Baby
Bush: The Worst President in History?
by
Doug Casey
by Doug Casey
Recently by Doug Casey: Charity?
Humbug!
I recognize
that I’ve antagonized many subscribers over the years with "Bush
Bashing." In January, just after OBAMA!’s election, I said
I wouldn’t mention Bush again, his departure having made him irrelevant.
I only feel bad that he and his minions will apparently get away
scot-free with their crimes; better they had all been brought up
before a tribunal and tried for crimes against humanity in general
and the U.S. Constitution in particular. But that is objectively
true of almost all presidents since at least Lincoln.
Most of our
subscribers to The
Casey Report appear to be libertarians or classical liberals
– i.e., people who believe in a maximum of both social and economic
freedom for the individual. The next largest group are "conservatives."
It’s a bit harder to define a conservative. Is it someone who atavistically
just wants to conserve the existing order of things (either now,
or perhaps as they perceived them 50, or 100, or 200, or however
many years ago)? Or is a conservative someone who believes in limiting
social freedoms (generally that means suppressing things like sex,
drugs, outré clothing and customs, and bad-mouthing the government)
while claiming to support economic freedoms (although with considerable
caveats and exceptions)? It’s unclear to me what, if any, philosophical
foundation conservatism, by whatever definition, rests on.
Which leads
me to the question: Why do conservatives seem to have this warm
and fuzzy feeling for George W. Bush? I can only speculate it’s
because Bush liked to talk a lot about freedom and traditional American
values, and did so in such an ungrammatical way that it made him
seem sincere. Bush’s tendency to fumble words and concepts contrasted
to Clinton’s eloquence, which made him look "slick."
I’m forced
to the conclusion that what "conservatives" like about
Bush is his style, such as it was. Because the only good thing I
can recall that Bush ever did was to shepherd through some tax cuts.
But even these were targeted and piecemeal, tossing bones to favored
interests, rather than any principled abolition of any levies or
a wholesale cut in rates.
Is it possible
that Bush was actually the worst president ever? I’d say he’s a
strong contender. He started out with a gigantic lie that
he would cut the size of government, reduce taxes, and stay out
of foreign wars and things got much worse from there. Let’s
look at just some of the highpoints in the catalog of disasters
the Bush regime created.
-
No Child
Left Behind. Forget about abolishing the Department of Education.
Bush made the federal government a much more intrusive and costly
part of local schools.
- Project
Safe Neighborhoods.
A draconian law that further guts the 2nd Amendment, like 20,000
other unconstitutional gun laws before it.
- Medicare
Prescription Drug Benefit. This the largest expansion of the
welfare state since LBJ and will cost the already bankrupt Medicare
system trillions more.
- Sarbanes-Oxley
Act. Possibly the most expensive and restrictive change to
the securities laws since the ’30s. A major reason why companies
will either stay private or go public outside the U.S.
- Katrina.
A total disaster of bureaucratic mismanagement, featuring martial
law.
- Ownership
Society. The immediate root of the current financial crisis
lies in Bush’s encouragement of easy credit to everybody and inflating
the housing market.
- Nationalizations
and Bailouts. In response to the crisis he created, he nationalized
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and passed by far the largest bailouts
in U.S. history (until OBAMA!).
- Free-Speech
Zones. Originally a device for keeping war protesters away
when Bush appeared on camera, they’re now used to herd in opponents.
- The Patriot
Act. This 401-page bill, presented for passage only 45 days
after 9/11 (how is it possible to write something of that size
and complexity in only 45 days?) basically allows the government
to do whatever it wishes with its subjects. Warrantless searches.
All kinds of communications monitoring. Greatly expanded asset
forfeiture provisions.
- The War
on Terror. The scope of the War on Drugs (which Bush also
expanded) is exceeded only by the war on nobody in particular
but on a tactic. It’s become a cause of mass hysteria and an excuse
for the government doing anything.
- Invasions
of Afghanistan and Iraq. Bush started two completely pointless,
counterproductive, and immensely expensive wars, neither of which
has any prospect of ending anytime soon.
- Dept.
of Homeland Security. This is the largest and most dangerous
of all agencies, now with its own gigantic campus in Washington,
DC. It will never go away and centralizes the functions of a police
state.
- Guantanamo.
Hundreds of individuals, most of them (like the Uighurs recently
in the news) guilty only of being in the wrong place at the wrong
time, are incarcerated for years. A precedent is set for anyone
who is accused of being an "enemy combatant" to be completely
deprived of any rights at all.
- Abu Ghraib
and Torture. After imprisoning scores of thousands of foreign
nationals, Bush made it a U.S. policy to use torture to extract
information, based on a suspicion or nothing but a guard’s whim.
This is certainly one of the most damaging things to the reputation
of the U.S. ever. It says to the world, "We stand for nothing."
- The No-Fly
List. His administration has placed the names of over a million
people on this list, and it’s still growing at about 20,000 a
month. I promise it will be used for other purposes in the future…
- The TSA.
Somehow the Bush cabal found 50,000 middle-aged people who were
willing to go through their fellow citizens’ dirty laundry and
take themselves quite seriously. God forbid you’re not polite
to them…
- Farm
Subsidies. Farm subsidies are the antithesis of the free market.
Rather than trying to abolish or cut them back, Bush signed a
record $190 billion farm bill.
- Legislative
Free Ride. And he vetoed less of what Congress did than any
other president in history.
The only reason
I can imagine why a person who is not "evil" (to use a
word he favored), completely uninformed, or thoughtless would favor
Bush is because he wasn’t a Democrat. Not that there’s any real
difference between the two parties anymore…
As disastrous
as he was, I rather hate to put him in competition for "worst
president" in the company of Lincoln, McKinley, Wilson, the
two Roosevelts, Truman, Johnson, and Nixon. He is simply too small
a character – psychologically aberrant, ignorant, unintelligent,
shallow, duplicitous, small-minded – to merit inclusion in any list.
On second thought, looking over that list of his personal characteristics,
he’s probably most like FDR, except he lacked FDR’s polish and rhetorical
skills. I suspect he’ll just fade away as a non-entity, recognized
as an embarrassment. Not even worth the trouble of hanging by his
heels from a lamp post, although Americans aren’t (yet) accustomed
to doing that to their leaders. Those who once supported him will,
at least if they have any circumspection and intellectual honesty,
feel shame at how dim they were to have been duped by a nobody.
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The worst shame
of Bush – worse than the spending, the new agencies, the torture,
or the wars – is that he used so much pro-liberty and pro-free-market
rhetoric in the very process of destroying those institutions. That
makes his actions ten times worse than if an avowed socialist had
done the same thing. People will blame the full suite of disasters
Bush caused on the free market simply because Bush constantly said
he believed in it.
And he’s left
OBAMA! with a fantastic starting point for what I expect to be even
greater intrusions into your life and finances. Eventually, the
Bush era will look like The Good Old Days. But only in the way that
the Romans looked back with nostalgia on Tiberius and Claudius after
they got Caligula. And then Nero. And then the first of many imperial
coups and civil wars.
Only by looking
at the past can we make sure that history won’t repeat itself. But
most of the time, Doug and his co-editors of The Casey Report
look at the future. They analyze budding trends for potential money-making
opportunities and share that research with their subscribers… usually
for two- or three-digit gains. One of their favorite investments
of 2009 is a play on an economic inevitability that is almost
guaranteed to bring early birds big returns. Read
more here.
August
19, 2009
Doug
Casey (send him mail)
is
a best-selling author and chairman of Casey
Research, LLC., publishers of The
Casey Report.
Copyright
© 2009 Casey and Associates
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