Create an Account
username: password:
 
  MemeStreams Logo

RE: Big Talk, Little Will | Thomas Friedman | NYT

search


RE: Big Talk, Little Will | Thomas Friedman | NYT
by Rattle at 10:08 pm EDT, Aug 16, 2006

Yes, the Democrats could help by presenting a serious alternative. But unless the party in power for the next two and half years shakes free of its denial, we are in really, really big trouble.

I think the environment in DC and media-sphere is the biggest part of the problem. If the Democrats even attempt to have a national dialog about what we should be doing in the war on terror, they get hammered for being soft on security. That's a very dangerous thing. On many levels, it's becoming harder and harder to have any sort of meaningful discourse. The public discourse on our approach to the war on terror has been amounting to jingoism.

September 11th forced a shift in people's views toward national security. This has amounted to "follow the leader, they know what they are doing" in many ways. The discursive space seems to be divided in all the wrong ways. We need a very real public debate, and I don't see it.

For instance... The approach to the war on terror that the Democrats were pushing, was very quickly dismissed as a "law enforcement approach" or "treating it like crime", as they were pounded for being "weak on security". I think this was a very bad way to cast the argument. Looking at the situation in London, I'm seeing that approach as being at the heart of the success. It seems that the key factor was cooperation between intelligence agencies in multiple countries.

I sincerely hope it does not take another successful attack to kickstart the process of looking at what is working, and what is not working. I fear that much of what we are doing is not working. I get that feeling every time I'm reading reports from the Middle East or anything about DHS.

(I wish I could read the full text of this article.)

RE: Big Talk, Little Will | Thomas Friedman | NYT


 
 
Powered By Industrial Memetics