
Just look at a few of his accomplishments.
by George Lakoff, Marc Ettlinger and Sam Ferguson
8/10/06
Progressives have fallen into a trap. Emboldened by President Bush's plummeting approval ratings, progressives increasingly point to Bush's "failures" and label him and his administration as incompetent. For example, Nancy Pelosi said "The situation in Iraq and the reckless economic policies in the United States speak to one issue for me, and that is the competence of our leader." Self-satisfying as this criticism may be, it misses the bigger point. Bush's disasters — Katrina, the Iraq War, the budget deficit — are not so much a testament to his incompetence or a failure of execution. Rather, they are the natural, even inevitable result of his conservative governing philosophy. It is conservatism itself, carried out according to plan, that is at fault. Bush will not be running again, but other conservatives will. His governing philosophy is theirs as well. We should be putting the onus where it belongs, on all conservative office holders and candidates who would lead us off the same cliff.
To Bush's base, his bumbling folksiness is part of his charm — it fosters conservative populism. Bush plays up this image by proudly stating his lack of interest in reading and current events, his fondness for naps and vacations and his self-deprecating jokes. This image causes the opposition to underestimate his capacities — disregarding him as a complete idiot — and deflects criticism of his conservative allies. If incompetence is the problem, it's all about Bush. But, if conservatism is the problem, it is about a set of ideas, a movement and its many adherents.
The idea that Bush is incompetent is a curious one. Consider the following (incomplete) list of major initiatives the Bush administration, with a loyal conservative Congress, has accomplished:
Centralizing power within the executive branch to an unprecedented degree
Starting two major wars, one started with questionable intelligence and in a manner with which the military disagreed
Placing on the Supreme Court two far-right justices, and stacking the lower federal courts with many more
Cutting taxes during wartime, an unprecedented event
Passing a number of controversial bills such as the PATRIOT Act, the No Child Left Behind Act, the Medicare Drug bill, the Bankruptcy bill and a number of massive tax cuts
Rolling back and refusing to enforce a host of basic regulatory protections
Appointing industry officials to oversee regulatory agencies
Establishing a greater role for religion through faith-based initiatives
Passing Orwellian-titled legislation assaulting the environment — "The Healthy Forests Act" and the "Clear Skies Initiative" — to deforest public lands, and put more pollution in our skies
Winning re-election and solidifying his party's grip on Congress
These aren't signs of incompetence. As should be painfully clear, the Bush administration has been overwhelmingly competent in advancing its conservative vision. It has been all too effective in achieving its goals by determinedly pursuing a conservative philosophy.
It's not Bush the man who has been so harmful, it's the conservative agenda.
The Conservative Agenda
Conservative philosophy has three fundamental tenets: individual initiative, that is, government's positive role in people's lives outside of the military and police should be minimized; the President is the moral authority; and free markets are enough to foster freedom and opportunity.
The conservative vision for government is to shrink it – to "starve the beast" in Conservative Grover Norquist's words. The conservative tagline for this rationale is that "you can spend your money better than the government can." Social programs are considered unnecessary or "discretionary" since the primary role of government is to defend the country's border and police its interior. Stewardship of the commons, such as allocation of healthcare or energy policy, is left to people's own initiative within the free market. Where profits cannot be made — conservation, healthcare for the poor — charity is meant to replace justice and the government should not be involved.
Given this philosophy, then, is it any wonder that the government wasn't there for the residents of Louisiana and Mississippi in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina? Conservative philosophy places emphasis on the individual acting alone, independent of anything the government could provide. Some conservative Sunday morning talk show guests suggested that those who chose to live in New Orleans accepted the risk of a devastating hurricane, the implication being that they thus forfeited any entitlement to government assistance. If the people of New Orleans suffered, it was because of their own actions, their own choices and their own lack of preparedness. Bush couldn't have failed if he bore no responsibility.
The response to Hurricane Katrina — rather, the lack of response — was what one should expect from a philosophy that espouses that the government can have no positive role in its citizen's lives. This response was not about Bush's incompetence, it was a conservative, shrink-government response to a natural disaster.
