Dick Cheney wants Obama to take the blame for his mistakes.
John McQuaid from Huffington Post makes a few good points about Cheney’s re-emergence and how pathetically self-serving it is:
Besides embellishing a legacy, the current Cheney campaign seems aimed at one thing: setting up Obama for the stab-in-the-back treatment in the event of another terror attack. Please. Terrorism is a serious problem. It requires real strategic thinking. Such posturing may be catnip to the press, but it’s virtually irrelevant to the world we live in, and unhelpful to the hard work of protecting us.
I live next door to a 62 year old man who doesn’t speak to me because I told him not to throw his beer cans on my property. His age is important because it illustrates that even at a point in his life when he should have learned a few things about politeness, the treatment of others and common sense, he’s obviously failed to take anything from these lessons.
Dick Cheney is the same type of person. He’s ALWAYS right. Anyone who disagrees is either naive or not as committed as he is. Anyone who wants to have a real discussion of complex issues doesn’t deserve to be in the same room with him.
This prick spent 8 years acting like a scared child, reacting to difficult circumstances with a concrete mindset and dividing this nation not out of belief but aggressive necessity. It was his way or the highway and, I’m sorry, that’s not acceptable in this country. When you show as much disregard for the people who elected you - and even the one’s who didn’t - you have no invitation to speak to us again. Most of the country HATES you and rightly so.
What Dick Cheney needs is not a soapbox that the media happily gives him but a strong, hard punch in the mouth. Maybe a few. His actions have resulted in countless unecessary deaths and pain for more families than can be counted. What this elderly child needs is to feel a bit of pain himself and a few good punches would do that. It won’t immediately force him to keep his beer cans on his side of the property but, over time, it might deter him from throwing them in the first place.
I used to live in Los Angeles for a few years. Anyone who’s lived there knows it’s a one-horse town, and that horse is the Entertainment industry. Those with an itch to enter it has made the pilgrimage out there at least once. Anyway, I never warmed to the place. First of all, there’s very little variety. Most of the conversations you have center around films. There’s a huge gap between rich and poor - and you end up living in a bubble; the space between where you live, where you go and who you meet and the hours in between where you’re in your car.