| A
Candid Interview With President Bush -- No, Not That One
By Bernard Weiner, The Crisis Papers
OpEdNews.Com
President Bush seemed flustered by my question.
"In our family," the President said, with
something of a pained smile, "that period and those episodes are
regarded as ancient, and somewhat embarrassing, history."
"I certainly understand that, Madame
President," I persisted, "but surely you have a personal view of
what happened at the turn-of-the-century."
There was a long silence. Her struggle to formulate an
answer -- or even whether to formulate an answer -- was almost palpable.
"My great-uncle was a good man, deep down. However,
in truth, there wasn't all that much 'deep' down there. What you saw is
what you got: a fairly superficial man who struggled for acceptance all
his life because he wasn't much good at anything, with his family and
friends always paving the way for him, and bailing him out of problems.
Given his self-esteem problems, like so many others in that era he took to
alcohol and drugs -- and I'm not going to go into any of that, as he's
talked in his memoir about how he turned his life around.
"But when he became President and America was
attacked by terrorists, he suddenly found himself, saw a way he could
excel and do good for the country. He saw that terrorism was the new type
of warfare for the 21st century, and, unlike his predecessors, moved to do
something serious about it. The American people loved him for that, and in
the beginning months supported his war effort to the hilt, which gave him
great strength. But..." I could see tears welling in her eyes.
"Excuse me, but it's very painful to think again of how he engineered
his own downfall."
I tried to smooth things over a bit. "Yes, it must
have been wrenching for you and your family when he resigned, only the
second President in history to do so."
There was a long silence. Finally: "Well, he saw
the handwriting on the wall. After the 9/11 and Iraq-lies bubbles burst
and he was impeached, he knew, unlike Clinton, that he was going to be
convicted -- the American people had had enough -- and so he left, taking
whatever dignity he had with him, but absolutely crushed, a failure once
again."
AN UNCHECKED ADMINISTRATION
"He and his advisors were so arrogant, so
mean-spirited, so convinced that nothing and nobody could touch
them," I said. "How could he think he could possibly get away
with it?"
"Try to look at it from his point of view,"
she said. "Clinton had disgraced the Presidency. The country was
looking for a strong, ethical leader, and a hopeful direction, a theme to
live by. He chose 'compassionate conservatism' -- which could have worked,
if he had felt strong enough in himself to follow his heart and not his
political advisors, and if he had enforced an ethical code in his
administration.
"In addition, look at what he saw when he surveyed
politics beyond our shores. America was the only superpower on the face of
the planet. A united Europe was in its weak infancy. Russia was a
basketcase; China wasn't quite there yet. Terrorists were running amok.
America had a moral duty to provide strong, confident leadership, and to
lead the fight against terror. All well and good, but the problem was: Who
was there to stand up to over-arching American power in the world, to keep
us honest and within the bounds of decent international behavior?
"Internally, everyone was frightened by the
terrorist attacks, and so they felt quite comfortable -- at first -- with
giving my great-uncle all the power he needed to fight that war, across
the globe and in the homeland."
"Yes, he did get huge support at first from the
population," I said. "But as time went on, he went way beyond
the bounds of what had been authorized -- to find and bring to justice
those responsible for 9/11 -- and began moving against other countries
that had nothing to do with 9/11, as well as internally abrogating
centuries-old respect for the Constitution, putting martial-law kind of
institutions into place and questioning the patriotism of anyone who
raised questions or objections. Where did all that come from?"
"Again," she said, "try to see it from
the point of view of my great-uncle and his advisors. The Republicans had
come this close [she held up her fingers to indicate about an inch] to
finally gaining full control of the three branches of government. They
truly believed that their conservative agenda was what the country needed
-- that unbridled capitalism would yield all things good and necessary,
and that acting aggressively abroad would guarantee homeland security --
and that liberal Democrats, if given another chance, would take the
country down the road to moral and economic bankruptcy and disaster in
foreign/military policy. They were desperate enough to risk going for it
all while they had the White House."
