Category Archives: Bush legacy project

Krugman

Ownership Society Watch

The new Survey of Consumer Finances shows an increase in family net worth between 2004 and 2007 — but estimates, based on stock and housing prices, that all of that gain and more has been wiped out since then. Adjusted for inflation, families are poorer now than they were in 2001.

It’s worth pointing out that with this release, yet another pillar of the what-me-worry school of economics has fallen. You may remember that a few years ago there was a lot of talk about how only bubbleheads paid attention to our low, low savings rate, because the truth was that Americans were getting steadily wealthier thanks to rising asset values.

Substantial majority want Bush admin investigated, in some manner

This Gallup result is getting big play in the blog world this morning.

TPM discusses poll

apples and apples

Tonight on Maddow’s show, economist Jeffrey Sachs noted that the bonuses that went to executives at Merrill were approximately equal to all the monies which the US gives out to the poor of the world.

And that’s why Bush’s tax cuts to the very richest (those same guys) will ensure a place for him in history.

And you’re surprised?

In an earlier post today (it’s down the page a bit) I noted that the owner of Peanut Corp of America has been revealed by email records to have known that his products were contaminated with salmonella and yet told his staff to turn them into money.

Now it comes to light that this paradigm of citizenship was an appointee to the USDA’s Peanut Standards Board in 2005.

We have so much to thank George Bush for.

http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/stories/2009/01/31/parnell_0201.html

Bush faithful get jobs

by Dan Eggen

Fred F. Fielding, Emmet T. Flood, William A. Burck and Daniel M. Price worked together at the White House under George W. Bush. Less than two weeks before leaving office, Bush made sure the senior aides shared a new assignment, naming them to an obscure World Bank agency called the International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes.

The appointments are for six years and are potentially lucrative, paying up to $3,000 a day plus travel and other expenses if an appointee is chosen to hear a case. Bush also named two other prominent Republican lawyers to the agency, which attempts to broker international finance disagreements.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/02/09/AR2009020902519.html?nav=hcmodule

The Bush Legacy – the real one

resize

h/t Brad DeLong

Past President’s Peepee Projection Peformance

How NYT and Other Papers Covered George W Bush’s Full-Frontal ‘Nudity’ on Broadway

NEW YORK As The New York Times reports this morning, former President George W. Bush’s penis has made it to Broadway. And it was not demure in saying so.

Yes, this member of the administration has a cameo in the new Will Ferrell tribute, “You’re Welcome America,” already one of the toughest tickets in town. It appears suddenly in the show, in living color, projected on a big screen, drawing gasps but also a few ahhs. It goes away and then appears again, provoking more shock and awe.

The Times reports today that it has already provoked at least six walkouts. Someone in the theater is actually keeping track. 

continue reading here: http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003939487

I did not know this!

The “Bush Legacy Project”, the on-going campaign which began about 8 months ago out of the White House to bolster the reputation of Bush and his tenure as president, had a precedent.  Will Bunch mentioned it last evening on Rachel Maddow’s show…the “Reagan Legacy Project”.

Take a look at the Sourcewatch page on it:  http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Ronald_Reagan_Legacy_Project   Note particularly the advisory board headed up by (big surprise) Grover Norquist.

If anyone remains under the mistaken apprehension that we are engaged in something less than a propaganda alley-fight, disabuse yourself of it.  If you’re comfortable with the consequences of modern Republican governance, relax.

“I hope Obama fails”

David Kurtz describe reality accurately, again.

Today’s GOP; Hoping for the worst

It occurred to me while reading Politico’s interview with Dick Cheney, that the GOP’s plan to regain political viability in the short term rests on two disaster scenarios: the failure of the financial rescue efforts (stimulus, TARP, and other bailouts) to stave off complete economic collapse and a new mass casualty terrorist attack — both of which they are positioning themselves to blame Obama for.

