|
by
Jackson Thoreau, 12-19-03 |
|
|
|
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Two days before the Saddam story was
released just in time to make the Sunday morning talk shows and dominate
this week's news coverage, George W. Bush did something unusual for him
- he took six "impromptu" questions from the press after a short
announcement of his nomination for the new HUD secretary.
Big mistake.
In his first three years, Bush's handlers have let him take
media questions on his own fewer times than any president in modern history.
At the same point in their terms, Bush Sr., Clinton, LBJ, Carter, and
Ford had faced the press more than 40 times. Reagan and Nixon had staged
solo news conferences more than 20 times. Bush Jr. has done so nine times.
Nine times.
And for those conferences, Bush Jr. was provided with a
list of possible questions by aides, given a few hours to rehearse his
answers, and taken into an official, dress rehearsal, with staff members
pretending to be reporters and firing questions at him. It’s as
if the president of the United States has nothing better to do than spend
numerous hours rehearsing lines like some two-bit actor. Well, this one
doesn’t have anything better to do – Bush is known to work
out and play video games while on the job in the middle of the day. How
sad. How pitiful.
How unpresidential.
Take a look at the official White House transcript of Bush's
answers to questions on Dec. 12, 2003, about Halliburton's no-bid Iraqi
contract, Baker's conflict-of-interest position, the dollar, and other
topics at http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/12/20031212-1.html.
You can see for yourself why Bush's handlers hate to let him answer questions
on his own.
The first question was whether Bush was concerned that the
Halliburton contract, which the pork-laden Pentagon - the agency that
has never seen a $200 hammer it cannot buy - is "investigating,"
gave fuel to his critics that the contract was inappropriate. Bush ignored
Cheney's obvious conflict in this matter and sounded like he didn't have
any personal interest in the situation. He said he appreciated the Pentagon
"looking out after the taxpayers' money. They felt like there was
an overcharge issue."
That's a lie right off the bat. The Pentagon didn't feel
there was an “overcharge issue.” This was only brought forth
because many other people - not the Pentagon, which awarded the contract
in the first place raised hell about it.
And what should be done about this no-bid contract, according
to Bush? "If there's an overcharge, like we think there is, we expect
that money to be repaid," he said.
Let me get this straight. A unit of the company the vice
president made millions off of before he helped steal the White House
in 2000 gets a no-bid contract worth millions from this administration
and American taxpayers are charged more than $3 for every gallon of gas
imported to Iraq, about double most other contractors' charges. And we
just make Halliburton pay a few more bucks, then let them go on with their
merry ways? We don't put contracts up for competitive bids so the taxpayers
can get the best deals?
Before another reporter named April could follow up with
another Halliburton question, Bush tried to divert attention and keep
the mood light by asking her if this was her "first Christmas season
as a mom." The effect is that reporters laugh and find it hard to
be tough on Bush, who acts like a nice, fun guy on the surface but underneath
is petty and, to quote him, a major-league asshole. Bush is also good
about remembering reporters' names and calling them by that to make them
feel special. He even did that to me when I just met him at my first conference
with him in Texas on the 2000 campaign trail. The effect is also that
reporters don't really pay attention to the fact that Bush doesn't really
answer their questions.
April asked a good question about Bush's response to critics
who say he should distance himself from Halliburton and Cheney. He again
didn't answer the question and simply repeated that "if anybody is
overcharging the government, we expect them to repay that money."
April did not get to ask a follow-up question, asking Bush to answer her
first question. Another reporter named Wendell then started out by saying,
"In light of the New York Times editorial today, tell me why....."
Then Bush stopped him and said to more laughter, "I don't read those
editorials." That's another lie. Bush might not read every Times
editorial, but someone on his staff does and he is briefed about them.
Bush rarely reads anything in detail. He usually lazily relies on staff
briefings, which is why his knowledge on issues is so shallow. But sometimes
he actually reads the Times' editorials. To say he doesn't ever read the
editorials is misleading. Bush even contradicted himself and admitted
he sometimes reads the Times' editorials a few minutes later by saying,
"I didn't mean to 'dis' the New York Times editorial page, but I
just didn't - I'm not reading it a lot these days."
SO.....is Bush not reading those editorials at all, or is
he not reading them "a lot?" No reporter caught the lie to question
Bush about it. But to be fair, I doubt I would have had I been there -
I'm better at catching things when I go back and read the fine print.
