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Bush's Speech Is a Sad Attempt to Salvage His Name

By Robert Scheer, Truthdig. Posted January 10, 2007.


Bush's talk of escalating the war is nothing more than a desperate strategy for salvaging what remains of his reign.
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To surge or not to surge, that is the question. As our prince proposes, once again, to take arms against a sea of troubles, he responds not to the disaster that he has visited upon Iraq, but rather embraces a desperate strategy for salvaging what remains of his reign.

To win, perchance to dream. Few Americans, a mere 17 percent, according to the latest Washington Post/ABC poll, think that sacrificing more Americans in patrols on the streets of Baghdad will reverse the slings and arrows of our outrageous Iraqi fortune, but giving a speech about it might provide our hapless Hamlet with some temporary political cover.

"All the world is really watching," proclaimed Bush press secretary Tony Snow, "and it's important to get this right." Toward that end, as The New York Times reported, "The president's aides were contemplating having Mr. Bush deliver it from the White House Map Room, a site replete with the history and imagery of World War II -- imagery that Mr. Bush has invoked as he has sought to compare the campaign against terrorism to the struggle against totalitarianism and the Nazis. But the Oval Office, a more traditional setting, was also being considered."

As for the speech's content, it is by necessity an exercise in the absurd, as the president previewed in his soliloquy for doubting Republican senators his conviction that Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has had a profound change of heart. This radical Shiite leader, who only days ago turned over Saddam Hussein to the tender mercies of a mob chanting its allegiance to the even more fanatical Shiite leader Muqtada al-Sadr, now is expected to lead U.S. troops in battle against his chief political ally and sponsor of much of Iraq's most deadly sectarian fighting. Even Bush must know by now that those fellows with whom he is in bed over there bear us nothing but hate. Speak not of the pangs of despised love.

That must give pause to the president's top advisers, but nonetheless they fail to confront the insolence of office that so fully characterizes this man. "Iraqis will take on this plan and lead it. We will be there to support them and be there to help them hold it," said one senior U.S. official, who briefed the media offstage.

But some in attendance did claim afterward to have demurred. "I expressed reservations," said Sen. Olympia Snowe, a Maine Republican. "I said, 'Why should we expect any different result than previously,' that I didn't believe the Maliki government had demonstrated the political will or capacity or resoluteness for reconciliation, that the reason Americans are not supporting the war is because they see Iraqis fighting among themselves rather than for themselves, and I didn't see the surge addressing the root causes of the violence." Needless to say that patient merit of the unworthy went unnoticed by the brooding prince.

"He seemed very confident," said Sen. Thad Cochran, a Republican from Mississippi. "I'm convinced he has come up with a proposal that he thinks will work." But Cochran confessed to feeling lonely in his faith: "I think I was the only senator who acted like he would be supportive. I was surprised that no one said it but me."

No matter such temporal considerations, for Bush's preoccupation is the dread of something after the death of his presidency, when history will judge the calamity of his long political life and such judgment would likely bear the whips and scorns of time.

"I don't understand what he thinks is going on in Iraq, but whatever it is, he doesn't care about politics, or the Congress or his successor, when it comes to Iraq," offered Richard C. Holbrooke, a veteran of foreign debacles authored by a rival clan. "He wants to either win the war or, since that is an impossibility, pass it on to his successor."

Will the Congress deny him? That is the question posed by Republican Sen. Gordon Smith of Oregon, who only weeks before had withdrawn support for his leader's war: "What this sets up is a classic war powers confrontation between the White House and the Congress. Clearly he has the power to commit troops; the question is whether the Congress has the convictions to deny funding." The senator admitted to having no such convictions: "It would be a dishonorable thing to budget away the bullets."

Better to spend them killing more of theirs and yours in an unworthy cause, for in that sleep of death what dreams may come, and, as the bard foretold, "Thus conscience does make cowards of us all." Ay, there's the rub.

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Robert Scheer is the co-author of The Five Biggest Lies Bush Told Us About Iraq. See more of Robert Scheer at TruthDig.

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Theater of the Absurd
Posted by: opeluboy on Jan 10, 2007 4:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Scheer as usual has it right. No wonder he was replaced at the LA Times with the subterranean insect larva, Jonah Goldberg.

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» RE: Theater of the Absurd Posted by: hotlipsin61
Mike
Posted by: maolson on Jan 11, 2007 3:20 AM   
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We have a Constitutional crisis on our hands.

George W. Bush is insane, incompetent and a real and present danger.

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» RE: Mike Posted by: Willy
» RE: Mike Posted by: macktan
Congress will do NOTHING
Posted by: Reader11722 on Jan 11, 2007 5:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Unfortunately it took segregationist Governor Wallace to reveal the truth that "there's not a dime's worth of difference between" Republicans and Democrats. The Democrats willingly went along with the War in Iraq, suspension of Habeas Corpus, detaining protesters, banning books like "America Deceived' from Amazon, stealing private lands (Kelo decision), warrant-less wiretapping and refusing to investigate 9/11 properly. They are both guilty of treason. The Democrats will go along with the surge then they'll go along with the next war against Iran. All on behalf of Israel.
Support indy media.
Last link (before Google Books bends to gov't Will and drops the title):
America Deceived (book)

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motamanx
Posted by: motamanx on Jan 11, 2007 8:55 AM   
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I fell asleep just before the speech. Missed it. What did he say? I woke up sort of happy that I missed it. I can't really stand that voice. What did he say that was any good?

What has he ever DONE that is any good?