Without one of those two, they have to figure it’s going to be a long time wandering in the political wilderness. Now think about the curdling effect, the blight on the soul that comes with rooting for such disasters to befall your country. The rot is now eating at the party’s very core.  http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/

Limbaugh describes Bush to Hannity on Fox

 He’s a – he had a reverence for the office, that’s why he didn’t get partisan. He thought it was irreverent to turn the Oval Office, or the Office of the Presidency, into a partisan strategic battle place.    http://thinkprogress.org/2009/02/02/limbaugh-bush-hated/

What can one say?  These people feel no slightest measure of responsibility towards the truth.

Bush Legacy propaganda Project goes online

Loyal Bushies Creat Bush-Cheney Alumni Association Website to ‘Help Build A Lasting Legacy’

Even before President Bush left office, he and his loyal Bushies were hard at work shaping his legacy, comparing him to Abraham Lincoln and claiming his failed policies were smashing successes. Work on his presidential library has also been increasing in recent months.

The newest installment of “George Bush is a wonderful person” is now online: the Bush-Cheney Alumni Association website. All Bush employees, appointees, interns, campaign donors, and volunteers are eligible to join. The site’s mission is to be “a forum in which alumni can stay connected and help build a lasting legacy for President George W. Bush and the Bush-Cheney Administration.”

The site contains a considerable amount of hagiography, with the highlighted “Bush Record Documents” compilations called:

– The Bush Record: Praise For President’s Accomplishments

– The Bush Record: More Praise For President’s Accomplishments

– The Bush Record: Praise Continues For President’s Accomplishments

Many of the articles were written by conservative columnists or former Bush aides.

http://thinkprogress.org/2009/02/02/bush-alumni-website/

h/t TPM

“From the totalitarian point of view history is something to be created rather than learned.  A totalitarian state is in effect a theocracy, and its ruling caste, in order to keep its position, has to be thought of as infallible.  But since, in practice, no one is infallible, it is frequently necessary to rearrage past events inn order to show that this or that mistake was not made, or that this or that imaginary triumph actually happened.”

George Orwell, “The Prevention of Literature”; quoted by Mark Danner in “What Orwell Didn’t Know”,  Public Affairs Reports, 2007, p. 21

RNC chair fight – desperate times, desperate men

Fangs and entrails.  It’s not a pretty sight. 

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/27/AR2009012703127.html?hpid=moreheadlines

h/t TPM

Gerson’s words

In Michael Gerson’s column in the Washington Post today we find these descriptors of the Obama decision to replace Bush’s PEPFAR head; “weasels”, “sabotage”, “pettiness”, “purge” and “malice” [likely editorial titling].

Unlike many in the Bush administration who seemed to demonstrate an almost autistic inability to conceive of or sympathize with other people’s suffering (Rumsfeld, Cheney, Addington, John Bolton, neoconservatives en masse) Gerson really does seem to have wished to alleviate suffering caused by poverty and aids.  So, we can tip our hats to his passion on this matter.

On the other hand, I can find no record of Gerson complaining when the Bush administration replaced Clinton appointees for reasons of ideology or, as Gerson complains here, where the Bush administration was acting in line with the desires of certain elements of his voting base (eg, John Ashcroft, the entire faith-based initiatives program, etc).

So, there’s a blindness or lack of consistency here which derives from ideology and partisan leanings and that’s something many of us fall prey to, including myself.  But I suspect Gerson may well be up to something else here too in the service of his hopes for elections up the road. 

First, it is the more general goal of keeping the religious right constituency angry and suspicious of Obama’s religiosity, his goals and how “faith” in America may be in danger.  Note this sentence:

Dybul consistently supported comprehensive prevention efforts that include abstinence, faithfulness and condom use — the approach that African governments themselves developed.

One might wonder what relevance “faithfulness” has in a medical and education program to reduce AIDS infections and poverty.  And we’d suspect that Gerson isn’t talking about faiths which don’t match his own Evangelism.  Gerson is speaking directly to the ‘faith’ community here and no one else.

Secondly, Gerson appears to be attempting to chip away at broadly-held notions of Obama as caring, generous, inclusive, and bipartisan.  And in this, he’s directing his criticisms at the broader electorate.   Goodness, Dr. Dybul is even gay and Obama “purged” and “sabotaged” this fine man.