Another failure of this administration during the Katrina fiasco was its wholesale disregard of the numerous and serious hurricane warnings. But this failure was a natural outgrowth of the conservative insistence on denying the validity of global warming, not ineptitude. Conservatives continue to deny the validity of global warming, because it runs contrary to their moral system. Recognizing global warming would call for environmental regulation and governmental efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Regulation is a perceived interference with the free-market, Conservatives' golden calf. So, the predictions of imminent hurricanes — based on recognizing global warming — were not heeded. Conservative free market convictions trumped the hurricane warnings.
Our budget deficit is not the result of incompetent fiscal management. It too is an outgrowth of conservative philosophy. What better way than massive deficits to rid social programs of their funding?
In Iraq, we also see the impact of philosophy as much as a failure of execution.
The idea for the war itself was born out of deep conservative convictions about the nature and capacity of US military force. Among the Project for a New American Century's statement of principles (signed in 1997 by a who's who of the architects of the Iraq war — Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, Zalmay Khalilzad, I. Lewis Libby among others) are four critical points:
we need to increase defense spending significantly if we are to carry out our global responsibilities today and modernize our armed forces for the future
we need to strengthen our ties to democratic allies and to challenge regimes hostile to our interests and values
we need to promote the cause of political and economic freedom abroad
we need to accept responsibility for America's unique role in preserving and extending an international order friendly to our security, our prosperity, and our principles.
Implicit in these ideas is that the United States military can spread democracy through the barrel of a gun. Our military might and power can be a force for good.
It also indicates that the real motive behind the Iraq war wasn't to stop Iraq's pursuit of weapons of mass destruction, but was a test of neoconservative theory that the US military could reshape Middle East geo-politics. The manipulation and disregard of intelligence to sell the war was not incompetence, it was the product of a conservative agenda.
Unfortunately, this theory exalts a hubristic vision over the lessons of history. It neglects the realization that there is a limit to a foreign army's ability to shape foreign politics for the good. Our military involvement in Vietnam, Lebanon, the Philippines, Cuba (prior to Castro) and Panama, or European imperialist endeavors around the globe should have taught us this lesson. Democracy needs to be an organic, homegrown movement, as it was in this country. If we believe so deeply in our ideals, they will speak for themselves and inspire others.
During the debate over Iraq, the conservative belief in the unquestioned authority and moral leadership of the President helped shape public support. We see this deference to the President constantly: when Conservatives call those questioning the President's military decisions "unpatriotic"; when Conservatives defend the executive branch's use of domestic spying in the war on terror; when Bush simply refers to himself as the "decider." "I support our President" was a common justification of assent to the Iraq policy.
Additionally, as the implementer of the neoconservative vision and an unquestioned moral authority, our President felt he had no burden to forge international consensus or listen to the critiques of our allies. "You're with us, or you're against us," he proclaimed after 9/11.
Much criticism continues to be launched against this administration for ineptitude in its reconstruction efforts. Tragically, it is here too that the administration's actions have been shaped less by ineptitude than by deeply held conservative convictions about the role of government.
As noted above, Conservatives believe that government's role is limited to security and maintaining a free market. Given this conviction, it's no accident that administration policies have focused almost exclusively on the training of Iraqi police, and US access to the newly free Iraqi market — the invisible hand of the market will take care of the rest. Indeed, George Packer has recently reported that the reconstruction effort in Iraq is nearing its end ("The Lessons of Tal Affar," The New Yorker, April 10th, 2006). Iraqis must find ways to rebuild themselves, and the free market we have constructed for them is supposed to do this. This is not ineptitude. This is the result of deep convictions over the nature of freedom and the responsibilities of governments to their people.
Finally, many of the miscalculations are the result of a conservative analytic focus on narrow causes and effects, rather than mere incompetence. Evidence for this focus can be seen in conservative domestic policies: Crime policy is based on punishing the criminals, independent of any effort to remedy the larger social issues that cause crime; immigration policy focuses on border issues and the immigrants, and ignores the effects of international and domestic economic policy on population migration; environmental policy is based on what profits there are to be gained or lost today, without attention paid to what the immeasurable long-term costs will be to the shared resource of our environment; education policy, in the form of vouchers, ignores the devastating effects that dismantling the public school system will have on our whole society.
Is it any surprise that the systemic impacts of the Iraq invasion were not part of the conservative moral or strategic calculus used in pursuing the war?
The conservative war rhetoric focused narrowly on ousting Saddam — he was an evil dictator, and evil cannot be tolerated, period. The moral implications of unleashing social chaos and collateral damage in addition to the lessons of history were not relevant concerns.
