In every speech we hear in regards to the war on terror, our leader tells us what we are not going to do. How about a reverse in strategy and just go out and kill all of these terrorists, damn it, and come back and tell us after the fact that you have put these people out of commission. If you are not going to be forceful (having to get permission to bomb a pick up truck once a day from the leader and then having to go back to base, just doesn’t win the war) then just get the hell out of the Middle East, bring our toys and soldiers back home, reject all of the passports for these terrorists who are supposed to be citizens on the loose, and tell the Middle East the first time they come over here and bother us, we will then get serious.
Our leader, a Democrat, is not listening to the Generals who know what they are doing and is probably playing war games on his iPhone. President Johnson, a Democrat, did the same thing. He played around with the lives of our soldiers in Viet Nam. Our leader keeps saying that the Iraq people have to fight their own wars – then what the hell are we over there for? Training these Syrian rebels who are Muslims is not going to work. They are Muslims and will turn on the Americans the first chance they get. All they want is the weapons and money!
How many times do we have to go through this exercise to learn our lesson? You cannot let these rebels do your heavy lifting. All I want is this leader to get out-of-the-way. When does a community organizer know more about how to win a war than our military generals? Since when should one person (this leader) have complete control of the lives of the whole country when he is not qualified to make these decisions – look at Benghazi and what happened to our people under his leadership. Where are the other two bodies of leadership (Congress and the Supreme Court) do they not have anything to say?
A Poem entitled “Rules” by John Ciardi is appropriate:
Whatever way a thing is done. Is wrong, as I hope you know. For that is the rule of One times One. It’s the way things always go.
It can’t be helped and there’s nothing to do. Except (as you’ll discover). By the ancient rule of Two times Two, Which is: First, do it over.
And do it over, as you must see, Means first you must do it wrong. That’s where we come to rule Three times Three: Improve as you go along.
If you get it right, right off the bat, That ends it right away, What’s left to do when you’ve done that? You’ve wasted the whole day!
No boy who starts by doing it wrong. Is finished early, is he? And if he improves it all day long, Why, then, his whole day’s busy.
Then everything’s proper, do you see? For idleness is to deplore. Don’t be right till it’s time to be. That is the rule of Four times Four.
This poem is exactly the way this leader handles his problems.
kommonsentsjane