And there’s the seemingly inevitable corner in here which works towards rehabilitation of Bush’s legacy…such a compassionate man who cared about Africans and AIDS.   

The full column is here: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/27/AR2009012702673.html?hpid=opinionsbox1

Update:  National Review take the cue and links Gerson’s piece as follows:

Obama sabotaged a doctor who brought AIDS therapy to millions.

Which is entirely logical, of course.  “Replacing appointees” and ‘sabotage’ being exact synonyms.

Update:  Andrew Sullivan has a considerably different take on this:

Michael Gerson is understandably upset that PEPFAR coordinator Mark Dybul was fired after talk that he would be asked to stay on:

…someone at State or the White House determined that sacrificing Dybul would appease a few vocal, liberal interest groups. One high-ranking Obama official admitted that the decision was “political.” Yet the AIDS coordinator is not a typical political job, distributed as spoils, like some deputy assistant position at the Commerce Department. It involves directing a massive emergency operation to provide lifesaving drugs, through complex logistics, to some of the most distant places on Earth. And now that operation may be months without effective leadership — undermining morale, complicating interagency cooperation, delaying new prevention initiatives and postponing budget decisions.

I don’t know why events transpired the way they did and it sure looks regrettable to me. You don’t have to keep anyone on from a previous administration, but if you do ask them, you shouldn’t then subject them to this. Jason Zengerle wrote about Dybul a few days ago: “There are a lot of people in the Democratic orbit who want Dybul’s job. It’ll be interesting to see who Obama picks for the post. And I wonder if Obama moved Dybul out because he had one particular person in mind.”   http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2009/01/the-politics–1.html

 

E.J. Dionne gets it

Earlier, I noted the recent column by Bush speechwriter Marc Thiessen and pointed out how it served as a propaganda twofer, forwarding the predictable Atwater/Rovian claim that Dems are weak on defense while at the same time pushing the Bush Legacy Project goal of rehabilitating the ex-president’s reputation.  Here’s how E.J. sees what Thiessen is up to (along with observations on how Obama’s popularity is necessitating a good cop/bad cop routine by Republicans presently):

On Friday, Gallup released a devastating report, based on 30,000 interviews over the course of 2008. It found that last year an average of 36 percent of Americans identified themselves as Democrats and only 28 percent called themselves Republicans. Gallup noted that this was the largest advantage for the Democratic Party in more than two decades.

For some Republicans, these numbers counsel short-term prudence and suggest a need for at least a semblance of cooperation with Obama, whose popularity is soaring. Former representative J.C. Watts, once a member of the House Republican leadership, cautions his party: “Be careful how you throw eggs at this parade.” In Congress, this approach is reflected in the efforts of some Republicans to alter but not oppose Obama’s stimulus package.

But in what might be seen as a “good cop, bad cop” division of labor, others in the GOP are already savaging Obama and his plans.

The most insidious line of attack involves laying the groundwork for blaming the new president in the event of a terrorist attack.

In a remarkably partisan op-ed in The Post last Thursday, Marc A. Thiessen, who was a speechwriter for former president George W. Bush, declared flatly: “If Obama weakens any of the defenses Bush put in place and terrorists strike our country again, Americans will hold Obama responsible — and the Democratic Party could find itself unelectable for a generation.”

This is dangerous, both substantively and politically, and it suggests that some of Bush’s loyalists will continue to politicize issues related to terrorism in their efforts to vindicate the former president’s legacy. 

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/25/AR2009012501771.html?hpid=opinionsbox1

And again

At the National Review as elsewhere broadly across the rightwing propaganda system, Obama’s first moves in office are being loudly criticized.  Closing Gitmo is a fine example.  “Bad, dangerous idea!” is the talking-point shout and it doesn’t matter which rightwing source you turn to, they are all saying the same thing.  It’s predictable.  It’s the game they play.  It wouldn’t have mattered what bills Obama might have signed in his first days, they would become  inevitable targets of feigned outrage.

So, the editors at NRO do “A False Move On Gitmo” to hold up their end of the propaganda campaign.  We knew they would.  Dependable folks, these.  But look how they tie up the piece in their last sentence:

Underneath all the lofty rhetoric, we’re gratified to see that this is change George W. Bush could believe in.

