May 09, 2003
View from Lodi, CA: My Doubts About Dubya
By Joe Guzzardi
Whenever I tell someone I don’t like George W. Bush,
I always get the same response.
“You mean you liked Bill Clinton?” or “Don’t tell me
you’d rather have Al Gore.”
These responses miss the point altogether. I dislike
George W. Bush because he is dishonest.
Deceit in politics is as old as the hills. Richard
Nixon and Lyndon Johnson—to name but two— were
sidewinders. But they were crude and bumbling. Bush,
however, is a smooth operator. He’s something to behold.
Bush has buffaloed the public and paralyzed the
Democrats.
The New York Times recently
reported [Looking at Postwar Bush, Glum Democrats
Ponder How to Win in 2004 April 16, 2003 By Adam
Nagourney] that a prominent Democratic Senator—who
wished to remain anonymous—said that the White House
plans a “never-ending war” to keep the focus off the
economy.
The “never-ending war” strategy is chugging along
with a powerful head of steam. Afghanistan and Iraq are
over and done with.
In Iraq, we beat an army whose soldiers hadn’t eaten
in a week. Bush set the table for himself and now,
mission accomplished, is on a victory lap.
Insiders say that the credit for this masterful
public relations coup goes to
Karl Rove, Bush’s right hand man.
Jason Stanford is a Texas-based consultant for the
Democratic Party. Stanford is only the only Democratic
soul brave enough to sit for an interview for the new
book,
Bush's Brain: How Karl Rove Made George W. Bush
Presidential by
James Moore and Wayne Slater.
Disgusted by how easily the administration shifted
away from Osama bin Laden to Saddam Hussein, Stanford
summarized [PDF] the Bush/Rove strategy:
“Hey, we can't take over
a country that doesn't exist, so fine, we'll go take
over some other country. We can't invade Al Qaeda. We
can't occupy it. We can't even find it. Okay. Fine. But
we do know where Baghdad is. We've got a map. We can
find it on a map. And they've got oil and an evil guy.
So let's go there.
“You've got a
6-foot-5-inch guy dragging his dialysis machine through
the mountains of Afghanistan and Pakistan, and we are
letting him get away," concluded Stanford.
Bush, like a magician, has turned 9/11 into political
advantage. By golly, he is going after those terrorists
to make America safe.
Never mind that Bush has saddled the National
Commission on Terrorist Attacks on the U.S. with a chump
change budget of $14 million.
Bush, afraid of what it might find, wants that
commission to go away.
When Bush made his
speech from the deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln,
I was listening to the Michael Savage Show. The program
was interrupted for the live broadcast.
Bush, patting himself on the back for the military’s
achievements, was masterful. No comparison was too
outrageous… “the daring of Normandy, the fierce
courage of Iwo Jima, the decency and idealism that
turned enemies into allies….”
Summing up with a quote from Isaiah, Bush properly
thanked the military for doing what it was asked to do.
And his thanks are correctly placed. But wouldn’t it
be a new low in American politics if these soldiers were
mere pawns in Bush’s re-election bid?
Immediately after Bush’s speech ended, Savage
returned. Savage is a huge Bush supporter. Bush may not
be Churchill, Savage observed, but who wouldn’t prefer
listening to the carefully measured President to the
next four years instead of New York Senator Hillary
Clinton.
Savage then played a tape of a Hillary Clinton speech
saying that criticism of Bush shouldn’t be construed as
unpatriotic.
Needless to say, I was fine with Clinton’s message.
But her voice sounded like someone was strangling the
cats.
While the Democrats have plenty of issues to
exploit—most noticeably the U.S. 6% unemployment rate
and a third straight month of jobs cuts in the
industrial sector—Bush is adept at dancing in between
the raindrops.
If the Democrats expect to win, the party will have
to get challenge Bush’s image as a fearless warrior
against terrorism.
The anonymous Senator quoted earlier will have to go
public with her opinions.
How else can the Democrats beat that Super Smoothie,
George W. Bush?
Joe Guzzardi [email
him], an instructor in English
at the Lodi Adult School, has been writing a weekly
column since 1988. It currently appears in the
Lodi News-Sentinel.