As a consequence, we expected to be greeted as liberators. The conservative plan failed to appreciate the complexities of the situation that would have called for broader contingency planning. It lacked an analysis of what else would happen in Iraq and the Middle East as a result of ousting the Hussein Government, such as an Iranian push to obtain nuclear weapons.
Joe Biden recently said, "if I had known the president was going to be this incompetent in his administration, I would not have given him the authority [to go to war]." Had Bush actually been incompetent, he would have never been able to lead us to war in Iraq. Had Bush been incompetent, he would not have been able to ram through hundreds of billions of dollars in tax cuts. Had Bush been incompetent, he would have been blocked from stacking the courts with right-wing judges. Incompetence, on reflection, might have actually been better for the country.
Hidden Successes
Perhaps the biggest irony of the Bush-is-incompetent frame is that these "failures" — Iraq, Katrina and the budget deficit — have been successes in terms of advancing the conservative agenda.
One of the goals of Conservatives is to keep people from relying on the federal government. Under Bush, FEMA was reorganized to no longer be a first responder in major natural disasters, but to provide support for local agencies. This led to the disastrous response to Hurricane Katrina. Now citizens, as well as local and state governments, have become distrustful of the federal government's capacity to help ordinary citizens. Though Bush's popularity may have suffered, enhancing the perception of federal government as inept turned out to be a conservative victory.
Conservatives also strive to get rid of protective agencies and social programs. The deficit Bush created through irresponsible tax cuts and a costly war in Iraq will require drastic budget cuts to remedy. Those cuts, conservatives know, won't come from military spending, particularly when they raise the constant specter of war. Instead, the cuts will be from what Conservatives have begun to call "non-military, discretionary spending;" that is, the programs that contribute to the common good like the FDA, EPA, FCC, FEMA, OSHA and the NLRB. Yet another success for the conservative agenda.
Both Iraq and Katrina have enriched the coffers of the conservative corporate elite, thus further advancing the conservative agenda. Halliburton, Lockhead Martin and US oil companies have enjoyed huge profit margins in the last six years. Taking Iraq's oil production off-line in the face of rising international demand meant prices would rise, making the oil inventories of Exxon and other firms that much more valuable, leading to record profits. The destruction wrought by Katrina and Iraq meant billions in reconstruction contracts. The war in Iraq (and the war in Afghanistan) meant billions in military equipment contracts. Was there any doubt where those contracts would go? Chalk up another success for Bush's conservative agenda.
Bush also used Katrina as an opportunity to suspend the environmental and labor protection laws that Conservatives despise so much. In the wake of Katrina, environmental standards for oil refineries were temporarily suspended to increase production. Labor laws are being thwarted to drive down the cost of reconstruction efforts. So, amidst these "disasters," Conservatives win again.
Where most Americans see failure in Iraq – George Miller recently called Iraq a "blunder of historic proportions" – conservative militarists are seeing many successes. Conservatives stress the importance of our military — our national pride and worth is expressed through its power and influence. Permanent bases are being constructed as planned in Iraq, and America has shown the rest of the world that we can and will preemptively strike with little provocation.
They succeeded in a mobilization of our military forces based on ideological pretenses to impact foreign policy. The war has struck fear in other nations with a hostile show of American power. The conservatives have succeeded in strengthening what they perceive to be the locus of the national interest —military power.
It's NOT Incompetence
When Progressives shout "Incompetence!" it obscures the many conservative successes. The incompetence frame drastically misses the point, that the conservative vision is doing great harm to this country and the world. An understanding of this and an articulate progressive response is needed. Progressives know that government can and should have a positive role in our lives beyond simple, physical security. It had a positive impact during the progressive era, busting trusts, and establishing basic labor standards. It had a positive impact during the new deal, softening the blow of the depression by creating jobs and stimulating the economy. It had a positive role in advancing the civil rights movement, extending rights to previously disenfranchised groups. And the United States can have a positive role in world affairs without the use of its military and expressions of raw power. Progressives acknowledge that we are all in this together, with "we" meaning all people, across all spectrums of race, class, religion, sex, sexual preference and age. "We" also means across party lines, state lines and international borders.
