I couldn’t say this any better:
Still, for those of us outside The Land Of Steady Habits, there was a little too much about the Greenwich Town Council and submarine bases and who said what when and to whom. But there was one quote that didn’t come up, and it’s the only quote that should matter to those of us outside Connecticut. It’s this one:
“It’s time for Democrats who distrust President Bush to acknowledge he’ll be commander-in-chief for three more years,” the senator said. “We undermine the President’s credibility at our nation’s peril.”
You may recognize that final sentence as the soft outer frontier of the rhetoric that ends up in a place where newspeople are accused of treason and where roam free the eliminationist fantasies of the lunatic right. It’s where we find “reasonable” people treating John Yoo’s authoritarian delusions as though they had something to do with America. I couldn’t care less if Ned Lamont once took a Republican stand on water rates. I saw enough last night to know he’d never say anything like that.
It matters to those of us inside Connecticut, as well. It’s part of the theme of arrogance and disdain this administration shows to our core American values. On global warming, WMD, post-war planning, stem cells, plan B, and, well, everything, the Bush administration believes they are smarter than experts who spend years on these issues. Lieberman works with Republicans to make these policies happen, provides “bipartisan” cover for them, and then turns around and tells us that we should not undermine the President’s credibility. You don’t deserve to be in Congress with an attitude like that, I don’t care what party you’re in.
(via Atrios)






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