So now my word isn't good enough that I'm a Democrat, I have to prove it to you? Congratulations, you just broke the Irony-Hypocrisy Speed Barrier.
Your word is good enough for me, until you start doing things that make you sound like a Republican. Please explain how this is either ironic or hypocritical.
And your hysterical "us vs. them" attitude about my opinion just makes it a two-for. Bush's behavior is beside the point.
Beside your point, perhaps, but not mine. My point is that you said:
Anyways, it's just been a trend of Obama's presidency that those who truly dislike him will agree to the plausibility of just about any negative statement until it's been utterly debunked. Again I'd compare it to how GWB was viewed by demos and liberals, except their anger was more directed at the executive orders, wiring tapping, torture and military action.
When comparing the responses to Bush's presidency with the responses to Obama's presidency,
what Bush's behavior actually was is a key part of the discussion. Please explain how this is hysterical.
(Nice link spam btw, I was alive then too.) It's the zealotry with which people, like you just did, line up along party lines to start freaking out. I can hold a rational conversation about where Bush was a bad president without foaming at the mouth, just like I can listen to people, even Republicans, disagree with Obama's particular policy moves and not call them out for being a "bad democrat" or "the enemy."
It's not link spam, it's citing my sources, something which your posts could benefit from. For instance: please link to where you disagreed with a policy move of Obama's, and where I called you a "bad Democrat" or "the enemy" for doing so. In the alternative, please explain why you're bringing that up there if you're not trying to imply I did it.
As it happens, I am not an epistemic gatekeeper, at least not at the line you've drawn. I love it when people criticize Obama, I just want it to be about something real. I think the
Eleventh Commandment lobotomizes the Republican Party, and I would love it if men like
David Frum carried the day and turned the GOP into a party I could consider supporting.
And to bring this thread back round to its original home, Obama went to AIPAC and Reuters called the speech a
slap at Netanyahu. Give the man credit, he went into the lion's den and pulled its tail.