ROLLED EASILY BY EXTREMISTS
"But couldn't he sense how isolated he'd
become?" I asked. "It was like he didn't see, or had no need to
see, the world outside his small coterie of advisors -- the pain and
suffering many of his policies caused -- as if he were down in the
shadow-government bunker as well, with only yes-men beside him. The result
was that he was missing out on good ideas from those who agreed with his
goals perhaps but vehemently disagreed with how he was going about
it."
"The short answer to your question," she said,
"is that his small-town Texas view was pretty narrow; he'd almost
never been out of the country. So his perception of the world was mighty
small. He believed that you grabbed things you wanted and needed while you
could get them and whupped ass if anyone challenged you. Merge this with
sole superpower status, giant corporations wanting theirs, the oil &
gas industries leaning on you, the desire to refurbish the reputation of
his Dad as President, the Democrats being in disarray, enemies real and
imagined out there, extremist advisors rolling this untrained man easily,
and it was a perfect prescription for over-reaching."
"But," I said, "didn't he and his
advisors learn anything from the experiences of Nixon -- that a
presidential cover-up, trying to hide information from the American
people, especially from the Congress, and abusing your authority by
engaging in extra-Constitutional police powers just alienates you from the
American people?"
She sighed: "He already was isolated and treated as
a joke by foreign leaders, and when he lost the confidence of the American
people -- when all the investigations began to reveal the embarrassing,
awful truths -- it was just about all over. I think maybe he could have
ridden it out, but it was his seemingly universal and perpetual war that
really was the straw that broke the camel's back.
"All the trillions that were spent on war when
people were hurting in a barely moving economy; all that violence -- which
just provoked more violence worldwide; all those dead Americans coming
back in boxes; all those humongous deficits because of his wars and tax
breaks for the wealthy and corporations; and all the domestic programs
that took the hit to pay for it all. It was like he was Caesar both
domestically, to pay off his supporters, and astride the globe, moving his
Roman legions from one country to another to keep recalcitrant countries
in line -- even threatening them with nuclear war."
JOINING THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY
"And that's when you broke from him and joined the
Democratic Party?"
"As you can imagine, it took quite a while to
acknowledge in public what I was feeling in private. I mean, look: My
great-great-uncle had been President, my great-uncle had been President,
my granddad wanted to be President -- they were all conservative
Republicans and that's how I was raised, to honor that philosophy and to
honor them."
"So what made you make the break?"
"It was a lot of things: I loved my country, I
loved its time-honored institutions, I loved the Constitution and its
protections, I loved our nation's former positive reputation in the world
and wanted to enhance it, I loved our nation's diversity and wanted more
folks to share in America's bounty, I loved civility in politics (even
when people despised each other) -- and everything the Bush family
represented then, especially in my great-uncle's short tenure, seemed
consciously or unconsciously to harm all those things I held precious. I
didn't become a Democrat, and then a Democratic candidate, to 'get back'
at my family but because my view of things was larger than his black and
white/good vs. evil way of looking at the world. I've never regretted
it."
"Even though you've been ostracized by the
Republican side of your family?"
"That part is very painful, to be sure. Especially
when I hear or read about the hateful things said about me. But then I
remember that they had their chance to advance the country, advance the
world, to bring light and hope and peace to America, even while fighting
terrorism -- and instead they decided to travel a darker, more violent and
corrupt route.
"I hope I am helping to bring the light, out of my
own political philosophy, of course, but also to somehow assuage some of
the bad that other parts of my family have brought to America and the
world. I am making mistakes and will make more, no doubt, but I think
we're mostly on the right track."
"Thank you, Madame President, for your
speak-from-the-heart candor."
"Thank you. God bless America." #
Bernard Weiner, a poet and playwright, was a
writer-editor with the San Francisco Chronicle for 19 years. A Ph.D. in
government and international relations, he now co-edits the progressive
website The Crisis Papers. |