And how many presidents have used the term "dis," especially
with an African-American official next to him? Bush was trying to act
hip, but it came across staged and even demeaning.
Anyways, Wendell's question dealt with why former Secretary
of State Baker's ties with the Carlisle Group and Baker Botts, which have
also won Iraqi contracts, don't pose a conflict of interest with Baker's
new job of restructuring Iraq's debt. Bush again didn't answer the question,
saying that Baker - the front man for the election heist in Florida in
2000 - was "a man of high integrity" and other bull.
The final question concerned the slide in the dollar against
the euro and whether Bush planned to intervene to try to stop the dollar's
decline. Bush's answer showed that he knows absolutely nothing about economics,
despite having an MBA from Harvard. His answer lent more suspicion that
Bush cheated on tests and term papers in Harvard by getting his frat buddies
to give him answers beforehand and write papers. I mean, read Bush's answer
to the question: "My answer to that question about the dollar is
that this government is for a strong dollar, and that the dollar's value
ought to be set by the market and by the conditions inherent in our respective
economies. And our economy is very strong and is getting stronger. But
the policy, the stated policy -- and not only the stated policy, but the
strong belief of this administration is that we have a strong dollar."
Say what?? The question is not: Do you believe we have a strong dollar?
The question is: What the hell are you going to do about the dollar's
decline?
And Bush's answer is obvious: Nothing because I don't know
what the hell to do. He doesn't even know what a declining dollar actually
means.
And it's another lie that the economy is getting stronger
- see a previous column I wrote on the economy and these phony economic
growth numbers we're suddenly seeing during this election year [my previous
columns are archived at http://www.geocities.com/jacksonthor]. Anyways,
after such a dismal performance before the press last Friday, Bush's handlers,
Rove, Cheney, Rumsfeld, & Co. knew they had to divert attention fast.
Bush's polling numbers have mostly declined since last spring so it was
time to.....trot out their friend, Saddam. Saddam was suddenly "found"
just in time for the Sunday morning talk shows so the focus would not
be on Halliburton and the declining dollar and other topics the Bushites
don't want American voters to know. Many people I've talked to, including
those who don't read the kind of Web sites I write for, have told me they
thought the administration knew where Saddam was months ago, that they
were just waiting for the right time to make an example of him. The Bushites
can't fool all the people, but they probably can fool enough of them to
steal another election. U.S. Rep. Jim McDermott, D-Wash., even told a
Seattle radio station that the U.S. military could have found Hussein
"a long time ago if they wanted."
British reporter Greg Palast had a good column at http://www.commondreams.org/views03/1214-08.htm,
poking fun at Baker's and other American officials' previous relationship
with Hussein. He wrote that Saddam "asserted that Baker and the prior
Bush regime, 'owe me my back pay. After all I did for these guys you'd
think they'd have the decency to pay up.’”
Palast got more serious, listing many jobs Hussein did for
the Baker-Bush administrations, including the invasion of Kuwait in 1990,
which was approved by Baker himself through an ambassador. The ties date
as far back as 1979, when Hussein seized power in Iraq with U.S. approval
and switched the country's Cold War allegiance from the Soviets to the
U.S. The next year, Hussein invaded Iran, with U.S. support, training,
and military hardware. Saddam even hosted Rumsfeld in Baghdad in 1983,
when more arms trade was ironed out. Then in 1984, the U.S. Commerce Department
issued a license for exporting aflatoxin to Iraq to be used in biological
weapons, Palast wrote. Four years later, Hussein gassed Kurds with those
weapons. That incident has long been repeated by conservatives to justify
the American invasion of Iraq earlier this year, when other excuses like
weapons of mass destruction and ties to bin Laden fell apart.
Such Bushite-Hussein ties are a big reason why I remain
suspicious of this week's staged "capture" of Saddam. Some deal
has been made with Hussein. He'll be "convicted" and secretly
shipped off to some island or obscure place to live out the rest of his
life in luxury.
This week's mainstream media coverage of the "capture"
is just more election propaganda, the kind Hitler used to overtake Germany
and much of Europe in the 1930s. The Bushites want an American empire,
just like Hitler almost had. They're making plans to invade Iran, Syria,
and other countries after stealing the 2004 election. Read the Bush administration's
“National Security Strategy of the United States of America”
at http://www.whitehouse.gov/nsc/nss.html. The chapter on global terrorism
at http://www.whitehouse.gov/nsc/nss3.html is particularly full of football
cliches such as “our best defense is a good offense.” The
document basically says the U.S. has the right to invade any country it
pleases simply by saying they engage in terrorism or MIGHT do so.
