Old, but Watergate isn't the reason Nixon is enjoying a special place in hell right now, this is.
Thanks for the link. Many times in the past I've called myself a supporter of Nixon for being a remarkably level-headed politician in an unlevel time and that his politics at least have been vindicated by history. Then it turns out the hippies were right all along and Nixon really was personally making sure the Vietnam War kept going to maintain his own relevance. Welp, count me in on Nixon bashing from now on.
At least LBJ is still a tragically conflicted political Sisyphus. Sure he basically created the Vietnam War, but he was also more responsible than any one other person for getting the Civil Rights Act and Medicare passed at the only time in history they could have happened. Would have been cool to see him literally swoop down over the riots to reclaim the office he'd abdicated in the name of national stability. Chicago might have burned down in the process.
In other news, for those who haven't heard: Pope Francis has been organizing an initiative to get the Vatican involved in international climate change activities, and some of his high holy press releases or whatever the Pope makes have been leaking out in the public, wherein he will begin calling climate change a moral dilemma for which humanity must hold itself accountable.
If you were wondering what the reaction would be from the American political party that holds both religious (Christian) principle and refusal to believe in climate change of any kind as its modern foundational principles. As you probably could have guessed, the reaction is
blatant hypocrisy.
When you talk about unpredictable science, I have to ask where's the nexus between that and the theology of the Vatican? ... I've studied the science … and I doubt the pope is going to embrace my position. But this is science, not theology.
I don't agree with the pope. ... I'm not a Catholic, but I've got a lot of friends who are, who are wondering: Why all of a sudden is he involved in this? I don't have the answer for that. ... I can't crawl in his mind. He has the right to say anything he wants, but that doesn't change the lack of science.
The church has gotten it wrong a few times on science, and I think that we probably are better off leaving science to the scientists and focusing on what we’re really good at, which is … theology and morality.
I hope I’m not going to get castigated for saying this by my priest back home, but I don’t get economic policy from my bishops or my cardinals or my pope. ... And I’d like to see what he says as it relates to climate change and how that connects to these broader, deeper issue before I pass judgment. But I think religion ought to be about making us better as people and less about things that end up getting in the political realm.
The Republican Party of 2015: Criticizing the Pope for being too reliant on 'unpredictable' science and too involved in topical political issues. Government policy needs the guidance of religious principle... provided the religion agrees with the politics.
I left out Rush Limbaugh deciding the Pope is secretly a Marxist agitator because who gives a fuck what he thinks.