by
Pierre Tristam
OpEdNews.Com
It
was never a question of whether, but of how President Bush would use the
graveyards of Sept. 11 to season his re-election campaign. The question
was just answered: By eroticizing the dead of that fateful day and using
the flag as their g-string.
The
first television ads of the Bush campaign released last week don't yet
linger on the dead. They only dig one back up for a cameo in the 30-second
spot that sums up the "challenges" Bush had to face after taking
office ("An economy in recession. A stock market in decline. A dot
com boom gone bust. Then a day of tragedy.") The ads are a teaser of
what's to come. They announce that the Republican National Convention in
Manhattan, a few blocks from Ground Zero and a few days removed from the
attacks' third anniversary, will be an orgy of Sept. 11 videos. Last
week's ads are the previews.
That
the administration is cashing in on the dead is not unusual. President
Lincoln did it to great effect at Gettysburg. President Reagan did it
movingly in Normandy, on the 40th anniversary of D-Day, when the 1984
presidential election was conveniently within sight. Most presidents do it
badly, so most have the grace to leave the dead in peace once the speeches
are over. President Bush has been doing it gracelessly and cravenly for
two and a half years. The dead of Sept. 11 are his all-purpose security
blanket. He's dug them up at every opportunity to call for another tax cut
in the name of "economic security," another country to invade in
the name of "national security," another reason to ignore the
Bill of Rights in the name of "homeland security." The dead of
Sept. 11 have been just as easy to dump like 3,000 used up lemon rinds
every time the Bush administration has snubbed the 9/11 Commission
investigating the attacks.
The
dead are also a recruiting tool for the Republican machine. That corpse in
the campaign ad wasn't dug up at random. Unlike the pathological
randomness of policy in the Bush White House, nothing is random in the
Bush campaign. Firefighters are shown ceremoniously carrying the remains
of a victim atop the rubble of the World Trade Center. Judging from the
size of the flag draping the stretcher and the uniforms of the many
stretcher bearers, the victim is a firefighter. "Ordinary"
victims at the site didn't receive nearly the same respect or solemnity as
did firefighters. It's an important detail in the choreography of the ad.
There
are 1.1 million firefighters in the United States. They generally vote
Democrat. Beginning on September 14, 2001, while a few firefighters'
bodies were still warm in the rubble -- if only from the still-raging
fires -- the Bush campaign got busy profiting from the simmering tragedy
to reclaim a fat voting block from the Democrats. It got a 69-year-old
retired firefighter and avowed Republican by the name of Bob Beckwith,
who'd strolled down to the site for a look-see, to stand on a charred fire
truck. It got President Bush to stand next to him and put his arm around
him, then to shout into a bullhorn something only the flies and the
microphones around him could hear. "Can't hear you," was what
Bush heard again and again from the crowd (and the dead) below. But
hearing wasn't the point. The image, and winning the firefighting union's
allegiance, was the point. (Beckwith 16 months later would refuse a
Democratic Congresswoman's request to travel to Washington, D.C., and help
convince the administration to release $90 million in health aid for the
more than 1,000 workers at Ground Zero who developed respiratory problems
and other illnesses. Beckwith's excuse: He didn't want to
"embarrass" the president.)
The
charred fire truck was President Bush's first Abraham Lincoln-like landing
-- not to compare it to Lincoln at Gettysburg, but to Bush's telegenic
landing on the aircraft carrier by that name, where he brandished the
death of a few thousand Iraqis and 117 Americans as campaign fodder. Stay
tuned for those ads. To be fair to the Bush campaign, it doesn't have much
else to run on. When they're not hung up on political necrophilia, the
campaign's ads are elegies to national and economic insecurity, Bush's
towering twin legacies. That doesn't diminish the obscenity of the ads'
imagery. The Federal Communications Commission is on a crusade to erase
obscenity from the airwaves. But it's going after the likes of Bubba the
Love Sponge and Howard Stern, whose g-string-inspired airs offend only
those who specialize in being offended. There's a case to be made for
denouncing the hoarier obscenities of our schlock jock in chief and his
Sept. 11 grave-robbing, which pollutes national memory. Sept. 11 shouldn't
so quickly have become yet another Superfund site.
Tristam
is a News-Journal editorial writer. Reach him at ptristam@att.net