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Bush Fades to Black after Eight-Year Mitigated Disaster
National Review Online ^ | January 16, 2009 | Deroy Murdock

Posted on 01/16/2009 6:31:14 PM PST by Delacon

As Bush fades to black, his presidency can be summarized with six Cs.

Credit: Several key triumphs make Bush’s tenure merely a mitigated disaster. He first deserves praise for preventing another Islamofascist massacre on American soil. History will applaud the liberation of Afghanistan and Iraq, and Libya’s consequent de-nuclearization. Bush’s tax cuts buoyed the economy before it sailed into the twin icebergs of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Justices John Roberts and Sam Alito will keep the Supreme Court constitutional. The D.C. voucher bill remains a school-choice milestone.

Carter: Otherwise, Bush is the Republican Jimmy Carter. This weak, ill-prepared bumbler let Washington eat him alive. Far worse, his apostasies bankrupted America and bombed the GOP into Dresden (often while an equally unprincipled, profligate Republican Congress navigated). The principled, fiscally responsible free-market/conservative movement is hobbled for its association with Bush, despite his serial violations of its tenets. The Right now must spend years scrubbing away Bush’s stain with brushes and Ajax.

Core: Alas, Bush has no philosophical core. He has a few sensible instincts: Tax cuts good. Terrorists bad. Abortion ugly. Most else is up for grabs.

In 2001, Bush initiated federal stem-cell research. By 2008, Bush nationalized private companies and steered the republic into $13.35 trillion in bailout commitments.

Bush’s instant socialism is the legacy of his Saran Wrap-deep faith in free markets. Under Bush, federal spending grew 32 percent (or 4.1 percent annually) — more quickly than inflation, Heritage Foundation analyst Brian Riedl calculates. Absent the Iraq and Afghan wars, Homeland Security, and Katrina relief, spending swelled 26 percent, or 3.3 percent annually, after inflation.

Since 1932, only FDR expanded Washington’s share of the economy more rapidly than Bush did. The Medicare drug entitlement, No Child Left Behind, two massive farm-welfare bills, and 69,341 un-vetoed earmarks are among the ghastly monuments of “compassionate conservatism.

Bush kicked fresh gravel into his supporters’ eyes when he kept the Education Department open, increased its budget 58 percent ahead of inflation, and then, for no apparent purpose, christened its headquarters the Lyndon Baines Johnson Department of Education Building.

More than 60 education laws were part of the vast number of legislative measures that made up the Great Society,” crowed Lynda Johnson Robb when the structure was renamed in September 2007. “But Daddy wasn’t as interested in the number of laws he helped enact as he was in the number of lives those laws help enrich.”

By signing the 822-page Energy Independence Act on Dec. 19, 2007, Bush extinguished the incandescent light bulb. This keystone of Yankee ingenuity failed in some 10,000 experiments until a perseverant Thomas Edison perfected it in 1880. Now it will become illegal in 2014. If compact-fluorescent and halogen bulbs outsell Edison’s invention, so be it. But for this quintessentially American creation to be prohibited by federal law is precisely the sort of abomination the Republican party was invented to prevent.

Communications: Bush raised the failure to communicate to a governing principle. This goes far beyond his linguistic pratfalls—such as Tuesday’s reference to helicopter pilots as “chopper drivers.” Besides not explaining its policies, the administration handed its opponents fresh truncheons with which to pound it silly.

Bush and his minions refused to detail the multifarious ties between Saddam Hussein and Islamofascist terrorists. They even stayed quiet about Manhattan-based, Clinton-appointed U.S. District judge Harold Baer’s May 7, 2003 decision that Hussein provided “material support” to the 9/11 conspirators. In Smith v. Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, Judge Baer ruled that Hussein's Baathist government and the Taliban assisted Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda. Judge Baer — who President Clinton nominated in April 1994 — ordered Hussein, Iraq’s former government, and this case’s other losing parties to pay $104 million in civil damages to the families of George Eric Smith and Timothy Soulas, both murdered on September 11, 2001, at the World Trade Center. Judge Baer added: “Again, since the al-Qaeda defendants and Iraq are jointly and severally liable, they are all responsible for the payment of any judgment that may be entered.”

Rather than publicize this federal court decision, Bush & Co. instead echoed the Left’s claims that Saddam Hussein had no connection to al-Qaeda, much less September 11.

Bush covered this topic most thoroughly at Kansas State University on Jan. 23, 2006. Bush said:

[Hussein] was a state sponsor of terror. In other words, the government had declared, you are a state sponsor of terror. . . . There’s a reason why he was declared a state sponsor of terror — because he was sponsoring terror.

When the administration found 3,894 pounds of low-enriched uranium in Iraq, Bush did not call a news conference. Instead, the Energy Department issued an almost totally ignored press release on July 6, 2004. Ditto the 606.3 tons of yellowcake uranium that the administration moved from Iraq to Canada last July. Despite the Left’s relentless charges that Bush lied about Saddam Hussein’s fondness for yellowcake, this development passed in near silence.