The mantra of incompetence has been an unfortunate one. The incompetence frame assumes that there was a sound plan, and that the trouble has been in the execution. It turns public debate into a referendum on Bush's management capabilities, and deflects a critique of the impact of his guiding philosophy. It also leaves open the possibility that voters will opt for another radically conservative president in 2008, so long as he or she can manage better. Bush will not be running again, so thinking, talking and joking about him being incompetent offers no lessons to draw from his presidency.
Incompetence obscures the real issue. Bush's conservative philosophy is what has damaged this country and it is his philosophy of conservatism that must be rejected, whoever endorses it.
Conservatism itself is the villain that is harming our people, destroying our environment, and weakening our nation. Conservatives are undermining American values through legislation almost every day. This message applies to every conservative bill proposed to Congress. The issue that arises every day is which philosophy of governing should shape our country. It is the issue of our times. Unless conservative philosophy itself is discredited, Conservatives will continue their domination of public discourse, and with it, will continue their domination of politics.
(c)The Rockridge Institute, 2006 (We invite the free distribution of this piece)
Fair Use Statement
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107 of US Copyright Law, this attributed work is provided via Thomas Paine’s Corner on a non-profit basis to facilitate understanding, research, education, and the advancement of human rights and social justice.


28 comments:
Bush is an idoit. He is incompetent. You are describing the accompishments of Dick Cheney and HIS administration.
Jesse Richard - Editor, TvNewsLIES.org
Click here to visit TvNewsLIES.org
You should really ask Cui Bono? By this measure those who profit are competent, those who lose are prey...
http://rossco.org/Darwin_Reconsidered.pdf
I am sorry to tell you this, but Bush IS an idiot! And he is not a Christian either! He has fostered hatred in the world: cultures toward each other AND especially toward America and Americans. Those of us who have had Muslim friends even, and would have liked to travel and see the rest of our planet are now afraid to do so, thanks specifically to him and his administration. He has also caused the cold-blooded slaughter of many innocent people! Do you really think that this is compassionate, or even wise?? He should have at least been wise enough to know that "an eye for an eye and the whole world goes blind." But HE IS NOT. Not only this, but to make matters worse, he exploited this war, and these people for profit, as well!
Anyone that can get a college degree without any effort, get credit for military service & not ever having been there, never been charged with AWOL, become president for two terms without the required votes, Bush must have something going for him. He doesn't seem too bright. In fact his verbal skills sound like a serious mental stutter. I sure don't get it. Must be someone he knows.
.....yah, his father.
I feel a bit like I'm beating a dead horse here but it's pretty plain to anyone paying attention that Bush is really just a talking head. Oh sure I have no doubt he "thinks he's in power" but the fact of the matter is that he is being "handled". Much like you handle a pop star or an actor with a drug problem. To further the Chenny, Rove agenda they needed just this kind of brainless, cocaine fried fratboy to carry out their middle eastern power grab. I think the debate regarding whether or not Bush has a brain has long since passed. Those who pull the strings don't even try to hide anymore really. You only need look with a clear head and open eyes at the facts. Only the most extremest, rightwing lunatics rush to his defense these days.
Sorry, but you're missing the point and have fallen into the classic hegelian trap. Let's examine the words of Benito Mussilini, himself: "Fascism reasserts the rights of the State as expressing the real essence of the individual And if liberty is to he the attribute of living men and not of abstract dummies invented by individualistic liberalism, then Fascism stands for liberty, and for the only liberty worth having, the liberty of the State and of the individual within the State The Fascist conception of the State is all embracing; outside of it no human or spiritual values can exist, much less have value. Thus understood, Fascism, is totalitarian, and the Fascist State - a synthesis and a unit inclusive of all values - interprets, develops, and potentates the whole life of a people." The Bush regeime has nothing to do with conservative, but is fascist in nature.
I cannot agree with your assessment of Bush. I do believe him to be a human vegetable. However, his handlers are extemely intelligent, and also extremely dangerous. They have indeed accomplished a great many of their objectives. However, they haven't necessarily achieved these goals through intelligence, rather, by dishonesty, complete disregard for the law, and intimidation. They have used the U.S. military to suppress other nations objecting to their cause, and, frankly, used the stupidity (or rather gullibility) of groups such as "Christians" in this country to achieve their ends. You mention "Conservative morals or morality" several times. These folks are neither "conservatives" nor do they have any morals. Traditional conservatives, such as Paul Craig Roberts, John Dean, Bob Barr, have long ago jumped ship from the standards set by these CRIMINALS. The bottom line, these folks are fascists and wish to rule over everyone that doesn't fit into their "group." They care about nothing but themselves, piss on the rest of humanity.