Once again, they frame the narrative as Obama meekly following in Bush’s footsteps.  He has to, really, because Bush got it all right, in his manly and resolute and brave policy stances and now Obama has no alternative (now that he’s faced with reality) to follow along quietly behind the daddy figure. 

Editorial here: http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=NTNiMjQzODZiNWIwMDk2MjkwZmEyNmU5ZjYxYmYzNWY=

 

It’s the continuing twofer: Bush legacy project mixed with Obama as eunuch.

Propaganda pump keeps pumping

From Noemie Emery, contributing Editor of the Weekly Standard and regular contributor to the National Review (where this piece is linked today)  writes in the dcexaminer whose editor is Mary Katharine Ham, Managing Editor at Townhall and Fox News contributor  (good solid rightwing propagandist bona fides)

Bush Legacy Hidden Here in Plain Sight

…Obama’s swing to the right on Iraq and on terror began when he started to read the daily threat assessments as a president reads them, and to look at events through the eyes of a president. When the world and the public see things as he did, their minds will change, as did his.

http://www.dcexaminer.com/opinion/Bush_legacy_is_hidden_here_in_plain_sight_012109.html

Except, this is all false or unknowable.  She provides no support for the assertion that Obama ‘moved to the right’ likely because it isn’t a supportable assertion (even given the earlier propaganda line from these folks that Obama had the most liberal voting record in the Senate, another false claim but a completely predictable one that had been forwarded regarding Kerry, Gore and Clinton earlier).  As regards the demarcation in time (“when he began reading threat assessments”), she knows this how, exactly?

Propaganda – creating a narrative (today’s arse)

If you hadn’t noticed yet, the marketing of the Bush Legacy is slowly pumping up a narrative on Iraq – the war is won and Bush won it.  In marketing/propaganda, what is actually true or real isn’t important.  Rather, it is what you can convince people is the truth or the reality.

As a WH aide (likely Rove) said to Ron Suskind:

In the summer of 2002, after I had written an article in Esquire that the White House didn’t like about Bush’s former communications director, Karen Hughes, I had a meeting with a senior adviser to Bush. He expressed the White House’s displeasure, and then he told me something that at the time I didn’t fully comprehend — but which I now believe gets to the very heart of the Bush presidency.

The aide said that guys like me were ”in what we call the reality-based community,” which he defined as people who ”believe that solutions emerge from your judicious study of discernible reality.” I nodded and murmured something about enlightenment principles and empiricism. He cut me off. ”That’s not the way the world really works anymore,” he continued. ”We’re an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you’re studying that reality — judiciously, as you will — we’ll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that’s how things will sort out. We’re history’s actors . . . and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.”   http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/17/magazine/17BUSH.html

Analysts and military historians who stand outside of the Bush/conservative movement sphere have carefully detailed the ways in which “the war is won” claim is false and deceitful in intent.  Even the much more modest claim that “the surge was successful” denies the uncomfortable facts of the limited geography of Iraq affected by Petraeus’ policies and the ethnic cleansing and balkanization which preceded it, etc.

But the people who have some interest in promoting this propagandist narrative have been pumping this one up for a while now and they’ll continue.  Take today’s editorial in the WSJ by William McGurn  (who happens to have been the chief speechwriter for Bush until Feb ’08, who was a bureau chief at National Review and who had been an executive with Murdoch’s Newscorp…your classic unbiased and trustworthy political observer).

Bush’s Real Sin Was Winning in Iraq

It’s a twofer title:  1) Bush won the war and 2) this was a ‘sin’ (to those internal enemies of American gooditude).  Who those traitorous baddies are gets suggested in the first paragraph:

In a few hours, George W. Bush will walk out of the Oval Office for the last time as president. As he leaves, he carries with him the near-universal opprobrium of the permanent class that inhabits our nation’s capital. Yet perhaps the most important reason for this unpopularity is the one least commented on.