Bush’s Nov. 5, 2003 signing of the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban (a good thing) featured Bush onstage at Washington’s Constitution Hall. Behind him stood GOP lawmakers Tom DeLay, Bill Frist, Dennis Hastert, Orrin Hatch, Rick Santorum, James Sensenbrenner, and others — all male. The White House press and advance teams arranged this much-needed curtailment of abortion rights and yet could not place even one woman beside the president. Why were no female senators nor congresswomen near Bush? Better yet, why not surround him with pro-life moms and their infants, perhaps some who were saved through crisis-pregnancy counseling? This public-relations malpractice let the National Organization for Women use a photo of Bush and the boys as an Internet recruitment and fundraising tool.

Cheek: Bush turned the other cheek until both were bloodied beyond recognition. Too nice by half, his “new tone in Washington” unilaterally disarmed Team Bush against critics who devoured them like piranhas.

This problem began with reports that outgoing Clinton staffers had trashed the White House. Had Bush brought in news cameras to document the destruction then only verbally described in the media, Bill and Hillary would have been terminally discredited. But Bush & Co. covered up for the Clintons, perhaps thinking this would buy peace with the Left. Yeah, right.

When then-senator James Jeffords (R., Vt.) became an independent in June 2001, the Senate switched from Republican to Democratic control. The day before the hand-off, Bush included Jeffords in a Cabinet Room photo opportunity. Message: “Go ahead. Ruin Bush’s day; get a bear hug.”

Bush took heat for skipping the NAACP’s 2004 convention. He and his publicists could have detailed the repugnant “old tone” comments by NAACP leaders, such as its then-executive director Kweisi Mfume. He said Bush is “prepared to take us back to the days of Jim Crow segregation and dominance.” Instead, these noxious words went unrepeated, and the notion that Bush is anti-black went unrefuted.

Bush’s lackadaisical response to Hurricane Katrina generated outrageous genocide accusations.

George Bush is our Bull Connor,” Rep. Charles Rangel (D., N.Y.) said on Sept. 22, 2005. “If you’re black in this country, and you’re poor in this country, it’s not an inconvenience. It’s a death sentence.”

Rather than loudly rebuff such sludge with facts (e.g., the Coast Guard rescued 33,544 Katrina survivors as soon as wind speeds allowed; between 2000 and 2003, federal anti-poverty spending grew in Orleans Parish, La., by 73.3 percent per recipient under Bush), the White House rolled over and played dead, silently confirming for many the despicable lie that Bush let blacks drown in New Orleans attics just for kicks.

Crawford: His ranch in Crawford, Texas, is the perfect place for G. W. Bush to disappear and never be heard from again. 


Deroy Murdock is a columnist with the Scripps Howard News Service and a media fellow with the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. 



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS: bush; bushlegacy; deroymurdock
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To: DLfromthedesert

On Tuesday I am getting my ingrown toenail fixed. And my legs waxed. And picking up dog poops. And cleaning the garage. ANYTHING but watch the Coronation.


21 posted on 01/16/2009 6:50:15 PM PST by bboop (obama, little o, not a Real God)
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To: okie01
3. Still, he's a good man.

The same was said about Carter for many years by members of both parties, but hardly ever anymore.

I've no doubt that, at every juncture, he did what he thought best for the USA.

I have no doubt that W did what was best for Mexico, Africa, and Iraq. He doesn't care much for the common American as Reagan did. He's an elitist and arrogant person who is often wrong and his cockiness prevented him from see his mistakes. He's ruined the GOP and the country.

22 posted on 01/16/2009 6:50:22 PM PST by Moonman62 (The issue of whether cheap labor makes America great should have been settled by the Civil War.)
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To: DLfromthedesert

We took our flag down on election eve and have not reflown the flag.

It breaks my heart to see what has become of America.


23 posted on 01/16/2009 6:51:00 PM PST by Carley (Remember when we had a real President)
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To: Delacon

bump. the guy makes some good points.


24 posted on 01/16/2009 6:51:09 PM PST by Recovering_Democrat
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To: the invisib1e hand

“This is sophomoric drivel. But then again, most of things are.”

How so?


25 posted on 01/16/2009 6:52:56 PM PST by Delacon ("The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule." H. L. Mencken)
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To: Delacon
Deroy Murdock nail's it!

And there is plenty more he still could have piled on.

26 posted on 01/16/2009 6:53:12 PM PST by DTogo (I haven't left the GOP, the GOP left me.)
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To: okie01

All Americans have a right to be grateful to W for his perserverance on the WOT. Beyond that, his eight years was flawed greatly by surrounding himself with losers. George Tenet, Scott McClellan, Minettas??, Andy Card, Colin Powell, and others. Many of his servants served him and the nation poorly but W seemed to tolerate if not celebrate these people.


27 posted on 01/16/2009 6:54:40 PM PST by doosee
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To: Radix

Exactly. If either one of those two idiots were president, the least we would have is several cities in ruins and glowing by now.