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» RE: motamanx Posted by: DaBear
Get him into a 12-step program!
Posted by: macktan on Jan 11, 2007 12:06 PM   
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Doing the same thing repeatedly and expecting a different result--most 12-step programs characterize this behavior as an addiction. And bush has an addiction to war. Just think if he had let the un inspectors finish their job! But Bush was gunning for Saddam from day one of his presidency, methinks a weird esteem game going on with President Dad. Bush was told in the beginning to let diplomacy handle Saddam and Iraq; but he chose war. The Iraq Study Group (too much of Dad in it) tells him diplomacy over war, but, no, war again. He is putting this country at risk by forcing a confrontation between him and the country...and the rest of the world. It's not enough to say I made a mistake...and then repeat the same mistake.

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» RE: Get him into a 12-step program! Posted by: brotherjonah
infantile lunatic and incompetent parents
Posted by: DaBear on Jan 11, 2007 12:22 PM   
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Hat tip to Robert, but TomDispatch has it nailed airtight in Tomgram: The President Alone in the Dark: Surging from Kenai: Bush's Sacrificial Americans (I think Tom Englehardt couldn't decide on just one title). In the second half of the piece he describes the personal pathology of the child-tyrant (my term for it) based upon the odd behavior of the Chimp throughout all of this.

Last night as I vomitted halfway through the speech and had to read transcripts and re-watch portions online just to get through it, I kept thinking, this is all oddly familiar. I was talking with a buddy who is a psychiatric facility worker and mentioned this and Englehardt's observations about the infantile role playing fantasy behavior of the Chimp while the real world situation is nothing short of a snuff film's action. His eyes bugged out and he conveyed that this is exactly the kind of behavior one sees when out of control adolescent patients first come in during an episode and have to be physically restrained until their episode passes. You can't do anything with them until the thing clears, then you can medicate, talk therapy all that. But when they're raging, you have to restrain them, period.

That's exactly where we are and yet we have passive parents in Congress who will say "no" but then fully fund the Child--who's practically daring them to punish him, to set a boundary that won't be moved. This is a classic Boomer-style passive parent behavior, afraid of physical contact with their out of control child, who will only use words when words must be backed up with the boundary and restraint when the ensuing tantrum comes. So many other peoples' kids are going to die because Pelosi, et al. won't have the spine necessary to parent George and Barbara's high-chair tyrant. This is what the aristocracy has brought to the nation: a lunatic who desperately needs help, who has made fools of some and corpses of others, bankrupted the treasury and now will again be given an enabling pass by the only folks who can stop him from harming himself and the rest of the world. To those who believed the Dims could save us, I hope you're happy. Your delusion is part of the psychosis that is Amerika. Madness is doing the same thing over and over expecting different results. Now do you believe the progressives, finally? What a fracking mess.

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U.S. government in the hands of military-industrial corporations
Posted by: scott balogh on Jan 12, 2007 7:44 AM   
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If the federal government were not controlled by the monstrous corporations that live off empirical gains, there would be some oversight and this president would not have been allowed to run amok. The power elite love this group of hit men and women. The only hope we the people have is to cut off some heads. By that I mean, haul the egomaniacs out of the boardrooms and install some oversight there too. No more political contributions from anyone and strive to re-create government by the people. Do we really have to take to the streets and revolt? Are we going to allow the Dick Cheney's of the world continue to trickle down on us or are we going to yank them out of circulation? Revolution!

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Jonah Goldberg?
Posted by: brotherjonah on Jan 12, 2007 11:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I did a google on my username, Brother Jonah. And came up with that dude writing some right wing crap that hurt my head and eyes just reading it. I should find out more about him, and start collecting a real data base of the lunatics who run with him.

Hey, they do it to us, right? Why shouldn't we have access to like the addresses, phone numbers, license plate numbers and IP addresses of the Pigs and their Pig Supporters?
What are they hiding?
If they have done nothing wrong, why would they fear public scrutiny.

Not really. I would be perfectly content to allow them to babble themselves into eventual unemployment, and obscurity.

Their thoughts and deeds deserve nothing more than to be buried in indifference.

I just noticed his name in the first comment about this excellent parody of the Chimp playing Hamlet.
I remember the soliloquy, learned it in high school.

Hamlet wandering around the castle talking to himself about suicide... tell you what, that there was a play with absolutely no heroes. The merciful part of it is the non-heroes all died at the end of the play.

Hamlet, however, for all his traumas and dramas, could not hold a candle to the real life psycho we have with his finger on the button of more WMDs than the whole rest of the world combined.

We sure have a problem here, like trying to talk a hostage taker into dropping the gun and letting the hostage go.

Only we are part of the hostages. And the gun is very very very extremely hugely big.

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Salvage his name?
Posted by: Jeanne on Jan 13, 2007 6:20 PM   
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Let's give the twit a real name in history. Let's name the war he started for him. It's BUSH'S WAR. Let it be labeled as such to stand among the Revolutionary War, the Civil War, WWI, WWII, the Vietnam War.... I can't think of a more ignoble tribute for that troll.

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» RE: Salvage his name? Posted by: TruthBeTold
» RE: Salvage his name? Posted by: Jeanne
Larry125
Posted by: Larry125 on Jan 21, 2007 5:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I just can't figure out how Bush is staying in power.Does he have photographs of all of the congressmen and senators breaking the law.Everyone in the country knows he is breaking constitutional laws.He may even be borderline retarded.Our soldiers all took an oath to defend the constitution from enemies foreign and domestic.Shouldn't they be rolling into Washington by now instead of invading and occupying other countries?

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