Sonny wrote:Dan Wishengrad wrote:I strongly believe that JC has been our best EX-Prez in history -- actually building homes for Habitat from Humanity, monitoring elections, fighting for human-rights, etc. Very admirable, indeed.
This is 100% laughable Dan. Monitoring elections for guys like his buddy Chavez in Venezuela? I will give him credit for building some homes through Habitat. But Bush, Sr and Clinton did that too.
JC hasn't met a dictator he didn't like and undercuts US policy abroad any chance he gets. He also seems to forget that ex-Presidents don't criticize the current administration as has been past (unwritten) policy for all past presidents.
Okay, Sonny, let's see what Carter has actually said for the record about Chavez, rather than what the right-wing attack machine has claimed he has said. This from CNN.com:
"Shown live footage of the protests, Carter said the United States' reputation in the world is as low as it's been in his lifetime and that the United States has lost its prestige, authority and influence in Latin America. He added, however, that the chief opponent to the Free Trade Area of the Americas, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, is a "demagogue." (Read about Congressional passage of the Central American Free Trade Act)
Before the protests turned violent, Chavez denounced capitalism to thousands of demonstrators from his perch in front of a six-story banner of communist revolutionary Che Guevara. Protesters, including Argentine soccer legend Diego Maradona, listened as Chavez claimed he would "bury" the Free Trade Area of the Americas proposal. Maradona wore a shirt accusing Bush of war crimes, while protesters called the U.S. president a "terrorist" and a "fascist." (Watch the protests -- 1:25)
Carter defended Bush and dismissed as rhetoric the words of the Venezuelan president.
"The personal attacks on the president and the condemnations of America by Hugo Chavez from Venezuela, I think, are completely unjustified and uncalled for," Carter said. "Chavez is a difficult person with whom to deal personally. I know from my own experience."
The problem with the right-wing pundits whom you seem to believe, Sonny, is that they are so blinded by hatred of Americans (like Carter) who disagree with them that they invent facts to justify their opinions rather than reporting the truth of what Carter did and has said about Venezuela and its election. Yes, Carter and his organization declared that Chavez won his recall election, while others claimed there was massive election fraud. I don't claim to know the truth, but do you? Carter was THERE, he has harsh words for Chavez (who I agree is a lunatic and a dangerous dictator), but I will give Jimmy some benefit of doubt that you obviously will not. Chavez may be nuts and dangerous, but nobody can deny that he is wildly popular in his own country and especially with the poor and the indigenous people of Venezuela, who turned out in record numbers to vote there.
This is the problem with "nation-building" -- if you promote democracy around the world you might not like the results you get! This is certainly true in Iraq, where our current administration has changed the reasons for its war of choice from removing WMDs (which weren't there) to "spreading democracy" in the Middle East (as if there EVER will be one other than Israel's!). Now we are stuck with another corrupt Iraqi central government that we have propped up, but apparently they are not quite the allies we had hoped for. Thousands of Iraqis and Americans have died for George W. Bush and Dick Cheney's unnecessary war, and we are mired over there with no hope for a quick exit in sight. We are all entitled to our opinions of course, but I say that the current administration -- and not Carter's -- is by FAR the worst Presidency in American history. And I stand by my "100% laughable" opinion that JC has done more since leaving office than any other President, Republican or Democrat. Bush Sr's life of volunteerism since leaving office? Give me a break!
And to StrykerFSU, I concede that age when leaving office is a valid point, especially when considering ex-President Reagan. But Carter is no young man anymore, and he's still out there today as an octagenarian, working just as hard at what he believes in.