the
Downing Street
memos, wherein a British intelligence
officer who met with the Bush administration back in July 2002 reported to
his superiors that Bush was set on going to war but that “the
intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy.”
Of course, these partisan critics of the president inevitably act
like misleading the public into war is a bad thing -- but is it?
In reality, Bush is only ensuring that Americans have plenty of
future adversaries and conflicts, meaning plenty of business for our
nation’s patriotic defense contractors.
Ever
since World War II, the
United States
’ economy has been dependent on what
former president Dwight D. Eisenhower called “the military-industrial
complex.” As the Department
of Defense website states, “[w]e are America’s oldest, largest,
busiest and most successful company,” employing millions of people while
operating over 6,000 bases in the Untied States and 702 overseas bases in
about 130 countries. For 2007,
the defense budget is roughly $463 billion, not including the wars in
Iraq
and
Afghanistan
, which account for an additional $120
billion. Overall, the
United States
’ defense budget accounts for just
under half of world military spending.
By courageously launching wars and provoking and planning future
ones, Bush has allowed our economy to thrive.
Since launching the war on
Iraq
in 2003, companies like Lockheed-Martin
have seen profits rise by over 73%, and Halliburton CEO Dave Lesar
declared “2005 was the best in our 86-year history” after seeing his
company’s profits soar to $2.4 billion.
Without endless war, the American economy would collapse, forcing
defense contractors and their families to live on the streets begging for
scraps of food. By ignoring
international law and bravely declaring the right to preemptively invade
any country in the world, Bush has shown his bold foresight and commitment
to creating well-paying American jobs, while proving to swarthy foreigners
that
America
means business.
Some critics might say that
by heralding militarism and international belligerence Bush is neglecting
other important fields, such as science and medicine; however, nothing
could be further from the truth. By
allocating $22 billion for the Energy Department to develop a new class of
tactical, bunker-busting nuclear weapons, Bush is providing jobs for some
of
America
’s brightest scientists.
Not only that, but by launching a war that has killed tens of
thousands of people, the president has ensured that hospitals, funeral
homes, and coffin makers all receive ample business for the foreseeable
future, all while allowing doctors to innovate in finding new and improved
ways to remove shrapnel embedded in one’s skull.
With all that said, too many Americans seem to have unfortunately
bought into the lies of the mainstream media and liberal academia.
According to a recent poll by the
Pew
Research
Center
, Bush’s approval rating sits at a dismal 33%,
with the three most frequent words used to describe him including
“incompetent” and “liar.” Like Jesus Christ before him, President
Bush is being unjustly crucified by his detractors.
With 2/3 of the public apparently not appreciative of all the work
Bush has done perpetuating the success of our war economy, one is left
with no other option but to ask: Why do so many Americans hate
America
?
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