The war on speech.
In March 2002, Bush signed the McCain-Feingold "campaign finance reform" bill, whose restrictions on political speech in the months approaching an electioni.e., at the time when political speech is most importantare so broad that they've forced a filmmaker, David T. Hardy, to delay the release of his documentary The Rights of the People until after November because it mentions several candidates.
Bush approved this bill fully aware that it was a First Amendment nightmare; it's generally believed that he did so assuming that the Supreme Court would strike down its unconstitutional elements. Surprise: The Court weeded out a few measures but left most of them in place.
That's not to say the government hasn't done anything to increase the amount of political speech. Its ham-handed crackdown on "indecent" broadcastsan effort that is to the cultural realm what McCain-Feingold is to the political sectorhas turned Howard Stern into Amy Goodman.
http://www.reason.com/links/links071304.shtml
Swifties showed that you beg, indeed, but your begging is misplaced.