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Mark Steyn: All this just for a photograph with the Queen?
The Telegraph (U.K.) ^
| 11/16/03
| Mark Steyn
Posted on 11/15/2003 3:32:32 PM PST by Pokey78
I have been watching George W Bush for five or six years now and it pretty much goes the same every time. He decides on his goal (tax cuts, missile defence, re-taking the Senate), the received opinion says it's never gonna happen, and somehow by the end of the day the chips have all fallen his way. But I confess for the first time I find it hard to see how this week can end well, and even harder to see what he ever expected to get out of it in the first place.
According to The Spectator, "George Bush needs to be pictured with the Queen to impress voters in the forthcoming presidential election", which must be one of the loopiest assertions even by the Speccie's recent standards, at least since their claim that the (non-) looting of the Baghdad museum was a put-up job by American art dealers. The notion that footage of "Bush riding in a carriage alongside the Queen" could be a decisive factor next November is true only in the sense that those disastrous pictures of Michael Dukakis looking wimpy in a tank were a decisive factor.
"Poor George. Born with a silver foot in his mouth," sneered the then Texas Governor Ann Richards, mocking her opponent as an idiot son of privilege. Having successfully reinvented himself as an easygoing Crawford rancher, Bush has nothing to gain by palling around with royalty. Besides, he always looks like a goofball in white tie.
Meanwhile, elderly Saddamite concubines like Tony Benn and George Galloway, their young followers in the "Support The Brave Iraqi Resistance" movement, and the many European admirers of the right of the Palestinian people to self-detonation have everything to gain. I have covered enough G8s and Summits of the Americas to know how it goes when the world's press flies in to cover a formal non-event.
You stroll into the media centre, the deputy assistant press secretary hands you a piece of paper saying, "Today Mrs Bush will be taking tea with HRH The Duchess of Gloucester (no press admittance)", and so you wander back outside and your nostrils catch the heady whiff of an anti-globalisation protester from round the corner, and even though they are the usual lamebrains with the giant Bush and Blair puppets you've seen a gazillion times you find yourself idly speculating - like that lady from Australian television who recently posed a group of Iraqi children on a live munitions dump - just what it would take to set them off. Even if it is only Harold Pinter, Lady Antonia and five Taliban from West Bromwich toppling that Bush statue at Thursday's demo, by the time it's on the BBC it will be the biggest turn-out since the relief of Mafeking.
My colleague and former Bush speechwriter David Frum, who is flying in to cover events for The Daily Telegraph this week, suggests that it could be like Venezuela in 1958, when a mob attacked Nixon's car and tried to kill him, and his coolness under fire was a huge hit with the folks back home. Well, maybe. But Caracas is one thing, London's quite another.
When the crazies jumping up and down in the street yelling "Death to the Great Satan!" are the citizenry of your closest ally, you can bet there will be at least a few Democratic presidential candidates ready to make hay and demanding to know, "Who lost Britain?" The argument will be that these scenes demonstrate just how total America's isolation is. Rumour already has it that certain elements in the rogue State Department set Bush up for this debacle to remind him in the starkest way just what happens when you listen to hard men like Rummy instead of the emollient types at Foggy Bottom.
Perhaps they did. Or perhaps it is just the State Department's usual incompetence, that they failed to understand just how much more complicated Iraq's political dynamic is in Britain: most of Mr Blair's party opposed the war, but so did many ex-John Major cabinet heavyweights (if you'll pardon the oxymoron) and a hefty chunk of Telegraph group columnists. The many anglospherist romantics on the US Right ought to note not the loonies in the street but the lack of any really spirited rebuttal from much of the UK establishment.
As to the derangement of the crowd, they are impervious to reason. After two years of warnings from clapped-out Arabists that the incendiary "Arab street" was about to explode in anti-American rage across the Middle East, it remains as unrousable as ever. Instead, it is the explosive European street that remains implacably pro-Saddam, pro-Yasser, pro-jihad, pro-Taliban misogynist homophobes, pro-anyone as long as they are anti-American.
The demonstrations this coming week are best considered in the light of several smaller events: on Remembrance Day in Melbourne, "anti-war protesters" shrieked their way through the service; in Ottawa, "anti-war protesters" sprayed slogans on the National War Memorial a few hours before the start of the ceremony. Bush-hatred is just a form of cultural self-hatred.
That's why this week will be a good test of US resolve. The Islamists can't win militarily. They can only win by demoralising America into jacking it in. That's a high price to pay for a Palace photo-op.
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: bush; marksteyn; marksteynlist; thequeen
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To: Pokey78
If Steyn is worried, then I'm worried.
To: MeeknMing
Ann B*tchards: the last time she had any major notoriety was in a Doritos commercial.
22
posted on
11/15/2003 4:40:51 PM PST
by
Paul Atreides
(Is it really so difficult to post the entire article?)
To: Pedantic_Lady
Actualler quote, "Poor George. He can't he'p it. He was born with a silver foot in his mouth."
23
posted on
11/15/2003 4:42:25 PM PST
by
gcruse
(http://gcruse.typepad.com/)
To: McGavin999
Maybe its the Queen that needs a picture with George Bush.
24
posted on
11/15/2003 4:45:43 PM PST
by
dalebert
To: Pokey78
Mark has a point here; this trip was unnecessary, god forbid if something bad happens to London or crap falling in Iraq - not a good idea - all these for a phto-op with the Queen - indeed, the price is too high for that.