Bill Cliton called himself a "virtual President" and made it very clear in an interview that someone else makes the choices for you and you just stand there and smile or shake hands while the real people behind the curtain are the ones working 24/7 for the banks and doing their very best to keep them happy.
Lucifer bless America.
Hail Satan.
Bill Clinton was the best president the US had in years.
mush and brainy
billy is a good actor, he even plays saxaphone
Dear fellow posters,
Seems like the writers message is to discredit the "conservative vision.
The conservatives gave our once proud "liberal" badge a bad image.
Just how did they do that?
Figure that out and you can do the same.
Can you start today?
A well written piece. Than you sirs. Comeback soon with more!
Chris
PS
Bush did not want the DHS. Liberman came up with the plan and Bush finally gave in.
PSS
Please no more qualifying if Bush is a shrub or not.
We have been missing the point for years!
Why did my first post not get posted? Was it snatched by our government friends?
Very well said. Although it is apparent that some readers are bent on arguing, you did a good job of explaining how the "Conservative Republican Agenda" appears to be fascist and criminal, on the level of your point of view. While, on the level of most people's viewpoint, it appears that Bush is incompetent. I did not for a minute think that you were stating that the "fascist agenda" is wise, moral or spiritual. I think it is unfortunate that many of your reader's viewpoints are bent on arguing. I am not even saying that I agree with you in terms of me being progressive or conservative. I just think it was a well stated viewpoint that I'm glad to be able to consider.
I agree that conservatism is in large part responsible for the litany of problems this administration has gotten us into. But I'd argue that conservatism has caused the administration's incompetence. If someone holds beliefs that prevent them from fulfilling their job duties, then they are incompetent for that job--even if they are otherwise perfectly able to perform. George Bush is still incompetent, in part because of his political beliefs, and in part because he's a bumbling fool ("My Pet Goat", anyone??)
Terrific analysis! It is unfortunate we have to endure 2 more years of this administration, which has done terrific damage to country and standing in the rest of the world. Never before has there been so much secrecy by those in power. It is imperative we dislodge the neocons and those Republicans in Congress who support them at the midterm elections so the investigations can begin. The conservative mantra of low taxes and little regulation have bankrupted the treasury as the war profiteers have been given a green light to steal this country blind, with, sweetheart deals and political plums given to party loyalists. After 911 the world stood with the US. Now we have a quagmire in Iraq that has degenerated into full scale civil war. The neoconartists are itching to plunder Iran and Syria. I hope they realize a draft will have to be instituted so they can provide the cannon fodder needed to fight wars for big oil and the corporate masters-stateless entities who only care about one thing-profit.
Now its coming to light that 911 may have been an inside job- the towers thatturned to dust as they collapsed, multiple explosion heard by first responders, the collapse of wtc 7 with no real damage. And how about the dancing Israelis who were taping the carnage rejoicing! They were arrested, their van tested positive for explosives. They were quickly extradited and a veil of secrecy implemented by the government. We have been fed numerous lies in order to keep the citizens frightened and in check.
"Conservative philosophy has three fundamental tenets: individual initiative, that is, government's positive role in people's lives outside of the military and police should be minimized; the President is the moral authority; and free markets are enough to foster freedom and opportunity.
What you are describing above is NOT Conservatism but a distorted view of the Conservative viewpoint from a leftish bizarro look at Conservatism.
It is not merely "individual iniative" it is INDIVIDUAL RESPONSIBILITY i.e., the acceptance by an individual that he or she is RESPONSIBLE for their own condition. Certainly one needs to demonstrate iniative to better one's condition, but that is not the point. The point is that you the individual are responsible for yourself, your actions, and your material condition. In a JUST society one benefits to the degree that one is willing to accept responsibility for their own condition and if they find it unacceptable TO DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT themselves and not wait for someone in government to steal the produce of someone else's efforts and GIVE it to them without providing any production in exchange.
