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Misunderestimating Bush
FrontPageMagazine.com ^ | 6/16/04 | Shawn Macomber

Posted on 06/16/2004 1:16:27 AM PDT by kattracks

Misunderestimated by Bill Sammon is available from the FrontPage Magazine Bookstore for $22.95.

Misunderestimated is meant to serve as a seemingly unique purpose: amid the sea of raging screeds attacking President George W. Bush, this book is meant to be a balanced, polite and positive look at the past two years of George W. Bush’s presidency. It is a mission Bill Sammon accomplished with skill and verve.

In a larger sense, however, the book is a stinging indictment of a press that is less and less content to simply report the news, favoring instead to put each story “in context.” Due to the overwhelmingly liberal nature of the fourth estate, this has amounted to freely repeating the Left’s view of President Bush’s every initiative.   

 

It is hard to imagine a reporter better suited to exposing their hypocrisy than Bill Sammon. As the Senior White House Correspondent for the Washington Times, Sammon brings a wealth of insight, razor-sharp wit, and plenty of behind-the-scenes dishing to Misunderestimated, just as he did with his previous books, At Any Cost and Fighting Back.

 

In Sammon’s account, the press is constantly caught up in a mob mentality, eager to make the worst of every situation and unmoved by logic or reason. See, for instance, their insistence upon calling Iraq a “quagmire” just days into the battle, with liberation just days away. And when our troops made it to Baghdad in an astonishingly short period of time, they just started openly fretting over whether our quick victory would make us appear like “a bully.” The fact that they had come to the same premature and misguided conclusions three weeks in the Afghanistan campaign didn’t deter them, because both mistakes were triggered by their ideology. 

 

Sammon is particularly incisive and damning when he examines how Dan Rather and CNN coddled and sometimes even praised Saddam Hussein in order to get an exclusive story.

 

The home front gets no better coverage. Misunderestimated opens with Bush under siege from all sides by out of control protesters in Portland, Oregon (“Little Beirut”). Protesters rush the car with signs like, “Bush: Wanted Dead or Alive” – with the word “alive” crossed out. Another sign simply showed a Bush with a gun at his temple. A third protester shunned violence, demanding the nation “Impeach the Court-Appointed Junta and the Fascist, Egomaniacal, Blood-Swilling Beast.” Yet the same national press that had, for the past decade, been discussing the anger of the so-called “Clinton Haters” chose to whitewash the protestors.

 

After Bush gets in, the protestors rough up a wheelchair-bound elderly man attempting to get into the Bush event and a group of gay softball players standing outside the hotel mistaken for Bush supporters.

 

However, it is in Sammon’s book that most people first read of this. Once again, what would have been a hate crime at any Republican event was conveniently left out of press stories.

 

Misunderestimated lays out in precise detail the behind-the-scenes picture from some of the President’s greatest triumphs: pointing out flora and fauna to an uninterested liberal press corps during a hike on his ranch; the elaborate scheming and disguises needed to get Bush secretly onto a Thanksgiving plane secretly bound for Baghdad; Bush’s preparation for his landing onto the U.S.S. Lincoln aircraft carrier, and his shaking the plane’s controls to get a rise out of his Secret Service detail.

 

As with the documentary, Journeys with George,, Misunderestimated is also full of Bush’s homespun humor. When the pilot flying him to an aircraft carrier warns him that there is a chance something could go wrong, Bush tells him, “You don’t need to worry about that; we’ve got a great vice-president.”

 

The book is also full of insightful interviews with numerous administration officials. “Everybody (in the press) says Powell and all those generals suffer from Vietnam Syndrome,” Powell tells Sammon, for example. “No I don’t…I think the press is more sycophantic with respect to Vietnam than any general I’ve ever served with.” At another point, Condoleeza Rice tells Sammon that the original plan had been to follow up Powell’s presentation on WMDs at the UN with two more on human rights abuses and Saddam’s ties to terrorism, something that would have been very helpful today in hindsight.

 

For those of us well-versed in liberal bias, Bush’s open mockery of the press corps is a welcome topic of Sammon’s review.

 

When David Gregory of NBC asks the president for an impromptu press conference out at his Crawford, Texas home, for example, Bush tells him, “Yes, what do I care? I don’t watch television.”

 

In another exchange, a reporter asks Bush why it is he doesn’t pay much attention to the press. “Well, because sometimes your opinion matters to me and sometimes it doesn’t,” Bush tells him forthrightly.

 

“Well, how do you know what the people think?” the reporter retorted.

 

“People don’t make up their mind based upon what you write,” Bush snaps back.

 

Former Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill called Bush “a blind man in a roomful of deaf people.” Bill Sammon reveals a principled man with the ability to take the long view – and exposes his opponents as headline-hungry journalists and Democrats who can’t think beyond the next news cycle. Unable to fathom his dismissal of their much-prized opinions, his opponents content themselves with the belief that Bush is stupid.

