The Second Anniversary of Bush’s Worst Bosh
by
James Bovard
by James Bovard
DIGG THIS
Two years ago last month,
Bush gave his second inaugural address. As I watched the speech
on television, I and perhaps millions of other Americans struggled
to answer the obvious question about the speech: Is it puerile or
is it merely tripe?
Bush was hailed throughout
the greater Washington metropolitan area for a speech that invoked
freedom and liberty almost 50 times. The Washington Post
headlined its report on the spiel, An Ambitious President
Advances His Idealism. The Council on Foreign Relations
Max Boot cheered that Bush is signaling basically victory
or bust ... no backing down. Liberal columnist Andrew Sullivan
swooned, Who could disagree with the stirring, elegant and
somewhat sweeping address the president just gave? Bill Kristol,
editor of the Weekly Standard, gushed that the speech was
powerful, subtle, historic,
sophisticated, nuanced, and profoundly
right.
Though Bush invoked
freedom ad nauseam, none of his comments referred to restrictions
on U.S. government power. Instead, they sanctified the presidents
right to forcibly intervene abroad wherever he believes it is necessary
to spread freedom. Like Khrushchev banging his shoe
on the podium at the United Nations, Bush was shouting We
will bury you! to anyone whom he and his cronies label an
enemy of freedom.
Perverting freedom
It is important not
to forget the doggerel that launched the Bush second term. His bombast
looks almost as pathetic now as a newsreel of a 1935 Mussolini speech.
He proclaimed,
So it is the policy
of the United States to seek and support the growth of democratic
movements and institutions in every nation and culture, with the
ultimate goal of ending tyranny in our world.
This speech was delivered
eight months after the Abu Ghraib photos hit the street and after
many documents and other evidence of the torture scandal had floated
to the surface. Yet, regardless of his embrace of torture, the American
media still treated Bush as a hero of liberty because of his flowery
words.
Bush, sounding like
an editor at the New Yorker, declared, Our goal instead
is to help others find their own voice, attain their own freedom,
and make their own way. Supposedly, foreigners would not even
recognize their own voice without intervention from Washington.
Bush declared,
All who live in tyranny
and hopelessness can know: the United States will not ignore your
oppression, or excuse your oppressors. When you stand for your
liberty, we will stand with you.
But Bush has used Americans
tax dollars to bankroll many of the worst oppressors in the world.
And he has rubbed Americans nose in the hypocrisy by labeling
dictatorial regimes as freedom-loving in one White House
photo opportunity after another for visiting heads of state.
Two years ago, he could
still strut about the supposed great victories he had won in Afghanistan
and Iraq: Because we have acted in the great liberating tradition
of this nation, tens of millions have achieved their freedom.
Even at that time, there were clear signs that most Afghans had
merely had a change of oppressors, and the rising chaos and bloodshed
in Iraq was a far cry from what Americans recognize as freedom.
The speech included
the usual pyromania: By our efforts, we have lit a fire as
well a fire in the minds of men. It warms those who feel
its power, it burns those who fight its progress, and one day this
untamed fire of freedom will reach the darkest corners of our world.
His praise for untamed is ironic, given his passion
for discretionary power across the board.
Bush issued a revolutionary
challenge to every government in the world:
We will persistently
clarify the choice before every ruler and every nation: The moral
choice between oppression, which is always wrong, and freedom,
which is eternally right.
He is correct that freedom
is eternally right. But that does not confer upon him
or other U.S. presidents the right to appoint rulers in other nations
on Earth. The notion of American uniqueness has gone from a point
of pride to a pretext for aggression.
He declared, The
leaders of governments with long habits of control need to know:
To serve your people you must learn to trust them. Yet the
more Bush trusts the people, the more he wants to spy on them. His
trust of the American people did not dissuade his administration
from seeking to build the Total Information Awareness network to
track every purchase, trip, or phone call that people make. The
Homeland Security Department epitomized the Bush administrations
trust of Americans when it warned 18,000 local and state
law-enforcement agencies to keep an eye on anyone who expressed
dislike of attitudes and decisions of the U.S. government.
Perhaps Bush simply trusts people not to object when the feds destroy
their privacy.
He concluded with a
final lunge:
America, in this young
century, proclaims liberty throughout all the world, and to all
the inhabitants thereof. Renewed in our strength tested,
but not weary we are ready for the greatest achievements
in the history of freedom.
And since the U.S. government
proclaims liberty everywhere, it is entitled to pay bribes to foreign
journalists (as the Pentagon does in Iraq) and interfere in foreign
elections (as the National Endowment for Democracy does almost everywhere
except Canada).
