Bush
the Melting
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Pride
may goeth before the fall, but with politicians like George W. Bush,
far too much time separates the pride part from the fall part. The
damage that he has wrought in this country and the world goes beyond
accurate enumeration most of it made possible because he
has been able to use 9-11 to pose as God's sword to smite his political
enemies at home and abroad. He should have slunk away after 9-11,
having failed miserably in his primary duty, but instead he used
a crisis for personal and governmental aggrandizement. That's the
pride part.
Now,
however, his fortunes have changed dramatically with the fall part
finally kicking in. Many of us remember that Clinton was highly
unpopular in fact, I recall sensing that he was the most hated president
of my lifetime. Well, his highest disapproval rating in his two
terms was 33 percent. I can recall feeling buoyed by the knowledge
that fully one-third of the public hated the president.
But
now look at the newest ABC
News poll: Bush’s disapproval rating is 51 percent not nearly
as high as it should be, but enough to give any freedom lover a
lift. Half the public (statistically speaking) are willing to tell
pollsters that they disapprove of everything about the guy: domestic
policies, international policies, and Bush personally. You know
it has gotten bad when web advertisers offer the chance to punch
Bush in the chops as a way of selling their products.
Remember
that dumb little war he started back in November 2001? Bush decided
that the way to flog some dead hijackers was to invade Afghanistan
on grounds that its leaders direct successors to the "freedom
fighters" that the US funded in the 1980s to overthrow the
Soviet-installed government had sympathy for Bin Laden, who did
his best to claim credit for punching the Pentagon and knocking
down the twin towers.
To
war with this impoverished dustbin! Everyone signed on did anyone
among the pundit class dare not to cheer? and his ratings zoomed
sky high. But what the US wrought there was not justice, peace,
or freedom, but a fracturing of the country into entrenched tribalism,
a vast increase in opium production (some estimates say it is responsible
for half the country's income and most of the world's supply), and
an explosion in recruits to the Taliban religion dedicated to casting
off the yoke of the US.
Now,
don't get me wrong. I'm all for political decentralization, and
tribes are better than central governments hands down. As for drug
production, how a man makes a buck is no one's business but his
customers; if the opium dens of the world need the stuff, bully
for Afghan farmers for beating others to market. Same goes for religion:
if these folks feel a greater attachment to their god than their
occupation government, that strikes me as perfectly reasonable.
But
the Bush administration didn't intend the current outcome. It hoped
to displace Talibania with something like an enlightened US rule a
very creepy ambition that perfectly mirrors the Soviet goal only
two decades earlier. Now the refusal of the country to submit has
produced a pretext for ever more violence. The client government,
meanwhile, is torching drugs, jailing dealers, and cracking down
on every political dissident sort of like the Taliban used to do.
Whence this amazing ability of the US government to so imitate the
behaviors of its former enemies?
Most
US citizens have known and cared nothing about the ongoing chaos
in Afghanistan, until the news blared that insurgents had shot down
a Chinook helicopter carrying 17 US soldiers, among whom were eight
Navy Seals and other highly trained soldiers. They were arriving
on the scene to help other ground troops who were in trouble. But
they found themselves in a trap from which they could not return.
The
situation is getting worse, not better. And the more the government
cracks down, the more the insurgents fight and the less of the country
that can be controlled. And as many military experts have said,
this is not a fight the US can win, short of exterminating the Afghans
with nuclear weapons.
Now,
the situation in Afghanistan is supposed to be a story of victory
by comparison to Iraq, which is far worse. The civil war that exists
in this once prosperous, pro-Western country is desperately sad.
The invasion and occupation have encouraged all the worst elements,
compromised the best ones, and mowed down the moderates in between.
It is a tragic and bloody story with no upside. Bush fears doing
anything, whether increasing troops (bad signal to insurgents) or
reducing them (bad signal to insurgents). All that US pundits can
think to say is: death to the dissidents!
Meanwhile,
never in modern history has a pretext for war been more transparently
fraudulent that Bush's tale about Iraq's WMD. With that hoax unraveling
for the 820th time, the administration decided to step
up the lies again, with Bush once again suggesting (to an active-duty
military audience no less) that the invasion of Iraq had something
to do with 9-11.
When
the soldiers gathered to hear his lies did not clap not for the
entire speech until a White House employee finally broke the stone-cold
silence the White House went not for truth but for spin: that was
the way it was supposed to be, they said.
Then
there is Bush's much-vaunted domestic initiative, which really comes
down to Social Security privatization. It was clear from the first
time he took up the idea that he had no idea of what he was talking
about. He believed the phony claims of beltway bandits that trillions
in liabilities could be wiped away with an accounting change backed
by libertarian rhetoric. When politicians talk this way, you don't
have to be a bloodhound to smell a rat.
Now
White House pollsters note a dip in his popularity every time he
brings up the issue. So it will be dropped for the duration. It
was his one and only cause, and it was pathetic from the outset.
Mr. Big Government could never make a principled case against the
program, so he ended up arguing for a new forced savings program
called privatization and funding the revenue shortfall with mountains
of debt. The idea was so intellectually dishonest that it makes
Hillary's health care scheme look like a paragon of transparency
and good government.
So
there we have it: three more years of a lame duck president who
is stuck in two losing, bloody, terrorist-recruiting wars, and has
presided over one of the great domestic flops in American history.
All he needs is a good recession to complement soaring gas prices,
and his fall will be complete.
My
prediction is that Bush's legacy will be universally reviled, leaving
only a few carping revisionists on blogs, who long ago decided that
they prefer Party Loyalty to truth. The important thing to note
is that someday he will be gone. And with him the movement that
has covered for him. Maybe his policies of welfare-warfare will
take a hit too. That would be pride, fall, and justice after all.
July
1, 2005
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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