No matter how many times you try to "Gild the Lilly" so-called progressive politics boils down to taking from the productive, at gun point, to reward the unproductive for being irresponsible and not being willing to accept responsibilty for themselves and the betterment of their own condition.
As Lincoln put it: "Government should not do for the people what they can do for themselves."
So-called "progressive" Welfare Super Statism is one of the cruelist things you can do to another person as it robs them of the dignity of providing for themselves. How many happy people do you see on welfare? Not many, if any, as they have been reduced to being nonproductive for a living. As well it robs those who do so despite the penalties of usurious taxation of the product of their own labor and industry. Taking from another by force, which is what taxation is, can best be described as theft.
This is not to say that their is no place for charity, but that charity at gunpoint is not charity it is stealing with a government license.
The valid and legitimate functions of the Central Government are Courts, Coinage, and Defense. Nothing more nothing less. Courts for orderly and peacable conflict resolution, Coinage to facilitate a uniform means of exchange between individuals, and Defense against those who somehow feel the need to lord it over others.
As for the argument that "the President is the Moral Authority" as a Conservative principle that is simply hogwash. The ultimate moral arbiter is the conscience and honor of the individual and when that conscience and honor prove inadequate then, and only then, is the use of the Police Powers of government justified. The President may well be an opinion leader, and the chief official of the Executive Branch of Government, but the President is not God nor is the President the "Arbiter of Morals". Ideally the President is only "the First Among Equals". One would hope that we could come up with something better than the cretinous swine now infesting the People's House. However, that swine is NO Conservative and to maintain he is, is an insult to all decent Conservatives.
...and free markets are enough to foster freedom and opportunity."
You miss the point completely and turn the correct order completely topsy turvy.
Free Markets are the result of freedom. Without economic freedom - the freedom to own your own labor and that which you produce you are NOT free. To the degree that some person or government can demand of you by force of arms that which you have by your own efforts produced you are that much a slave. Free Markets are not the purpose of freedom but a concomittant of freedom. In other words if you do not enjoy economic freedom you are not free. A Feudal Serf under the Feudal System, even under the most extreme Lords, paid no more than 1/3 of their produce to their Feudal Liege. Under our current regime the average American now pays between 42 and 55% of their produce in one form of taxation or another. The illusion that you are free when such a system exists is just that - an illusion.
The system being pushed by the Bush Junta is not Free Market Capitalism (which does have it's defects) but CRONY CAPITALISM which is essentially a Fascistic Organization of society to benefit those few at the very top of the Pyramid. Crony Captitalism is many things but it is not Free Markets. It is organized not by the productivity of the individual but is based upon one's connections. In other words merit, satisfying human needs and wants most effectively, has nothing to do with it.
There may well be valid criticisms of honest conservatism, but you did not present any of them.
As for the Idiot in Chief. He is a Cipher, a nonentity, a functioning moron, who looks up to a Whore as a moral paragon. The only question is not that he dancing to the tunes of Pipers unseen, but who are the Pipers?
Diogenes
Bush is the bumbling idiot puppet of the Cheney/Feith/Wolfowitz/Rumsfeld NeoCon regime. It's not Conservatism, it's Facism, pure and simple. They have created a police state and are manufacturing "terrorist plots" to keep the people afraid.
Guess what? The country is going to take a swing to the left come November, for better or worse.
If Bush is dumb then what are the Democrats? He defeated them twice. He even cheated and they barely said a word. Bush clamped down on rights by conducting illegal search and seizures, stealing private lands (to give to corporate friends), forcing protestors in cages, pressuring book outlets to drop the title "America Deceived", and starting 2 illegal wars based on lies and a false-flag operation known as 9/11. If he's dumb and the Democrats are too moronic to take advantage of any of these myriad of abuses, then the only answer is that the Democrats are complicit. Remove them ALL, vote third party.
Last link (in case Google Books falls to gov't pressure):
America Deceived - Book
Monopoly capitalism runs the show.
Every power you give the state will eventually be turned back upon you. The answer to government mismanagement is NOT bigger government.
Bush is not a conservative. That is the biggest mistake that people make. I agree that he is not an idiot, outside of that, the article below has a basic premise which so many people believe and which the Bushwhackers want people to believe.
