PDA

View Full Version : Bill Moyers' Interview With Andrew Bacevich




SMM
Aug 18, 2008, 02:48 AM
This (http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/08152008/watch2.html) was outstanding, and is not biased left, or right. I often add commentary to threads I start. In this case, I am not going to do so. I am only going to add some bio information. I think this is important enough, so that I do not wish to add my own bias in advance.



ANDREW J. BACEVICH

Is an imperial presidency destroying what America stands for? Bill Moyers sits down with history and international relations expert and former US Army Colonel Andrew J. Bacevich who identifies three major problems facing our democracy: the crises of economy, government and militarism, and calls for a redefinition of the American way of life.

As campaign ads urge voters to consider who will be a better "Commander in Chief," Andrew J. Bacevich — Professor of International Relations at Boston University, retired Army colonel, and West Point graduate — joins Bill Moyers on the JOURNAL to encourage viewers to take a step back and connect the dots between U.S. foreign policy, consumerism, politics, and militarism.



Daveman Deluxe
Aug 18, 2008, 04:24 AM
The most important parts, in my mind:

When Mr. Bacevich said that the Reagan Republicans haven't changed a thing about politics in the past thirty years (emphasis mine):

One of the great lies about American politics is that Democrats genuinely subscribe to a set of core convictions that make Democrats different from Republicans. And the same thing, of course, applies to the other party. It's not true. I happen to define myself as a conservative.

Well, what do conservatives say they stand for? Well, conservatives say they stand for balanced budgets. Small government. The so called traditional values.

Well, when you look back over the past 30 or so years, since the rise of Ronald Reagan, which we, in many respects, has been a conservative era in American politics, well, did we get small government?

Do we get balanced budgets? Do we get serious as opposed to simply rhetorical attention to traditional social values? The answer's no. Because all of that really has simply been part of a package of tactics that Republicans have employed to get elected and to - and then to stay in office.

And when he said that the Democrats are just as bad in the same way:

Well, I may be a conservative, but I can assure you that, in November of 2006, I voted for every Democrat I could possibly come close to. And I did because the Democratic Party, speaking with one voice, at that time, said that, "Elect us. Give us power in the Congress, and we will end the Iraq War."

And the American people, at that point, adamantly tired of this war, gave power to the Democrats in Congress. And they absolutely, totally, completely failed to follow through on their commitment. Now, there was a lot of posturing. But, really, the record of the Democratic Congress over the past two years has been - one in which, substantively, all they have done is to appropriate the additional money that enables President Bush to continue that war.

The most correct and thoughtful interview about how far we've come from the founding fathers' intentions that I've yet seen.