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July 6, 2006Happy Birthday, Mr. President!***Reposted by request and will stay on top all day. Newer posts will be below, when I post them!***
A much-esteemed, long-neglected friend sent an email this morning, which was delightful to recieve. At one point he mentioned this post from yesterday and wrote: I think (President Bush) has lost his bearings. but then, so did Moses from time to time, it’s quite understandable. That made me wonder a little - has President Bush lost his bearings, or have we? Is it President Bush who has broken faith with “his base” or have they? When I read my friend’s line, I thought of a line from Pride and Prejudice, in which Elizabeth Bennett says in new appreciation of Mr. Darcy, “In essentials, I believe, he is very much what he ever was.” Perhaps I am a dim bulb, but President Bush has never surprised me, and that is probably why I have never felt let down or “betrayed” by him. He is, in essentials, precisely who he has ever been. He did not surprise me when he managed, in August of 2001, to find a morally workable solution in the matter of Embryonic Stem Cells. He did not surprise me when, a month later, he stood on a pile of rubble and lifted a broken city from its knees. When my FDNY friends told me of the enormous consolation and strength he brought to his meetings with grieving families, I was not surprised. When the World Series opened in New York City and the President was invited to throw the first pitch, there was no surprise in his throwing (while wearing body armor) a perfect strike.
He did not surprise me when he spoke eloquently from the National Cathedral, or again before the Joint Houses of Congress, when he laid out the Bush Doctrine. He did not surprise me when he did it again at West Point, or when he went visionary at Whitehall (Lauri points out the video can be found at this link. It’s worth watching!) There were no surprises in President Bush’s invasion of Afghanistan to battle AlQaeda. There were no surprises when he went after an Iraq which everyone believed had WMD, an Iraq that had tried to assassinate an American President, an Iraq whose NYC consul did not lower its flag to half-mast after 9/11. Actually, there was one surprise. He did surprise me by going back to the UN, and back to the UN, in that mythical “rush to war” we heard so much about. But then again, the effort in Iraq was never as “unilateral” as it had been painted. President Bush did not surprise me when, faced with the scorn of “the world community” and those ever-ready A.N.S.W.E.R. marches which sprang up condemning him and Tony Blair, he stood firm. A lesser man, a mere politician, would have folded under such enormous pressure. I was not surprised when Bush did not. (Aside - it’s funny how they just can’t get a good-sized crowd together for those protests these days, innit? Everything about Iraq was “wrong” and everything about Iraq is “failure and quagmire” and yet, somehow, we all breathe a sigh of relief that the job is done, that Saddam is out of power and that Iraq, save a very small piece of troubled land, is - in remarkably short order (and despite the wild pronouncements of John Murtha) - tasting its first morsels of democracy and liberty, and showing promise.)
It never surprised me that Yassar Arafat, formerly the “most welcomed” foreign “Head of State” in the Clinton White House was not welcomed - ever - to the Bush White House. I wasn’t surprised by the, not one, but two tax cuts he got passed through congress, or the roaring economy - and jobs - those tax cuts created. I wasn’t surprised when he killed the unending farce that is the Kyoto treaty (remember, the thing Al Gore and the Senate unanimously voted down under Clinton?), or when he killed U.S. involvement in the International Criminal Court, or when he told the UN they risked becoming irrelevent, or when he told the Congress and the world, “America will never seek a permission slip to defend the security of our country.” Not surprising.
I wasn’t surprised at all to watch him - in a foreign and hostile land - go rescue the Secret Service agent who was being detained and kept from protecting him. Or to see him shoot his cuffs, afterwards, and greet his host with a smile. I was never surprised that he tried to “change the tone” or tried reaching across the aisle to invite onesuch as Ted Kennedy to help draft education reform, something none of his predecessors dared touch. Just as they never dared to try to reform social security or our energy policies. The feckless ones in Congress wouldn’t get the jobs done, unfortunately, but he is a president who at least tried to get something going on those “dangerous” issues. His senior prescription plan was unsurprising and it is helping lots of people. I was not at all to surprised to see President Bush forego the “trembling lip photo-op” moment in which most world-leaders indulged after the Christmas Tsunami of 2004 in order to get real work done, to bring immediate help to that area by co-ordinating our own military (particularly our Naval support) with Australia and Japan. Stupid, stingy American. I was surprised, actually, to see him dance with free Georgians. I didn’t think he danced.
