The flaw in that "reasoning"--if it can be called that--is that Senator Clinton has been a critic of the management of the war from day one and wants to change the current course in Iraq.
ROFL! Yeah, OK...
"Oh, Mr. Bush... here's the deal --
declare all the wars you want... as long as it's neat and squeaky clean. We'll take the cowardly route and be complicit in your militaristic route. Don't worry, you have our support.
But if they go bad, you can be sure that we'll do our best to blame you for everything that goes wrong, and hope no one notices that we've been calling you 'The Worst President in history for years', but we also just gave someone with that title a blank check to go to war."
In other words...
war is OK... as long as you manage it awfully well.
Senator Clinton, and her gang of pundit-hugging centrists like Feinstein, Schumer, and the like... aren't criticizing the decision to go to war... or denouncing war as something that should be avoided at just about all costs barring a situation like World War II (which we *all* now know isn't the current situation, and anyone who didn't have our heads up our asses knew four years ago).
They're criticizing the "management" of the war. That's it... just the 'management' of it. And you try to shame me into the fact that I didn't vote for Kerry? Sorry, baby, I'm quite proud of voting the way I did.
And supposedly, my "reasoning" is the one that has flaws...
You have to admit that our country would be far better off if John Kerry were President today and not Geroge Bush.
I find it hard that even you would admit that, because it would mean Hillary would have to have waited at least another four years to be president, wouldn't she have? We all know that's mostly all you care about.
But as to your point, on the contrary, it's very possible that people would have taken all that energy that they put into the 2004 race, declared things "OK" again, and given up, fully convinced that things were OK again, instead of continuing to examine the inherent flaws in the current system. The media (especially the beltway gasbags), the electoral system, the one/two party system, the lack of grassroots input in the political process, the horde of pigs feeding at the trough in Washington; all those things would have continued to go unquestioned. That would have been an unintended consequence of installing Kerry in the WH... at least on the part of most voters. It would have been an intended consequence, however of the political elite.
The only thing that happened post 2004 that wasn't already happening pre 2004 (meaning things like Iraqi civilians dying; nobody gave a shit about them before, so I doubt anyone would now), and is almost impossible to reverse, and a broad-based coalition of people are forced to care about because it impacts so many issues, is the appointment of two more conservative Supreme Court justices.
I'd like to think that Americans would have followed along even if Kerry had actually been able to take the position he won in spite of himself (because everyone knows he didn't have the stomach to fight for it), but one thing we both agree, is that we simply can't expect Americans to perform their civic duty to educate themselves. So, since Kerry never actually made it to the WH, the two conservative Supreme Court justices seem to be the only thing that will force the 'security moms' (if there actually were more than three or four) to really examine the consequences of voting based on ridiculous rhetoric instead of based on reason and education.
If more people, like you, had voted for him, we probably wouldn't be facing these problems. The fact that that didn't happen is nothing to be proud about.
First off, there are no "people like me".
Secondly, it makes no difference how many people vote for Kerry, if he isn't willing to fight for his victory, and leaves millions of people hanging there, including his own VP candidate who vowed not to quit until every last vote was counted. I felt very bad for all those people that waited for hours in line to vote in Ohio, never got to, and the fact that they were betrayed and abandoned for all their efforts -- it just wasn't something that made me regret me not casting a vote for Kerry in a state that went blue long before the night was running long, and people's hearts started beating fast and they started getting really, really nervous as the "number of precincts reporting" and the percents from each precinct accumulated into a number that seemed to continue to mutate one way even as exit polls predicted something different earlier in the night, and a sinking feeling started developing in a LOT of people's stomachs.
Finally, if anything is happening because of these last four years with Bush as a lame duck president, Americans are being forced to question whether their country is as great as they've been brainwashed to believe it is. They're being forced to look into the mirror, something that they never really let themselves do for very long... because they didn't necessarily like what they see. Waving all the flags in the world won't let them out of that one. And neither will bombing some random country on a map when you don't like to look at what's terribly wrong with your own. After all, they've already tried it, and it failed to fix anything. Maybe once this is over, America can reclaim the moral leadership it lost the right to invoke every time it pointed the finger at some other country... and not just in the past six years or so, either.