The whole point of representative government is that the ruling body is supposed to do what the people want, because frankly nobody can waste the time to go through 50,000 tax bills covering the minutiae of charging a fee for, I dunno, armpit hair, nor would people opt to do so if they wanted to. It's not a setup where we just pick one of a random assortment of pricks and let them do as they please with the planet- that's what the major party heads would like everyone to think (and, naturally, what the rulers would like everyone to think) but it just ain't so. The idea of democracy is a government that at least sort of works according to what the people want, not does whatever the hell it pleases and then tries to convince everybody it's what they want deep down. Bush invaded Iraq on what are now pretty obviously personal grounds- he didn't like Saddam personally, and so he abused his power to kill more people than you or I are likely to know in a lifetime, simply to screw him. If getting rid of this sort of murderous crap and installing a true republic is gonna lead to a wishy-washy administration, so be it- at least it won't kill so many people unnecessarily.
Incidentially, value judgements hardly figure in- we're still making nice with bloody dictators all over the world, and have historically- the US has, by the numbers, caused far more deaths than the Iraqi regime ever did. So? We didn't invade Iraq because Saddam's an asshole, anyway- or at least we didn't think that was the reason. That was a rationalization after the fact- the truth is a few months ago the media and the administration couldn't shut up about the certainity that he had nukes and was probably giving them to al Qaeda- now that Bush's transparently faked rationale has been exposed as the fraud it always was, those who backed the war naturally try to keep themselves from looking bad and admitting they were wrong by saying that it was, in the end, a good deed, even if inadvertently so. Whether it actually is is a question I could answer with statistics about mortality rates and quality-of-life factors such as availability of health care, electricity, and clean water, but that's nothing anybody wants to hear about. Me, I think our foreign policy keeps making anarchies look bad, when they don't necessarily have to be these hellholes we keep setting up...
And what makes you think Bush won't be reelected? He stands a high chance of doing just that- he makes great commercials, and has worked the war hysteria and paranoia (partially caused by his own raids on the constitution- note that these are the weapons of any inherently fascist organization) to his advantage successfully since September 11th. At this rate, he could have half the country goose-stepping around wearing armbands if he so pleased- of course, the powers that be (not him, really, I just refer to him as an identifier for the larger collective that's in charge of the Executive) are a little bit subtler than that. Though it doesn't take much subtlety to pass under the radar screens of the masses.
Why don't I do anything about it? To the extent that I can, I am. Protest has only a mild efficacy when the government really doesn't care what its opponents think and the media completely ignores dissidents not writing in the opinion pages (making the message nigh impossible to get out to the people without a more coherent structure than is available). An assassination (the outside solution of last resort if things got too hairy) would be ineffective because Bush himself is an interchangeable part of a larger machine designed essentially to set up the atmosphere necessary for a one-party system (the Democrats' and Republicans' dream realized)- killing him, or even a more significant member of the executive, would only strengthen the system, and thus be counterproductive as well as lacking in flair and no fun (yeah, you hear that you NSA ****s? Get off my back!). *****ing and spreading the word whenever and wherever I can is about the limit of my abilities until the opposition starts to form- and lemme tell you this, it ain't gonna come from none of those spineless Democrats.
CP: Exactly. Nations stagnate when unilateralized. Opposition- in the form of revolution, labor wars, student riots, etc. is what has allowed the US to evolve to the times and rise in power these recent centuries- our industrial capacity alone is inconsiderable (and nearly nonexistent, now)
And while that may seem true for the majority, it isn't an absolute. Take, for one, my pro-drug stance. A certain issue with my liver and such don't enable me to get high without quantities of weed that are way out of my price range, and I'm not into anything else. And yet I want everyone to be free to smoke up. Self-interest?
Falcon: Dude... I've never played Counterstrike. I don't dig that ****. Also, you're a moron.