Let me tell you what has surprised me about George W. Bush. I have been surprised by his ability to keep from attacking-in-kind the “public servants” in Washington who - for five years - have not been able to speak of the American President with the respect he is due, by virtue of both his office and his humanity, because they are entralled with hate and owned by opportunism. I have been surprised that he has kept his committment to “changing the tone” even when it has long been clear that the only way the tone in Washington will ever change is if everyone named Bush or Clinton or Kennedy is cleared out and “career politicians” are shown the door and - it must be said - every university “School of Journalism” is converted to a daisy garden, maaaan. We are stardust. We are golden. I wasn’t surprised when President Bush thought that New Orleans had dodged a bullet after Hurricane Katrina, and therefore let down his guard. After all, we all thought NOLA had done so. I wasn’t surprised that he had - similarly to his actions the year before, re Hurricane Charlie - asked the Democrat Governor of Louisiana (and the Mayor) to order evacuations and suggested to her that she put the issue under Fed control to speed up processes (she did not, btw for a long while). But I was surprised that, when the press “picked and choosed” their stories while launching an unprecedented, emotion-charged, often completely inaccurate (10,000 bodies!) attack on the President - the rising waters were all his fault and he was suddenly “the uncaring racist attempting genocide by indifference” - the President did not fight back against the sea of made-up news and boilerplate, fantastic charges against him.
I was surprised, and what surprised me was the sense I had that Bush’s heart was broken. That he had done everything he could to keep faith with the nation, and that he could not believe that in a time of such terrible need, all some people could think of was, “how do we use this politically, how do we break Bush with this?” It can’t have helped that some of the hysteria was coming from the right as well as the left. Things changed after that, didn’t they? The press and the left doubled up their attacks, the far-right went very smug, and President Bush never has seemed to have regrouped his spirit. A month later, I wasn’t surprised (although some - mostly the hard-right “I’m a Conservative before I’m anything and he’d better serve me” types - clearly were) when he nominated Harriett Miers to the SCOTUS. In fact, I’d predicted it. Up until that moment, every person President Bush had nominated to pretty much any position had won accolades from the beamish far-right, but Miers did not. She wasn’t one of their guys or gals. She wasn’t Luttig, she wasn’t Rogers-Brown. Harriet Miers? Damn that Bush! The denouncements came fast and furious and suddenly “the base” with which George W. Bush had not broken faith…broke faith with him. Suddenly they were as willing to call him a moron and an idiot as any KozKid. Imagine that. Imagine being the guy who has given his base one splendid nominee after another, in all manner of posts, make a nomination he thinks appropriate only to find that “base” coming out with both guns, defaming his nominee and directing all manner of insult at himself. President Bush is nothing if not loyal; his loyalty is often his downfall. When he asked for a little trust (which he had surely earned) a little loyalty and a little faith, from “the base,” he got kicked in the groin, over and over again, for daring to think differently, for falling out of lockstep with his policy-wonk “betters.” That had to be bitter, for him. At that point Bush, unchanged in essentials, might have wondered if his conservative “base” had become a bit over-confident and loose-hipped, so cock-sure of their majority (not that congress used it) so certain of their own brilliance that they were beginning to believe they didn’t need him; that he wasn’t conservative enough, after all, and that the next president was going to be the solid, “uncompassionate” conservative they’d really wanted all along. The president who had delivered one gift after another to his base asked them to trust him, and his base sneered. Then of course, the DPW debacle was launched and once again the far-right, his “base” went beserk, again, for very dubious reasons. Buster was the one who pointed out to me, then, that in this matter President Bush was being entirely consistent with who he had always been and that his defense of the sale was not unsound, nor unprecedented. The right didn’t care! They stomped their feet and went DU again. Even Rush Limbaugh couldn’t control them. The left, on the other hand, which should have supported the president - they would have had he been anyone else - simply exploited what they could of it. And now, the Great Big Immigration Imbroglio of ‘06 has turned “the base” quite vicious. President Bush is no longer simply a moron or an idiot to his base, he is a bad man. He is a bad American. He is a bad president. Everything he does now, is wrong. As yesterday’s WSJ pointed out, Bush is closer to the deified Ronald Reagan on this issue than anyone on the right wants to admit. And they’d never do to Reagan what they are doing to Bush. Let’s look at a few Reagan quotes on the nature of those “far-right” conservatives, mmkay? ‘When I began entering into the give and take of legislative bargaining in Sacramento, a lot of the most radical conservatives who had supported me during the election didn’t like it. ‘Compromise was a dirty word to them and they wouldn’t face the fact that we couldn’t get all of what we wanted today. They wanted all or nothing and they wanted it all at once. If you don’t get it all, some said, don’t take anything. ‘I’d learned while negotiating union contracts that you seldom got everything you asked for. And I agreed with FDR, who said in 1933: ‘I have no expectations of making a hit every time I come to bat. What I seek is the highest possible batting average.’ ‘If you got seventy-five or eighty percent of what you were asking for, I say, you take it and fight for the rest later, and that’s what I told these radical conservatives who never got used to it.’ Mr. Reagan, I salute you. I did not vote for you. Twice. I came too late to appreciation of you. But sir, some of us have been saying the same thing to “the base” for a few weeks now. They’re still not listening. They won’t, I imagine, until they absolutely must. And perhaps it will take a staggering defeat for that to happen. President Bush’s immigration policies have not changed materially since he was Governor of Texas. You folks knew that when you elected him, twice. He has not changed, cannot change, because his policies arise not from his poll numbers but from his convictions and his conscience. You used to love that about him. Can everything, everything that needs to be done BE done, and all as you would have it done, in the real world, a world of bitter bipartisanship and a corrupted press? Some say that the GOP should consider “losing in ‘06 to win in ‘08.” Some conservatives say that they’re going to not vote - to sit out an election or vote for a third party candidate to “teach the GOP a lesson.” The far-right gwwwwarks like a cracker-obsessed parrot: Bush has abandoned the base, he’s abandoned the base, he’s abandoned the base. Ever stop to think maybe the president feels his base has abandoned him, that uncontent with 75%, they’ve simply moved beyond reason? Ever stop to think that while you’re calling the president every despicable name in the book and demanding his fealty or you’ll “teach him a lesson,” that perhaps there is a lesson you need to learn? That a good man, disinterested in merely laughing or crying for the camera for 8 years and looking to do a difficult job in the face of unprecedented hate, unprecedent speed of communication, unprecedented global instability, unprecedented backstabbing from within his own CIA, deserves some loyalty and the benefit of a doubt as he tries to bring you the 75% you so callously spit back at him as insufficient? We do not know everything we think we know. Nothing is static; everything is in flux, and it is very likely that more is at work here, on many levels, than any of us can dream. There are things seen and unseen. Think about it. Here is a question, and I’ll be writing on it some more during the week, but start thinking about it, now: HOW DO YOU RECEIVE A GOOD? How you receive a good has a lot to do with whether any more “good” comes your way. The Conservatives got a “good” in 2000 and 2004; they’re receiving it very badly, indeed. I think the throwing-under-the-bus-of-George-W-Bush by “the base” is one of the most shameful things I have ever witnessed in all my years of watching politics, from both sides of the political spectrum. How do you receive a good? President Bush has never surprised me. He is, in essentials, the man he ever was. It does not surprise me that he is a Christian man living a creed before he is a President, that he is a President before he is a Conservative. It seems to me precisely the right order of things. You don’t have to agree with everything President Bush does; I don’t. But he deserves a lot better than he’s getting from his own side. He deserves, dare I say it, a spirit of compromise and workability, as opposed to the hard-line demand for a “perfect” solution (one which will never pass congress) to a problem no one else in government has even dared to address.
Related: Lorie Byrd has some good links including a very endearing one. http://theanchoressonline.com/2006/07/06/happy-birthday-mr-president/trackback/ 16 Responses to “Happy Birthday, Mr. President!” |
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July 6th, 2006 at 12:00 pm
The Anchoress » Happy Birthday, Mr. President!
The Anchoress » Happy Birthday, Mr. President!
Go. Read. Reflect.
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July 6th, 2006 at 12:09 pm
Happy 60th Bday, Mr. President
Anchoress has written a wonderful tribute to the President on his 60th bday. You may not agree with it all, but he’s our guy - for better or for worse and Anchoress has done a fine job of recapping his five years thus far as President.
Lorie B…
July 6th, 2006 at 12:15 pm
[...] The Anchoress [...]
July 6th, 2006 at 1:30 pm
YES MAM!!! May I say Ditto! Bring it, sing it, sister! Happy Birthday, Mr. President and God Bless You!
The day will come when we will look back so wistfully, so sadly, on these times, when we will sit in stunned disbelief every day at the empty suits and craven criminals who will be running things in Washington and in the media.
July 6th, 2006 at 1:42 pm
[...] Here’s a valuable repost from the Anchoress’ site. She reminds us that Bush has been through a lot of hard rain in the past five to six years, and suggest that maybe Bush isn’t abandoning his base as much as it’s abandoned him. I wish I could agree, Anchoress, but when you hear that the president’s closest advisor is about to kiss up to the Chicano equivalent of the KKK, you really have to wonder if anyone in the White House really has America’s best interests at heart. [...]
