Theme : Bush
U.S. Knows Its Condition -- Lousy
Most of us see through Bush's fantasy that our grave national problems
can be fixed by a war.
by Robert Scheer
Let me tell you about the state of the union: It's lousy. The only real
question is whether the president doesn't know it or just doesn't care.
You also have to wonder why the Democrats offer only token opposition
to an administration run amok. And you might also be curious as to why
the mass media have allowed this "what, me worry?" president
to charm his way through the worst humbling of the U.S. economy since
the Depression.
Perhaps all these powerful people just think we're stupid. This seemed
to be the belief last Wednesday, when the president pitched his latest
economic stimulus for the wealthy while standing in front of a painted
facade of "Made in the USA" boxes in a room where the words
"Made in China" on hundreds of real boxes had been taped over
by presidential volunteers.
Even more aggressive was the White House public relations approach employed
Sunday. An atypically bellicose Colin Powell was launched into the heart
of a skeptical Europe, preemptively savaging the efforts of United Nations
weapons inspectors as basically meaningless, even before those inspectors
were to speak to a world that has shown its lack of desire to rush into
war.
And what did those inspectors say, their voices of reason barely audible
over the White House's drums of war? They said Saddam Hussein was providing
open access to inspectors but not being as cooperative -- surprise, surprise
-- when it came to volunteering information. At a time when we are pursuing
diplomacy with North Korea, which has nuclear weapons, it is stunning
that the inspectors in Iraq said they had "found no evidence that
Iraq has revived its nuclear program since the elimination of the program
in the 1990s." And, most important, the U.N. experts said, "our
work is steadily progressing and should be allowed to run its natural
course."
The White House uses bombast to portray our nation as being merely a
step away from peace and prosperity. All it needs is another feed-the-rich
tax break and a war for oil. All the while, the administration is willfully
ignoring some harsh realities: The Dow fell below 8,000 on Monday, Osama
bin Laden is still on the lam and we are pursuing a foreign policy increasingly
based on the discredited credo of might-makes-right colonialism.
With more of the working poor slipping each day into the ranks of the
food bank poor and with Bush's promised corporate reform a grim joke for
a middle class swindled out of its savings, states from Maine to Oregon
are facing historic budget crises. But unlike the feds, who under Bush
gleefully produce red ink like it's vintage wine, the states can't run
a deficit.
California alone is set to cut $5 billion from its education budget --
significantly less, by the way, than the $8 billion and change that state
investigators believe Bush's and Vice President Dick Cheney's buddies
at Enron and other energy companies bilked from the Golden State. Bush,
with his tin ear for cries for help emanating from the heartland, is loudly
boasting about a budget that leaves no money to help out the states.
The administration's previous tax cuts for the rich failed to lift the
economy and Bush offers only more of the same.
Even Bush's alleged strong suit, the campaign against terrorism, is being
exposed as a structure built on shaky ground. The administration's indifference
to the now completely out-of-control Israeli-Palestinian war is pouring
oil on the fire of Muslim extremism. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's
denigration of the leaders of France and Germany as "Old Europe"
-- for daring to question Bush's Iraq policy -- is only the latest sign
we have squandered the international goodwill we so painfully gained Sept.
11, 2001.
In fact, unless Hussein, reminiscent of a Super Bowl soda ad starring
Ozzy Osborne's family, suddenly unzips his skin to reveal he is actually
Bin Laden, we are likely to march to war with the support of an "international
coalition" that amounts to a fig leaf named Tony Blair and a motley
collection of nations one can buy on EBay.
It is not surprising, then, that more than half of those queried in the
latest New York Times-CBS poll believe the president doesn't share their
priorities for the country. Americans, bless them, are no longer buying
the fantasy that knocking off a paranoid dictator of a Third World country
is going to solve our grave national problems. But the president and his
hawkish henchmen still don't get it.
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