reply to post by sos37
The thing is, there is all different kinds of stupid.
Bush's kind was the Anti-Intellectualism kind of stupid. Which is why I can't stand him.
Cheney's kind was the hubris kind of stupid. "I know better than you, yer just a panzy, ranr, all Democrats are evil, ranr, I am above the law",
which is why I can't stand him.
Scott on the other hand wasn't stupid in my eyes, just defending his Administration, which is his job. He never came off as anti-intellectual to me,
nor did he come off as full of hubris. He appeared to me simply as a man who really believed in his cause and someone who would love to sit down to a
nice dinner and attempt to explain it to me, even though we didn't see eye to eye on situations.
You see, one of the things Conservatives do which really irritates me is that they stick up for their own until they say something which detracts from
their cause, at that point they are persona non grata.
I on the other hand don't think it's that black and white. I try to understand the reasons as to why someone is saying something. And those
reasons are typically not partisan.
Scott was in washington because he wanted Change. He honestly believed that W was the man to bring it to Washington. You can't fault him for that...
and in the end, he became disallusioned, and I'm sure he's also had his feelings hurt because he thought W was better than that.
Anyway, he's a thoughtul person, and always has been.
Maybe that is why he endorsed Obama?