Hate Bush, Hate Yourself:
Two sides of the same coin.

BY RUSS WELLEN
05.31.2007 | POLITICS

Remember how hard it was to gloat when President Bush's poll numbers began to sink? In part, that was due to discouragement over the tremendous amount of work undoing the damage caused by his administration. It was certainly no reflection of any nobility of spirit that liberals and progressives might flatter themselves into thinking is inherent to their breed.

For instance, note how hatred of Bush, which you'd think would have peaked after the Democrats assumed the majority in Congress, continues unabated.

The time has long past to leave hatred of Bush behind. Because he's a soft target, it never delivered much bang for the buck anyway. Perhaps instead we should reserve our hatred for those who put him in power. No, not corporate interests, Karl Rove, or the Bilderbergers, but the voters.

In other words, hating Bush is hating the American people. But, just as hatred for Bush is futile because he's too dense to know he's hated, it's no fun reviling those to whom informing themselves before voting never occurred.

In his new book, "The Myth of the Rational Voter: Why Democracies Choose Bad Policies," libertarian economist Bryan Caplan suggests voter competence tests to encourage greater economic literacy. Because it harkens back to the measures whites used to keep blacks from voting in the South, that's a non-starter in the US. His idea about emulating pre-World War II England and granting extra votes to more knowledgeable voters is even more dead in the water.

We're stuck then with a system in which, as journalist Christopher Shea writes, "Most people base their votes, and their answers to polls, on only the vaguest feelings about how the economy, or life, is treating them."

At the risk of appearing as elitist as Kaplan, those that muddled are only to be pitied. Then who's left to hate? How about those privy to the knowledge of what Bush and Co. were capable. In other words, ourselves.

Us? Yes. Just because we're tired of hearing Edmund Burke's chestnut -- "All that is necessary for evil to succeed is that good men do nothing." –- doesn't make it any less true.

Okay, I'll go first. Like many reading this, I vote, go to demonstrations, write articles, and call my congressional representatives. Obviously, these activities alone haven't been enough to halt the pox the Bush administration has spread on Iraq (not to mention everything else it's touched).

I hate myself, then, because. . .

Next are more personal failures for which I hate myself:

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