28 posted on 01/16/2009 6:54:42 PM PST by Brucifer (Proud member of the Double Secret Reloading Underground.)
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To: Delacon
Where would we be if we had 4 years of president gore followed by 4 years of president kerry? I shudder to think about it.

I think President Bush did a great job especially considering the opposition of the democrats the press and the ungrateful conservatives who were mad at him because he wasn't a reincarnated Reagan. The ONLY fault I can find with him is he didn't stand up for himself and fight the lies and smears. He let them stand and too many people believed they were true. God Bless President Bush may he live long enough to finally see his record vindicated.

29 posted on 01/16/2009 6:54:50 PM PST by Ditter
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To: Moonman62
The same was said about Carter for many years by members of both parties, but hardly ever anymore.

We know Carter better now, I'll grant your point. But I'm comfortable in asserting we won't find Bush to be any different in the future than he is now.

Who would be your 2nd best President, after Reagan, from 1964 forward?

30 posted on 01/16/2009 6:55:22 PM PST by okie01 (THE MAINSTREAM MEDIA: Ignorance on Parade)
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To: MartinStyles
Too bad he didn’t spend properly. The growth rate of domestic spending has Republicans labeled as both ‘only for the rich’ and ‘big government’ spenders.

Yep, and look at where all the bailout money is going, big business, instead of fixing the financial system as originally intended.

31 posted on 01/16/2009 6:55:39 PM PST by Moonman62 (The issue of whether cheap labor makes America great should have been settled by the Civil War.)
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To: Moonman62

But Mccain hated bush. So maybe bush ain’t all that bad, eh?


32 posted on 01/16/2009 6:56:44 PM PST by mamelukesabre (Si Vis Pacem Para Bellum (If you want peace prepare for war))
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To: Delacon

You need to mark this as Bush-Bash Caucus. If I’d seen that disclaimer, I’d have stayed aways. Now I have to go bathe in tomatoe juice and burn my clothes.


33 posted on 01/16/2009 6:56:45 PM PST by the invisib1e hand (revolution is in the air.)
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To: Delacon

What’s to disagree with, facts are facts, ma’am. What we had here was a failure to communicate and it started right away in 2001, by covering up the trashing of the White House by the Klintonites. As for “better than Goron or sKerry”, remember that US Presidents all move slightly to the other side of the spectrum when taking power (as will Zero, you can bet), and those two clowns would have surely, Shirley, moved to the right, however slightly.

The desperate bushbots here are walking on broken glass saying that he may be a Carter but he’s our Carter. He ain’t mine! The author’s right on the mark.


34 posted on 01/16/2009 6:57:13 PM PST by Revolting cat! (After all is said and done I'm goodier goodier than you!)
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To: Delacon
Communications: Bush raised the failure to communicate to a governing principle. This goes far beyond his linguistic pratfalls—such as Tuesday’s reference to helicopter pilots as “chopper drivers.”

That's not so bad. I've heard pilots refer to themselves as drivers. But anyway, W is a terrible communicator.

35 posted on 01/16/2009 6:57:41 PM PST by Moonman62 (The issue of whether cheap labor makes America great should have been settled by the Civil War.)
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To: okie01
“1. He was right on the most important issue of our time — the War on Terror. He has won that war — to date.”

FDR was right on the most important issue of the day which was fascism. Doesn't mean I regard him highly as a president.

36 posted on 01/16/2009 6:57:51 PM PST by Delacon ("The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule." H. L. Mencken)
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To: Delacon

The twin towers was a one-time event. I feel safe when flying. I’m not forced to pray to a pagan god five times a day. Thank you Mr. Bush.


37 posted on 01/16/2009 7:00:22 PM PST by doc1019 (The Manchurian candidate of the Islamic world is about to occupy the White House!)
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To: Delacon
The article captures the essence of Bush's failure: he is the elite son of East Coastie patricians. He has his family's distaste for political combat and contempt for the common man. Why else would he abusively allow his nation and its people to be savaged by their enemies, domestic and foreign, without so much as a whimper of protest.

His cavalier dismissal of the consequences of his conduct, "Let history decide," is a slap in the face of every American who has to live with those consequences NOW. We don't have the luxury of waiting on history, or of retreating in affluent, haughty splendor and watching the world go down the drain, courtesy of the 2006 and 2008 electoral malfeasance of the Bush-led GOP.

38 posted on 01/16/2009 7:01:41 PM PST by hinckley buzzard
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To: doosee
I agree with much of what you say.

So, after Reagan, who was the 2nd best President from 1964 forward?

Your answer will say a.) much about the general quality of Presidents we've enjoyed over the past 44 years and I suspect b.) a lot about GWB.

39 posted on 01/16/2009 7:02:16 PM PST by okie01 (THE MAINSTREAM MEDIA: Ignorance on Parade)
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To: Delacon

When Jimmy Carter left office, I never thought another Democrat would be elected President. Now that Bush is leaving office, I think that we will never see another Republican President elected ... at least in my lifetime.


40 posted on 01/16/2009 7:03:10 PM PST by svxdave (Life is too short to wear a fake Rolex.)
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