The Bush administration has been as big an activist gov't as any big brother "liberal" gov't. Their goals in spreading the wealth through gov't largess is as much as any liberal democrat regime has done. This time the emphasis is on the 5% of the individuals in the U.S. and the corporations associated with them. The Bushwhackers have no problem handing out money to it's corporate cronies and cutting red tape for them. Meanwhile screwing the average citizen with with less and less gov't benefits and at the same time piling on red tape with an onerous police state. This is not conservative at all, this is quite radical and very liberal from point of view of it's beneficiaries. A true conservative does believe in cutting taxes and shrinking the gov't but in no way shape or form believes in the special treatment of the 5% in this country. A conservative would never go along with this foreign policy disaster as it is out of line as any Democratic administration has done.
The conservative image that the bushwhackers maintain is a front, even in a cruder sense one it is one gigantic sting and the ''marks'' are the average U.S. citizen and taxpayer, Republican and Democratic because both sides have bought into this "game" for their own reasons. When I hear people blaming conservatism on this scam, I hear another blame game and someone who bought into the Rove machine propaganda. Face it, we have been had, these f$ckers have kept everybody off balance while the biggest transfer of wealth the U.S. has seen has been pulled off. These f$ckers are base criminals, calling them conservative gives a sheen of respectability to them which only adds to their game of smoke and mirrors.
Monopoly capitalism runs the show....and they will as happily dress themselves in liberal as well as conservative garments. Communism or facism; its all monopoly capitalism, and with the unwashed masses slamming each other over shallow idealogical differences, "they" walk free.
When words like idiot and fascism are used without restraint, it identifies the user as someone from the margins.
Lots of people voted for Bush, though some of those votes are questionable. So we here we are.
George Bush is not a classic conservative; he uses a big government model to remake society into a pure captialist system, one in which we are on top of the world. He's been pretty quiet lately about Iraq- he's bitten off more than we can chew. But he's shwredly used his connections and effectively rewarded them in his position. He has that form of intelligence. But one could not call him morally intelligent.
And we're a lot more like Queen Victoria's British Empire (economically) than the fascist models of the twentieth century. And we'll pay the piper just as they did. Indulgence doesn't build character.
The words "conservative" and "progresive" don't have to be opposed. Its wise to consider the history of a matter and conserve what deserves to be conserved. And also to push forward with new information. As a culture we have scientific and economic intelligence, but do we know ourselves, how to live in an optimally "human" way? To try to progress beyond ourselves toward some kind of American dream fantasy or any other pipe dream is not really progress. Its like sitting there watching Star Trek and wishing you were there, while neglecting the real life people and real needs around you.
Time to gather this in. Yes, president bush is for the rich, blatantly; this is not morally wise. But the best one could hope for is a balance between capitalism and human concerns, because the welfare state was and is demeaning. But the rich are showing themselves in need of regulation- big time. That is, if we really want a government by the people and for the people rather than to be richer than the next guy so we can lord it over him as we rely on empty patriotic platitudes to justify ourselves.
WW-III soon.
So who cares about Bush, etc?
It is TOO LATE!
For the record, by the way, what I mean by being truly human is the Orthodox Christian understanding, that we're made in the image of God. And when Jesus said, "the kingdom of God is in your midst," he means that there's hope right now for living in that dimension.
So its never too late.
Rulers of the earth come and go, but the King of all can make a difference for each of us and everyone we contact.
But of course one cannot serve God and mammon. When the two are connected and the motives twofold, it is ugly and hellish.
I was a Republican, and I am in horror at what this party has become.
And don't listen to those Christians who get so excited when all hell breaks loose in Palestine because they think it means the Second Coming is around the corner. Their take on "Israel" was a 19th century invention unknown for 1800 some years in the Church. A heresy. We've got to treat both Jews and Arabs with respect- they're both made in the image of God.
As long as we have life, we can struggle toward Love. No giving up.
Typical liberal ramblings....
The Republicans and Democrats are both the cause of our problems. I remember under the Clinton era everyone was just as pissed off about the state of the nation...Wake up people!
Wake up to what?
American's are too lazy too care.
As long as you have lotsa porn to jerk-off too, piles of junk food to consume and big fat cars and trucks and vans out front, who cares.
Bush has made it clear America hates Islam only because Israel hates Islam. america is the base for satans new world order and couldn't care less if Americans care or not.
If you can't see that you don't even have a country anymore, then you might as well be sleeping in the cold ground.
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