 

And the press has many devotees among this number. Sammon remembers that Michale Wolff of New York magazine publicly hoped that “the righteous Bushies...falter” in Iraq. This, of course, translates to a U.S. loss, with attendant American casualties. Wolff later wrote that, “The camaraderie of people (journalists) who understood the joke was very reassuring and comfortable.” But is it indeed reassuring that so many journalists dwell in so narrow a circle that they never have their views challenged?

 

As Bill Sammon demonstrates, George W. Bush never backs down from doing what he believes is right for the passing gratification of being “reassured” or “comforted” by the press, the French or the fanatical Bush-haters who long for his bloodshed. Like Ronald Reagan before him, Bush demonstrates perseverance and leadership. And Misunderestimated shows that Bush has both qualities in spades.

 


Shawn Macomber is a staff writer at The American Spectator and a contributor to FrontPage Magazine. He also runs the website Return of the Primitive.




TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: billsammon; bookreview; bush43; misunderestimated

1 posted on 06/16/2004 1:16:27 AM PDT by kattracks
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To: kattracks

I really want to read this book. People who have read it have great things to say about it.


2 posted on 06/16/2004 1:26:56 AM PDT by texasflower (in the event of the rapture.......the Bush White House will be unmanned)
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To: texasflower

I just got it (downloaded it to my PDA to read on a flight I have next week) and it's great! It starts off with a truly frightening description of the Bush motorcade being attacked by demonstrators in Portland when Bush was on his way to a fundraiser for a Congressman there a couple of years ago, and reads like a novel - very vivid, very good.


3 posted on 06/16/2004 3:23:31 AM PDT by livius
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To: livius
It starts off with a truly frightening description of the Bush motorcade being attacked by demonstrators in Portland

That must really be scary. That is the part almost everyone has mentioned first about that book. They have all said it is frightening.

I love the way Sammons writes about Bush.

I wonder if he would get some sort of position in the second term. Maybe get rid of poor Scott and make him press secretary?
4 posted on 06/16/2004 3:29:26 AM PDT by texasflower (in the event of the rapture.......the Bush White House will be unmanned)
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To: livius
I read the book last week and I got a sense of the brain power this guy possesses. He's quick and simply manhandles these idiots behind the scenes.

I guess it is not only his ideological stance but also his DELIVERY that must bother them, he doesn't have that intellectual DEIGNING tone, no big words, no NUANCE, just straight talk. They are not used to this from pols they cover, there's not an ounce of SLICK in him, their only choice is to paint him as dumb.

5 posted on 06/16/2004 3:46:03 AM PDT by wayoverontheright
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To: texasflower
Maybe get rid of poor Scott and make him press secretary?

I think that would be a fine idea.

6 posted on 06/16/2004 4:23:38 AM PDT by livius
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To: wayoverontheright

I agree, and I think the book seems to be very good in identifying exactly why it is the opposition HATES Bush - doesn't just oppose him or dislike him, but really hates him in a way never seen before (well, perhaps since Lincoln, who was also portrayed as a boob).


7 posted on 06/16/2004 4:25:30 AM PDT by livius
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To: livius

I'm two-thirds of the way thru this book. It is truly incredible, and I mean incredible, the several dozen press conferences and TV interviews the the comparison to Vietnam or the word quagmire is menttioned re: Iraq...and this starts one week before the attack to the first week after.

Sammon nails it in this book. Very good read.

happydogx2


8 posted on 06/16/2004 4:38:48 AM PDT by happydogx2
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To: livius
I just got it (downloaded it to my PDA to read on a flight I have next week) and it's great! It starts off with a truly frightening description of the Bush motorcade being attacked by demonstrators in Portland when Bush was on his way to a fundraiser for a Congressman there a couple of years ago, and reads like a novel - very vivid, very good.

What was so scary to me about that chapter, other than thinking what would have happened to the president had those thugs got their hands on him, was that this was the first I was hearing about it. There was obviously a news blackout of this story. Maybe it was reported, but not widely. What else has happened that we'll never find out about?

9 posted on 06/16/2004 5:51:36 AM PDT by alnick
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To: kattracks

I just finished reading this book, and I highly recommend it. The political sections of the book are fairly run of the mill - it's the behind the scenes shots at Bush (especially his interaction with the media) which really make it worth reading. Especially memorable is the group of press flacks struggling to keep up with the Pres during a brisk hike across his ranch at Texas. Sammon has a gift for catching the charm and wit of the president on a personal level - definitely go pick it up.


10 posted on 06/16/2004 6:21:52 AM PDT by ICX (I am sorry Michael Moore is American; he could feed a medium sized village in Africa.)
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To: alnick
What else has happened that we'll never find out about?

Actually, I wondered exactly the same thing when I read that account. Very alarming indeed.

11 posted on 06/16/2004 10:15:00 AM PDT by livius
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