Not
About Bush
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
Too
many Americans seem to think that everything in politics is about
being either for President Bush or against him. They are encouraged
to do so by partisan propagandists.
That's
wrong. That's no different from people living in a dictatorship
who have only one choice, to be either for the dictator or against
him. We don't have a dictator. We have an elected politician, and
as free American citizens we can either agree or disagree with some
or all or none of his policies. And we have a God-given right to
express that disagreement.
Americans'
loyalty is owed to the Constitution, not to any particular politician
or political party. Every American has a duty to oppose any politician
who violates the Constitution or shows disdain for it. That includes
federal judges.
My
beef with the president is not with George Bush, the man. He seems
like an affable and decent chap. My beef is with his policies and
with his administration's apparently rock-solid determination to
never tell the truth to the American people. His chief adviser,
Karl Rove, seemed to have launched the 2004 re-election campaign
the day after inauguration in 2001. Consequently, everything the
president does and says seems guided by that goal.
Take,
for example, his fly-in photo op on Thanksgiving Day. Yes, it was
nice to boost the morale of the 600 or so handpicked GIs, but think
this through. The president had to fly in under the cover of darkness,
spend his two hours in the Baghdad Airport, a heavily fortified
American military compound, and then steal away again under the
cover of darkness. If our operations in Iraq were really successful,
he could go there and tour the country. His actions contradict the
spin of his people that the Iraqis welcome us as liberators and
that everything is going along according to plan.
His
sneaky in-and-out trip is a sharp contrast to the pictures of Saddam
Hussein walking around with a huge crowd of admirers in broad daylight
after Baghdad had fallen and the American Army was looking for him.
And what about Sen. Hillary Clinton and all the other politicians
and entertainers who have visited Iraq? Granted, they fly into Fort
Baghdad Airport and travel by military escort to Fort Green Zone,
a heavily fortified area of central Baghdad. But at least they let
the Iraqi sun shine on them.
I'm
not questioning the president's courage. I'm sure he's a brave man.
I'm merely pointing out that his policies and his style of executing
them have made him immensely unpopular, not only in Iraq but in
Europe. And, by extension, his unpopularity also affects the United
States, which makes diplomacy difficult.
Secretary
of Defense Donald Rumsfeld's snide remarks about the "old Europe"
notwithstanding, the powers in Europe are Germany, France and the
United Kingdom. Having Poland, Romania and the Czech Republic as
allies is like having middle-school kids as offensive linemen in
a National Football League game.
Because
of President Bush's policies, we are entangled in two guerrilla
wars that show no signs of slackening; our trade deficits have reached
such alarming highs that foreign-capital investment has been drastically
reduced, and the dollar seems headed for a financial meltdown. His
policies have produced more terrorism, not less; more unemployment;
and a fiscal threat that is scaring money people from Hong Kong
to Geneva.
But
what alarms me most about our president is that he appears to be
totally oblivious to everything outside his small, tightly controlled
circle. He seems smug even.
Well,
it remains to be seen if he will be re-elected. It will depend not
on what polls indicate today, but how the American people feel next
November. That is as unpredictable as all the foreign and domestic
events that might occur between now and then. Until then, Americans
should debate policy and not attach themselves like mindless groupies
to either Bush or any of his opponents. We are not fans or followers.
We are citizens, with the responsibility to think about what is
best for the country and to make an informed decision at the next
election.
December
11, 2003
Charley
Reese has been a journalist for 49 years, reporting on everything
from sports to politics. From 196971, he worked as a campaign
staffer for gubernatorial, senatorial and congressional races in
several states. He was an editor, assistant to the publisher, and
columnist for the Orlando Sentinel from 1971 to 2001. He
now writes a syndicated column which is carried on LewRockwell.com.
Reese served two years active duty in the U.S. Army as a tank gunner.
©
2003 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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Reese Archives
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