Freedom vs. power
Bushs speech epitomized
how idealism can provide a license to kill. Unfortunately, many
Americans still have not looked beyond the presidents words
to recognize the masses of foreigners who have died because of his
intervention. (The British medical journal Lancet estimated
that the invasion of Iraq has resulted in more than 600,000 dead
since 2003.)
Hearing George W. Bush
constantly invoke freedom is like hearing Bill Clinton praise chastity.
The Bush team has made so many power grabs at home and bankrolled
so many dictators abroad. And yet Bush still seems to believe that
citing freedom can sanctify everything he does and every war he
intends to wage.
Freedom
has become merely another invocation to sanctify power. The more
often Bush praises freedom, the more deference he expects to receive.
He uses the word freedom as an incantation to lull people
to sleep to douse any concerns about his latest expansion
of government power, his latest deployment of U.S. troops, his most
recent executive order. He maximizes confusion over freedom in order
to minimize resistance. In ancient Rome, as long as the emperor
praised the Senate, the republic was presumed to be safe. In contemporary
America, as long as the president gushes over freedom, the peoples
rights are considered safe. And the more a politician praises freedom,
the more leeway he has to destroy it.
Bushs invocations
of freedom are especially suspect, since he talks and acts as if
presidential supremacy is the highest freedom. In an interview published
a few days before his second inauguration, he was asked, Why
hasnt anyone been held accountable, either through firings
or demotions, for what some people see as mistakes or misjudgments
[in Iraq]?
He replied,
We had an accountability
moment, and thats called the 2004 election. And the American
people listened to different assessments made about what was taking
place in Iraq, and they looked at the two candidates, and chose
me, for which Im grateful.
Thus, in Bushs
view, Americans had a single moment in which to assent
to his policies or oppose them. Since slightly more assented than
did not assent, Bush felt entitled to do as he pleased in Iraq and
everywhere else.
Open the door
to freedom! Put a strong man at the helm! was the campaign
slogan for National Socialist candidates in the 1932 Reichstag elections.
The fact that Nazi politicians invoked freedom to win votes did
nothing to protect people from their subsequent tyranny. Strong
leader is also a favorite Bush phrase. He has used the term
strong leader in more than a hundred speeches since
taking office and, as the Washington Post noted, this was
the subtext of his 2004 campaign strategy. Vultures of doom
are not circling Washington simply because Bush used the same freedom
and strong leader theme used in 1930s Germany. But it is a
warning that political naïveté and craving for a strong leader can
be a fatal combination.
Unfortunately, Washingtonians
were not the only ones to get snowed by Bushs rhetoric. Two
days after Bushs second inaugural, I was stuck in a middle
seat of a flight from D.C. to Dallas. I wedged in between a chubby
little 14-year-old boy and a tripwire-tense Air Force enlisted man.
The kid asked me, Did
you go to the inauguration Thursday?
I smiled and said no.
I asked whether he did. His eyes lit up, his face awoke, and he
declared, Yes! He told me he was from Bushs hometown,
Midland, Texas.
What did you think
of the speech? I asked.
I loved every
word of it!
So you think it
is a good idea for the U.S. to be spreading freedom?
Oh yes. We have
to do that.
Are you concerned
about going to war to spread freedom? I asked nonchalantly.
The Air Force dude erupted,
Dont listen to him! This guy hates America! This guy
hates our president! Dont listen to a single thing he says!
After his foam dried, we exchanged a few words and his hinges nearly
failed him as I calmly recited a few Bush and Cheney WMD falsehoods.
Nearing
landing, the boy asked a question or two about my views. My replies
were fairly tame but he squinted and said warily, You sound
like you hate the government.
I smiled. No.
I dont hate the government. I just think its power should
be limited.
His suspicions of me
remained.
What should government
be doing? What is its main purpose? I asked.
The
kid paused, struggled briefly, and then replied, Keep people
under control.
This is the new American
vision of freedom that Bush seeks to impose around the world. This
type of freedom does far more to empower politicians than liberate
citizens. If politicians can redefine freedom at their whim, then
they can raze limits on their own power.
Just
because a presidents comments are insipid does not mean they
are innocuous. Americans cannot preserve their rights if they take
their political reality from the person with the most to gain from
subverting freedom.
May
12, 2007
James Bovard
[send him mail] is the author
of the just-released Attention
Deficit Democracy, The
Bush Betrayal, and Terrorism
& Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice, and Peace to Rid the
World of Evil. He serves as a policy advisor for The
Future of Freedom Foundation. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2007 The Future of Freedom Foundation
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