Thankfully, there are still a few prominent U.S. officials
like Sen. Robert Byrd [D-West Virginia] who continue to speak out against
this disastrous, selfish, and unAmerican policy. At the 138th anniversary
celebration of The Nation Magazine on Dec. 14 in New York City, Byrd said,
"The capture of Saddam Hussein will not be the keystone for peace
in that volatile region. This day's news does not lessen the danger that
the Bush doctrine of pre-emptive strike poses to international peace and
stability.... Not only is the doctrine of pre-emption a radical departure
from the traditional doctrine of self-defense, but it is also a destabilizing
influence on world affairs. The Bush doctrine of pre-emption is a dangerous
precedent. The Bush doctrine of pre-emption is a reckless policy. The
rising tide of anti-Americanism across the globe is directly attributable
to the fear and distrust engendered by this Bush doctrine of pre-emption."
Byrd called the war in Iraq "nothing less than a manufactured war.
It was a war served up to a deliberately misled and deluded American public
to suit the neoconservative political agenda of the Bush White House."
And Byrd also criticized his colleagues. "Most disheartening
to me, Congress allowed the Constitution to become a casualty of the Bush
doctrine of pre-emptive strikes," he said. "Congress allowed
its constitutional authority to declare war to fall victim to this irresponsible
strategy. Just a little more than a year ago, in October 2002, the Senate
obsequiously handed to the president the constitutional authority to declare
war. It failed to debate; it failed to question; it failed to live up
to the standards established by the framers. Like a whipped dog, the Senate
put its tail between its legs and slunk away into the shadows, slunk away
from its responsibility." You can go to http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20031229&s=byrd
to read Byrd's speech in its entirety.
To those who say we have a right to invade other countries
and impose our brand of democracy on them, consider this: What if Canada
suddenly built up militarily, invaded the U.S., and somehow overtook our
government, driving the Bushites from power [remember “Canadian
Bacon,” Michael Moore's 1994 movie on the neocons lying about a
potential Canadian invasion to keep the military budget high?]. While
I would be happy about Bush being driven from office, I wouldn't be happy
about having some other country force its government down my throat. And
if some of my relatives or friends had died because of this invasion,
I'd no doubt fight tooth and nail against the Canadian puppet government,
even if it provided free medical care to all.
Getting back to Hussein, his "capture" has not
stopped the violence in Iraq. More troops continue to be killed or injured.
We have killed many civilians there, ensuring that their family members
join the other side. They fight back in ways we don't understand, ways
we call terrorism.
But that's how the Irish have resisted the British taking
over part of their homeland since the early 19th century. Even the American
patriots employed tactics that the British considered unfair and even
terrorism during the Revolutionary War of the 18th century. Those tactics
included waving white flags at British troops, then shooting them when
they put their guns down. You do what you have to do when you're the underdog.
We're never going to "win" this war until we understand that,
just like we will never "win" the war on drugs until we understand
how addicted to drugs - from caffeine to alcohol to prescribed drugs to
illegal ones - many Americans are and how agencies like the CIA have participated
in the drug war.
In other words, we will never begin to win these wars until
we realize what big hypocrites we are and start making some real changes.
We will sure never win these wars going down the abyss that
the Bushites are leading us down.
I'm not saying I admire Hussein, as many on the right are
lying that I do. I don't admire any dictator and that includes Bush, who
didn't really win in 2000 and does whatever he wants like a dictator.
I'm just calling it like I see it, which is what a true
patriot should do in a real republic. I don't trust anything Bush says
or does, especially in an election year. I don't buy it that Hussein just
now happened to be "captured."
I await the "capture" of Osama bin Laden, which
will probably occur a month or so before the 2004 election.
Jackson Thoreau is an American writer and co-author of
We Will Not Get Over It: Restoring a Legitimate White House. The updated,
120,000-word electronic book can be downloaded on his Internet site at
http://www.geocities.com/jacksonthor/ebook.html. Citizens for Legitimate
Government has the earlier version at http://www.legitgov.org/we_will_not_get_over_it.html.
He can be contacted at jacksonthor@yahoo.com or jacksonthor@justice.com.
-30-
|