BY THE WAY

I wonder if either candidate has pondered the benefits of actually losing this election? If Kerry wins, you can see how the Republicans would then blame all the inevitable mess in Iraq on his vacillation (even if he doesn’t budge an inch), and marshall a Tet offensive argument that implies that if only Washington hadn’t given up, the Blessed Leader would have seen the war to victory. Kerry wouldn’t be able to win, whatever he does. And because he’d be more fiscally responsible than Bush (could anyone be less fiscally responsible?) he wouldn’t have much in the way of domestic goodies to keep his base happy. But if Bush wins and heads into a real, live second Vietnam in Iraq, his party will split, the country will become even more bitterly polarized than now (especially if he’s re-elected because he’s not Kerry) and he’ll become another end-of-career Lyndon Johnson. The presidency of the U.S. is never an easy job. But it could be a brutal one these next four years. Which sane person would want the job?

THE ADMINISTRATION’S OPEN MIND: Here’s a fascinating little vignette about the way in which this administration is prosecuting the war. It’s a fawning account of a recent Rumsfeld speech. Money quote:

The crux of the speech came during the question-and-answer session, when an audience member posed the following: “The Financial Times today editorializes that it is ‘time to consider Iraq withdrawal,’ noting the protracted war is not winnable and it’s creating more terrorists than enemies of the West. What is your response?” An irritated yet good-natured Rumsfeld responded, “Who put that question in? He ought to get a life. If he’s got time to read that kind of stuff, he ought to get a life.”

Yep. Anyone who even reads bad news has the wrong attitude and should “get a life.” And people wonder why this White House did not listen to internal advice about post-war planning before the war or seems divorced from reality in so many ways. Rather Ratheresque.