July 6th, 2006 at 3:05 pm
Beautiful post, Anchoress, as only you can do it. I join you in wishing President Bush a Happy Birthday, with many more to come! And each better than the previous one!
July 6th, 2006 at 3:14 pm
What a wonderful post about our beloved President. I can only hope that someone in the White House sees it and passes it on to “W” as a special birthday treat. As always, thanks for your thoughtful insights on so many topics!
July 6th, 2006 at 4:17 pm
Eloquent, Anchoress. But so is this from Peggy Noonan from last fall:
http://www.opinionjournal.com/columnists/pnoonan/?id=110007460
It does not directly refer to President Bush, but I do think she put her finger on what many of us feel, and hearing that Rove is sucking up to La Raza sure doesn’t allay the forebodings.
Nevertheless Happy Birthday, Mr President.
July 6th, 2006 at 5:25 pm
[...] The Anchoress has a darned good one on the President. Filed in: President Bush, Blogging Friends by newton at 18:27 on Jul 6th, 2006 | No Comments » [...]
July 6th, 2006 at 6:41 pm
Thank you, Anchoress, for this beautiful post. I hope President Bush has many returns of the day. He has earned that right the past six years.
One of the reasons we started Hang Right Politics was that we too were tired of everyone jumping all over the president.
I don’t always agree with him but I’m certainly not going to criticize him publicly and call him some of the names I’ve seen him called on at least one blog I used to frequent quite a bit.
Thanks again for this post.
July 6th, 2006 at 7:00 pm
As usual, a wonderful post! (Us Cancerians have to stick together…
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I only wish the Republicans in Congress had the strength of character that President Bush does. In fact, I think a lot of the failures perceived as the President actually belong to the Congress.
July 7th, 2006 at 9:47 am
Bush Bits
Happy Birthday, Mr. President.
The Anchoress wrote an interesting article about President Bush.
And John McCaslin informs us of this:
President Bush’s motorcade made an unscheduled U-turn and stop - at a lemonade stand - while speeding to …
July 8th, 2006 at 2:32 am
Not only is “the base” (as they label themselves) calling President Bush names; they also find the wildest stories about him to be credible, if they involve Mexico or immigration. Jerome Corsi has lately been peddling his conspiracy theory that President Bush is trying to cancel America and replace it with a North American version of the EU. And I see from two of the comments above that there’s a story out about Karl Rove “sucking up to La Raza,” whatever that actually entails. All this, because suddenly, as of three months ago, illegal immigration is so important an issue that a high and deep wall 1800 miles long MUST be built YESTERDAY to keep out the Mexicans, that the issue trumps everything else, including the War on Terror, and that if the problem isn’t being reversed right now, then Bush is guilty of refusing to enforce the law of the land and therefore deserves no support. Never mind that state and local governments are often telling sheriffs to release the illegal immigrants they just arrested (probably because the locals can’t feed and house all of them who should be arrested). Never mind that our immigration and naturalization system is a nightmare for LEGAL immigrants. Never mind that an 1800-mile wall will probably take years to build, and that people are still going to be crossing the border before the wall is finished. Never mind that Congress might also be at least partly to blame for the problems we’re facing. Never mind all those details — if the problem isn’t going away, then (according to “the base”) President Bush, at best, is not doing his job, and at worst, is committing treason and needs to be impeached.
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I still support the President. The smashmouth brats who call themselves “the base” don’t support the President. I’m sick of these people. I’m sick of watching them explode with rage at the President every couple of months, over Katrina, over Harriet Miers, over Dubai, over immigration, over whatever else might be just over the horizon. In fact, I’m sick enough of it that I’ve cut my blog-reading habit WAAAAYYYYY back. I haven’t read a word of LaShawn Barber or Michelle Malkin or Ann Coulter in months (I’m pretty much DONE with that bunch), and I’m doing a lot less reading of conservative forums than I used to.
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Thank you Anchoress for this island of sanity.
July 12th, 2006 at 10:57 am
[...] The Anchoress Gina Cobb [...]
December 21st, 2006 at 11:19 am
[...] The Anchoress ” Happy Birthday, Mr. President! Sister Toldjah tracked back with Happy 60th Bday, Mr. President. Cass Knits! … Pingback by Hang Right Politics - Archives ” Happy Birthday, Mr. President! … [...]
February 2nd, 2007 at 12:17 pm
[...] The Anchoress ” Happy Birthday, Mr. President! Sister Toldjah tracked back with Happy 60th Bday, Mr. President. Cass Knits! … Pingback by Hang Right Politics - Archives ” Happy Birthday, Mr. President! … [...]