But reality isn’t quite as described in that bit in red.  Bush carries with him the near universal opprobrium of the citizens of his own country, of the citizens of the rest of the world, and of American historians.  Pretending that this opprobrium is confined to “Washington insiders” plays on the anti-elite mythologies of rightwing populism and attempts to deceive through ommission of the breadth of the “opprobrium”.  Further, in this case, as in most such cases, the person claiming disdain for the Washington insider is himself a classic example of exactly that.

The piece goes on in a predictable manner with a reminder of Viet Nam and how the internal baddies fucked that up too, how Bush’s opponents just can’t bring themselves to speak well of the surge and admit he got something right.  Irrational Bush-hatred from the elites…so unfair to this magnificent example of an American president.

And we get the narrative twist I’ve been pointing to previously.

Mr. Bush’s success in Iraq is equally infuriating, because it showed he was right and they wrong. Many in Washington have not yet admitted that, even to themselves. Mr. Obama has. We know he has because he has elected to keep Mr. Bush’s secretary of defense — not something you do with a failure.

Mr. Obama seems aware that, at the end of the day, he will not be judged by his predecessor’s approval ratings. Instead, he will soon find himself under pressure to measure up to two Bush achievements: a strategic victory in Iraq, and the prevention of another attack on America’s home soil. As he rises to this challenge, our new president will learn that when you make a mistake, the keepers of the Beltway’s received orthodoxies will make you pay dearly.

The retention of Gates proves that Bush’s policies and strategies regarding Iraq must be the right ones.  We wonder if McGurn’s logic would lead him to an identical claim that Bush’s retention of Tenet would prove the correctness of Clinton’s intel policies and strategies?  We guess not.  This is a fallacious and deceitful claim and quite ignores the value of any new administration retaining competent people who have run complex and important posts, and the converse folly of removing everyone associated with a prior administration.

And, we again have the implication that Obama can bring nothing beneficial to the Iraq equation, all he might do is meekly reproduce the boldness and under-appreciated strategic vision of Bush.

But McGurn isn’t out to make citizens smarter or more educated or more thoughtful.  He’s out to make you stupider through ommissions and deceits and spin.  He’s an arse.

Column can be read here: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123241360913796235.html

Update:  Michael Goldfarb at The Weekly Standard (the Murdoch owned neoconservative mouthpiece) on McGurn’s piece:

Obama has inherited victory in Iraq. Bush has done more than, as McGurn quotes Biden in early 2007, “keep it from totally collapsing…[until he could] hand it off to the next guy.” Now rather than retreat in defeat, our new president must manage to withdraw American troops without undermining their success. It will be a tremendous challenge, but the press will not be able to blame Bush if security deteriorates in Iraq after Obama gives the Joint Chiefs their “new mission.” The victory in Iraq is Obama’s to lose. 

Victory in Iraq…brave W. Bush did it…any/all future problems in Iraq will be Obama’s fault.  So we have a double arse day today.   http://www.weeklystandard.com/weblogs/TWSFP/2009/01/inheriting_victory_in_iraq.asp

As Andrew Sullivan, a Republican who initially supported the Iraq war but has not now for some years, says:

The one thing to remember about the neocons: their shamelessness is their only means of survival. And amnesia – constant, disciplined, carefully organized amnesia.  http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2009/01/when-will-the-1.html

Wheelbarrows full of it

Ya want Bush Legacy Project propaganda?  Check out the NRO’s “Farewell, Mr. President” here: 

http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=MjY5YjQ0YmFlZDljNzI5YmRjOWNjM2ZiMTZlNDhiNjg=

There’s those talking points, again

A Brit Tory, commenting in The Independant, helps out in the Bush Legacy propaganda project. 

Here’s his heading:

History will vindicate George Bush

Here’s the final sentence:

It now looks as if there will be many more continuities between the Bush Administration and the Obama one than many of the new President’s supporters had hoped. That is a tribute to George Bush. It will not be the last. 

http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/bruce-anderson/bruce-anderson-history-will-vindicate-george-bush-1419292.html

 

The real Bush legacy

From the Guardian, “leading commentators give their assessments of GWB’s presidency…

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/video/2009/jan/17/georgebush-legacy-usa