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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: BufordP

Neither of these men has done 1/100 what Bush has done for conservatism.

How many justices have either men placed on the Court?

Oh wait, they probably put Sandra Day O connoer on didnt they?


81 posted on 01/16/2009 8:40:14 PM PST by lonestar67 (Its time to withdraw from the War on Bush-- your side is hopelessly lost in a quagmire.)
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To: Delacon

Reagan ran up bigger deficits than Bush— he showed far less fiscal restraint. So Reagan was not by any measure fiscally conservative.

He nominated and placed Sandra Day O Connor on the Supreme Court. That was an unmitigated disaster.

He placed 300 peacekeepers in Lebanon to appease Israel Bashers. Those soliders were murdered. When prompted to retaliate, he refused. He pulled out and ran from the terrorists.

Please understand. I think Reagan was great. But if this is how it is going to be for Bush, then I will destroy Reagan with exactly the same logics being used against Bush.

It is not even close. Bush fielding more than 200,000 volunteer soldiers repudiates the soft post Vietnam era America in a way that puts him light years ahead of “I conquered Grenada” Reagan.


82 posted on 01/16/2009 8:43:41 PM PST by lonestar67 (Its time to withdraw from the War on Bush-- your side is hopelessly lost in a quagmire.)
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To: Moonman62
Bush's legacy is a huge budget deficit, the loss of the House, Senate, and the White House to the libs.

I'll never understand why he didn't veto some pork barrel spending.

83 posted on 01/16/2009 8:48:41 PM PST by FBD (My carbon footprint is bigger then yours)
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To: Delacon

I’m hanging my flag upside down as of Monday and Tuesday I have rifles that need to be zero checked and sighted in from 11 to 1 eastern time.


84 posted on 01/16/2009 8:48:58 PM PST by Obamageddon (Birth certificate and college transcripts will be required for Federal employment, Mr. Soetero)
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To: Carley

We still fly our flag 24/7 - lighted all night. I still believe in the USA and its also a hint to prospective burglars that they might want to go someplace else. Don’t give up on our great nation - fight for it! ;-)


85 posted on 01/16/2009 8:52:27 PM PST by Tunehead54 (Nothing funny here. ;-)
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To: Delacon

btrl


86 posted on 01/16/2009 8:53:52 PM PST by Mrs. Don-o ("It is our choices, far more than our abilities, that show us what we truly are. " -- J.K.Rowling)
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To: Delacon
I've been as ticked at Dubya as anybody but in no way is he Jimmy Carter. Jimmy Carter is in a league of his own and that league is about a dozen exponents beyond the nearest competitor who would not be Bush. Clinton would be closer to Carter-level incompetence that Bush.

Maybe Mr. Bean might compare to Carter, or Kramer from Seinfeld, but those guys are fictional characters.

87 posted on 01/16/2009 8:59:34 PM PST by Tribune7 (Obama wants to put the same crowd that ran Fannie Mae in charge of health care)
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To: Delacon

We ain’t seen disaster yet. We will be so wishing we had Bush back.


88 posted on 01/16/2009 9:02:31 PM PST by beckysueb (Drill here! Drill now!)
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To: lonestar67
Oh wait, they probably put Sandra Day O connoer on didnt they?

Derbyshire, Bartlett, and Gertz put O'Connor on the court? Yeaaaaahh....

89 posted on 01/16/2009 9:08:59 PM PST by BufordP ("I've abandoned free market principles to save the free market system."--George "the Abandoner" Bush)
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To: madison10

Thanks for the poem. Listen I voted for the guy like most cons out of necessity. He never inspired me. FDR and Kennedy inspired the dems. One was a socialist and the other could arguably be called a con in this day and age so its a wash. It wasn’t until Reagan that cons had an inspirational leader. Now the dems have one. We need one.


90 posted on 01/16/2009 9:10:29 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: BufordP

Oh my bad.

They offered something much more valuable and useful:

Criticism.


91 posted on 01/16/2009 9:12:28 PM PST by lonestar67 (Its time to withdraw from the War on Bush-- your side is hopelessly lost in a quagmire.)
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To: Delacon
Carter: Otherwise, Bush is the Republican Jimmy Carter.

I stopped right there. Dumbest thing I've read in a long while.
92 posted on 01/16/2009 9:16:36 PM PST by stentorian conservative
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To: lonestar67

You make some good points but Reagan did so well for the republican party and cons that he managed to get Bush Sr elected. If you want to count the mistakes of a presidency thats fine, but it took Lincoln 4 generals before he could win a war and he could have lost his presidency to one of his own generals for his 2nd term if it wasnt for Sherman burning Atlanta to the ground. My point is that the country forgives their presidents mistakes so long as they inspire. The dems now have an inspirational leader. Ideologically and politically. What do we cons have?


93 posted on 01/16/2009 9:26:08 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: lonestar67

Obama sucks. Having said that, is Bush your Messiah? Thou shall not criticize the Bush in anyway, shape, or fashion?

Many Freepers are no different than lefties when it comes down to stifling debate.


94 posted on 01/16/2009 9:30:18 PM PST by BufordP ("I've abandoned free market principles to save the free market system."--George "the Abandoner" Bush)
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To: Blue State Insurgent
I'll take "Shining city on a hill" and "Mr. Gorbachev tear down this wall" versus your "Islam is the religion of peace" and "Doing the jobs Americans won't do."

And I do agree that W will fill the history books, just like Hoover.

95 posted on 01/16/2009 9:37:57 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: SkipW

I couldn’t agree with you more....I’m sick at heart and fearful for our nation, our way of life.....and to have to sit by and see what’s been done over the past few generations by our so called leaders and not be able to do a darned thing about it sickens me.

This One World Order be damned. Everything that has happened has been deliberate, including the financial debacle...all to wipe out our middle class, which has been the backbone of our country.


96 posted on 01/16/2009 9:56:48 PM PST by Molly T.
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To: Delacon

“Too nice by half, his “new tone in Washington” unilaterally disarmed Team Bush against critics who devoured them like piranhas.”

They ‘devoured’ him so much that he won re-election. These anti-Bush articles are a dime a dozen.


97 posted on 01/16/2009 10:08:49 PM PST by death2tyrants
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To: Delacon

Murdock is usually a thoughtful writer. Thus is beneath him.


98 posted on 01/16/2009 10:30:38 PM PST by Eagles6 ( Typical White Guy: Christian, Constitutionalist, Heterosexual, Redneck. (Let them eat arugula!))
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To: Delacon

For AM bump! ;-)


99 posted on 01/16/2009 10:48:37 PM PST by Tunehead54 (Nothing funny here. ;-)
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To: Delacon

I would never equate Bush with Jimmy Carter.

Any president who is in office for 8 years will make mistakes, little ones and big ones. In some ways W was too nice of a guy to be Prez. For example, why did Iraq drag on for over 5 years under his watch? The left would have hated him even more than they did, if that is possible, but after Saddam Hussein’s regime was toppled, and the insurgents took over Mosul and Fallujah etc, we should have given the women and children 24 hours to leave those cities and then carpet bombed them into oblivion along with the hateful scum within. If WW2 had been run like Iraq, Nazis would still be in Dresden, Munich, and Berlin sniping at our troops. The same goes for Japan. W would have never dropped the A-bombs on the Japs and our casualties would have been huge. Nixon and Reagan would have dropped the bomb to their credit. I still admire W but as Prez he earns a C+ from me.


100 posted on 01/17/2009 4:28:45 AM PST by doosee
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