Writing "Home"

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Until recently.
What began with a drip with the Los Angeles Times two months ago is developing into a trickle. And while the New York Times editorial from this past weekend may or may not wind up being a seminal moment in the domestic debate over Iraq, the more noteworthy objections come from some smaller outlets, like last week’s Olympian editorial (from Olympia, Washington) and this past Sunday’s Tuscaloosa News.
The Tuscaloosa editorial (for those of you keeping score at home, Tuscaloosa County went to Bush 61 percent in 2004, up from his tally in 2000) was a strong condemnation of Bush’s Iraq policies, titled “Bush Stands Alone in his Failed Iraqi Democracy Plans.” In turns formal and folksy, the piece focused on the Republicans who have abandoned Bush’s push of the war:
But the president, far from shaken by these defections, continues to pursue his policies. Increasingly, he resembles the marching band member who insisted that only he was in step; all of his colleagues were wrong.
Recent reporting in The Washington Post shows why Bush chooses to press an indefensible policy. He sees himself as an instrument of God, chosen to bring about a specific set of changes in Iraq. If others — including some of his closest supporters — now think it’s impossible to bring about those changes, it’s because they lack Bush’s divine vision.




Author Thomas Friedman on Obama's Afghanistan plan and the war on terror.