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Editorial
See other Editorial Articles

Title: Jack Bauer for president
Source: World Net Daily
URL Source: http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=53986
Published: Jan 29, 2007
Author: Joseph Farah
Post Date: 2007-01-30 11:54:58 by SmokinOPs
Keywords: Jack Bauer, torture, fantasies
Views: 378
Comments: 22

There's a reason Fox's "24" is the most popular show on television.

It's not just the suspense. It's not just the action. It's not just the great premise, the great writing, the great performances and the great production values.

It's because America loves Jack Bauer. We recognize we need him.

If you have watched even a few episodes of "24," you realize it's not decisions by the president of the United States that save Americans from disaster after disaster. It's individual initiative and courage displayed by Jack Bauer – the man we're constantly reminded is "expendable."

Viewers understand Jack Bauer is the one indispensable character. They recognize without him, or others like him, all is lost. Presidents come and go. Jack Bauer remains – and, as long as he remains, there is hope the bad guys will continue to be foiled in their efforts to kill Americans and destroy their country.

To say Jack Bauer's methods are "controversial" would be an understatement. Quite frankly, his methods would be illegal in the real America – and not only in the way they are employed inside the country against citizens, but even on America's battlefields and in foreign places with names like Abu Graib and Guantanamo Bay.

Back in the real world, President Bush is hoping to win his war in Iraq by sending in 20,000 more U.S. troops. But what he needs, figuratively speaking, is Jack Bauer.

He needs new tactics. He needs intelligence. He needs information extracted from captives on the battlefield and enemies picked up on the streets of America. Actually what he needs is a dose of common sense – not really anything new.

He needs to turn our brave fighting men loose. He needs to free their hands of the restraints he and the Congress of the United States have placed on them with regard to interrogation techniques. He needs to return to the rules of engagement that made the American military the envy of the world.

Prior to November 2004, there was little question anywhere that America was accomplishing its mission in Iraq. It was destroying the enemy and transforming the country into a U.S. ally in the Middle East.

But what happened in November 2004 changed all that. It wasn't a victory on the battlefield by al-Qaida. It wasn't a spontaneous uprising by America's enemies. It wasn't any failure by U.S. troops.

It was a public-relations disaster called Abu Graib. That media coup for the enemy set off a chain of events that ultimately led the politicians in Washington to handcuff our troops – ensuring the quagmire that followed.

Abu Graib spelled the end of coercive interrogations. Now enemy captives know they don't have to talk. They know exactly what U.S. interrogators will and won't do to get information. They have no fear. They know Jack Bauer isn't coming.

That's why Bush's plan for more troops won't work. It's not more troops we need. It's taking the handcuffs off the troops already on the battlefield that is needed.

When we stopped performing coercive interrogations, we no longer had the ability to prevent attacks before they happened. We no longer had the human intelligence we had prior to November 2004. What we get from prisoners now is nothing, nada, zilch, zip … bupkiss.

Does anyone in Washington watch "24"? Does President Bush? Does Nancy Pelosi? Does Harry Reid? What do they think of it? Do they cheer on Jack Bauer? Or, do they scream at the television: "Arrest that man!"

I really wonder.

Because America needs Jack Bauers. We will lose Iraq if we fail to recognize war is a dirty business that must be waged with the understanding that anything short of victory is unacceptable.

There will be a presidential election in 2008, God willing.

I hope there will be a Jack Bauer among the candidates.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 10.

#3. To: SmokinOPs (#0)

We will lose Iraq if we fail to recognize war is a dirty business that must be waged with the understanding that anything short of victory is unacceptable.

Oh my- that would so crush me if "We" lost Iraq. The consequences are just to horrible to imagine if "we" lost Iraq. Why that would mean I wouldn't be robbed by DC to pay for a couple hundred thousand troops to be there for eternity so they can get in more wars that profit me and mine nothing at all and serve no interest for me whatsoever. Yeah, that would really devastate me. I wouldn't be able to sleep at night knowing that Iraqi goat herders are no longer being tortured by "Jack Bauer". Oh my- what would I do with myself if "we" lost in Iraq? That Moslem flotilla would be right off our coast lobbing shells into downtown Boston. Oh my oh me! Save me from the goat herders fictional character Jack Bauer! I am a giant idiot pussy who likes to have half his paycheck stolen to protect me from Mooslems who have less of a chance of killing me than does lightening. Eeeeeeeek. Save me. "We" must win in Iraq.

Burkeman1  posted on  2007-01-30   12:39:46 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Burkeman1 (#3)

Oh my- that would so crush me if "We" lost Iraq.

The flip side of that is little resistance to dispossession by immigration.

The neocons have the other end of that cleft stick.

A people that can be easily led in any direction will not move strongly (in the behaviorist sense) in any direction. On the other hand, a people with strong behavior can be led in only a few directions.

Both support and opposition for the war is quite weak. If we strongly opposed immigration, or strongly supported it, then we would also strongly support or oppose the war.

Though there are rather high percentages of opposition to both, it's not right to characterize this as strong opposition. It's mostly been strong minorities that have made big changes in history. Percentages matter at the voting booth, but only when the votes are a proxy for non-voting consequences. There is no magic in voting booths.

Since there are no non-voting consequences for our rulers, our votes don't matter.

Tauzero  posted on  2007-01-30   13:27:18 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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