In Bush's second inaugural address, which lasted all of seventeen minutes, he used the word "freedom" twenty-five times. His reference, of course, is to our mission in Iraq (although, curiously, the word "Iraq" never passed his lips). Talk about protesting too much!
Ohhhhhh! FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM FREEDOM
Viola! Iraq is free!
The word "liberty" appeared fifteen times in the speech. Apparently Bush is hoping that if he repeats that word often enough the American people will, when they think of the war in Iraq, picture in their minds' eyes Lady Liberty, lifting her lamp beside the golden door. Unfortunately a more likely candidate for war icon -- and a truer reflection of the reality--is the image of a hooded man perched on a box with electrodes attached to his hands. Not exactly lamps and golden doors here. Rather another sort of monumentalism, one reflected in the words "All hope abandoned ye who enter in."
Perhaps Dante's caveat should be inscribed by the provisional authority over the arrival gates at Baghdad International Airport.
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