But then again, I recalled the millions of protestors in Europe against Ronald "Raygun" in 1983 over the Pershing Missiles stuff, it doesn't seem to hurt him in anyway in 1984 at all. Should be interesting how history will judge "W" vs "Raygun" on theirs unpopular decisions - at least to the Eurolefties..
25
posted on
11/15/2003 4:46:04 PM PST
by
FRgal4u
To: MeeknMing
Great graphic!
To: Pedantic_Lady
Doesn't matter. His son took her governorship in 92 and its been downhill for her ever since and for W ever upward. W's reelection in 98 is one of the most remarkable political feats in our time and it was his springboard to the Presidency.
27
posted on
11/15/2003 4:53:51 PM PST
by
xp38
To: xp38
Correction: Bush defeated Richards in the 1994 gubernatorial election. Terms as governor in Texas last for four years, not six as you implied.
To: Pokey78
bttt
29
posted on
11/15/2003 5:00:31 PM PST
by
lainde
To: xp38
Check that...my error now...W beat Richards in 1994
30
posted on
11/15/2003 5:01:15 PM PST
by
xp38
To: Pedantic_Lady
Yeah sorry my error.
31
posted on
11/15/2003 5:01:48 PM PST
by
xp38
To: Pokey78
So far, Bush has done a remarkable job of using the press's worst instincts against them. They will never give him any free or favorable publicity, so he has to somehow use their corrupt dishonesty to make them work against themselves.
For instance, the press spent a whole year linking Bush to the economy. Now that the economy is improving, that enormously expensive media campaign can only help him. Coneheads everywhere will think, "Duh, Bush, economy!" and pull the Bush lever, because that's what the press told them to do.
I don't have the foggiest notion what he's planning here, but I wouldn't rush to be against him.
32
posted on
11/15/2003 5:02:38 PM PST
by
Cicero
(Marcus Tullius)
To: Pokey78
Maybe President Bush wants a chance to speak to the people of the United Kingdom without the usual BBC soundbites and duckspeak.
33
posted on
11/15/2003 5:22:07 PM PST
by
Snake65
(Osama Bin Decomposing)
To: Paul Atreides
34
posted on
11/15/2003 5:22:36 PM PST
by
MeekOneGOP
(I won! I won! http://rmeek141.home.comcast.net/LotteryTicketRutRoh.JPG)
To: Snake65
BUMP
Bush has to do this, if only to show the not-so-ragheaded that he fears them not. In my mind,as clouded as it is at times, he has to do this, just to show his courage and unwavering dedication to rid the world of this menace, and to prove that in a free country, he knows this bunch of marxists STILL have the freedom to voice their assinine ideas. It is imperative.
JMHO
FMCDH
35
posted on
11/15/2003 5:36:35 PM PST
by
nothingnew
(The pendulum is swinging and the Rats are in the pit!)
To: MizSterious; rebdov; Nix 2; green lantern; BeOSUser; Brad's Gramma; dreadme; Turk2; keri; ...
Ping
36
posted on
11/15/2003 5:39:51 PM PST
by
knighthawk
(And for the name of peace, we will prevail)
To: Pokey78
As to the derangement of the crowd, they are impervious to reason. After two years of warnings from clapped-out Arabists that the incendiary "Arab street" was about to explode in anti-American rage across the Middle East, it remains as unrousable as ever. Instead, it is the explosive European street that remains implacably pro-Saddam, pro-Yasser, pro-jihad, pro-Taliban misogynist homophobes, pro-anyone as long as they are anti-American. Yep. Houston, we have a problem.
37
posted on
11/15/2003 5:47:06 PM PST
by
Victoria Delsoul
(I love the smell of winning, the taste of victory, and the joy of each glorious triumph)
To: Democratshavenobrains; William McKinley; JohnHuang2; MeeknMing
<< Yeah, but the majority of Minnesota was somewhat ashamed and aware of the obvious repulsiveness of the Wellstone/Nuremberg Rally. I'm not sure the same can be said of Britain. >>
Spot on!
Most envy-motivated Limeys hate and rage against US, in ways most Americans; doomed, it sometimes seems, by our inability to quit projecting the content of Our Character on to those who absolutely loathe and despise US; find impossible, until it's September 11 2001, to imagine -- or to contemplate.
<< Bush-hatred is just a form of cultural self-hatred.
That's why this week will be a good test of US resolve. The Islamists can't win militarily. They can only win by demoralising America into jacking it in.
That's a high price to pay for a Palace photo-op. >>
Lead in their efforts by the execrable Mad' "Andnotat" Allbright, the whole KKKli'toon Gang and their every other un-and-anti-America henchman: -- including and especially those of America's enemies, Ginsberg, Souter et al, on the once-supreme Court -- and those who comprise Foggy Bottom's loathsome and fearsome self-annointing and self-perpetuating bastard-ofspring of the Communist Party of America-descended Brahmanas; -- are flogging the "all our old 'friends and allys' hate US stratergery to the death!
A high price indeed.
Please God that Mr Bush knows what he's doing on this one.
Too.
And my money's on our President.
Bump/Ping
38
posted on
11/15/2003 6:22:59 PM PST
by
Brian Allen
( Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God - Thomas Jefferson)
To: keri
ping
39
posted on
11/15/2003 6:29:53 PM PST
by
Allan
To: nicksaunt
Thanks. I can't take credit for it, but I sure like posting it ! ...
40
posted on
11/15/2003 6:46:13 PM PST
by
MeekOneGOP
(I won! I won! http://rmeek141.home.comcast.net/LotteryTicketRutRoh.JPG)
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