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"Dinners With Dubya" Reveals Weird and Fuzzy Feelings For Our 43rd President

A BUZZFLASH NEWS ANALYSIS
by Meg White

After a few months of Bush media blackout, to the point where comedians started joking about forgetting who our current president actually was, I've been hearing a lot about President George W. Bush lately. Even some who abhor the policies and outcomes stemming from his administration remember the man as "good," "efficient," "funny," and "kind."

Something about those characterizations struck me as fuzzy and hollow at the same time, but I haven't been able to articulate it exactly until a reading an essay titled, "My Dinners With Dubya."

For me, one of the most telling moments about Bush's perceived personality came during his 2004 campaign against Sen. John Kerry. One Zogby poll famously asked undecided voters which candidate they'd rather have a beer with. The reformed alcoholic "Dubya" won that contest, as well as the election months later.

The often prescient satirical news source The Onion nailed it once again in 2005 with an article titled, "Long-Awaited Beer With Bush Really Awkward, Voter Reports."

Vanity Fair published this article in true form, as a confessional of sorts from a gay drinking pal of Bush's daughter Barbara who visited the White House as her guest on several occasions. C. Brian Smith writes that at first, Bush's talk of "dog farts and diarrhea nicknames" was funny, and he admits to genuinely liking the man, despite ideological differences.

Smith describes a president who refers to the hallowed White House Treaty Room as "my upstairs office," repeatedly calls the Washington Monument the "Washington Memorial" and tells Smith he is "a good boy."

It's all fun and games until a return visit one month after 9/11. Bush has often talked about the tragedy in paradigm-shifting terms, referring to pre- and post-9/11 thinking as markedly different and diametrically opposed. But Bush didn't seem to have changed much, according to Smith.

In Oct. 2001, Smith sat in the White House screening room watching what he described as "an awful movie" with the president, who was dodging a meeting with the head of the FAA over whether Reagan National Airport was safe enough to completely reopen.

But that's not how Bush remembers this time in his life. This is what he said in his last TV address to the American people about that difficult period after the September 11 attacks:

"As the years passed, most Americans were able to return to life much as it had been before 9/11. But I never did. Every morning, I received a briefing on the threats to our nation. And I vowed to do everything in my power to keep us safe."

Now, it probably wouldn't have made anyone any safer if Bush had been at that FAA meeting. But I know damn well that the president's knowledge of Anthony Hopkins' Hearts in Atlantis didn't help. If he were really doing as much as he could to keep us safe, he might watch a documentary on the history of colonialism or take a briefing book to bed with him instead of attending that FAA meeting.

No matter. I've never met President Bush, but I imagine my criticism would have little effect on the man. As he said in his final speech:

"You may not agree with some tough decisions I have made. But I hope you can agree that I was willing to make the tough decisions."

Fair enough. However, I have a feeling some of the decisions he made weren't exactly framed in the correct manner. It's like trying to come up with the right answer when you don't even know the question.

For example, did the president understand his responsibility as commander-in-chief when Katrina hit? From what he told reporters about Katrina at his final presser, it seems he thinks of the office of the president as some sort of ceremonial figurehead that shows up in his finery to try and make things seem better than they are.

"I've thought long and hard about Katrina -- you know, could I have done something differently, like land Air Force One either in New Orleans or Baton Rouge. The problem with that and -- is that law enforcement would have been pulled away from the mission. And then your questions, I suspect, would have been, how could you possibly have flown Air Force One into Baton Rouge, and police officers that were needed to expedite traffic out of New Orleans were taken off the task to look after you?" 

I could point out how completely deranged this view is of the reality of the situation in New Orleans in August 2005. I could list what was sorely needed there at the time, and how Air Force One was never on that list. But I hardly think it's necessary to state the obvious here (plus, Jon Stewart already did an excellent job trying to explain it to Bush).

In the end, the warmest memories people seem to have of Bush relate to his hospitality. This would be just fine if we had a monarchy, with a prime minister available to take the heat when things need to get done. And our president's confusion about his job description is almost understandable, given the nepotism that got him into politics in the first place.

But when you determine electability upon the basis of hospitality, that's what you get: a beer buddy, and nothing else. Like a child pouring imaginary liquid into plastic teacups for the King of Teddybearistan in his backyard, Bush misses the point entirely.

A BUZZFLASH NEWS ANALYSIS


I thought he had said ....

...that he had thought about flying Air Force One into New Orleans.

And I thought of how that would have joined his two greatest failures into a single act, and saved everyone the worry over impeachment.

If the Gang Of Pirates think that the only good Democrat is a dead Democrat, only a fool would think it bipartisan to accommodate them.

Everyone seeks their own description of our brain dead President

"A spoiled little rich brat" is my favorite without getting into a 600 page dissertation. This subject definitely needs to be filed under "drunk and stupid."

Bush Is The Point

George W. Bush has always gotten by with a joke and a smile. He learned a long time ago that those attributes will shut off the analytical portion of people's brains and open them up to subtle (or maybe not so subtle) manipulation. Making people like him makes them less likely to attack him and be more forgiving when he does pull something outrageous.

As for those who fell for his cracker "charm" and voted for him, they aren't about to openly admit to their complicity. It is no different than with those who voted for Reagan; at first, they couldn't shut up about their votes for Ol' Rayguns! Within two years, however, no one would ever admit it because they felt they had been lied to and cheated. But the damage had already been done. There was no one to rise up and make repairs.

It is thus today. While the entire nation is now reviewing just how they allowed this mental midget to destroy our nation, the people aren't yet ready to freely confess that they did nothing to stop him - even if they didn't vote for him. They keep hoping that Obama will redeem their sins and take a few of the usual suspects out to the wall and sacrifice them to assuage our collective guilt, but that doesn't look like it's going to happen. Obama is apparently willing to allow the Classless Crawford Cowboy Clown to cluelessly ride off into the sunset, released from the culpability that is his legacy.

Maybe the fact that Bush will only have Secret Service protection for ten years will open the door for a more adult entity to exercise responsibility, as it is more clear than ever that America will emulate the Bush example and evade responsibility any way it can.

Bush awe-shucked his way

Bush awe-shucked his way into the hearts of a enough number of Americans in order to STEAL 2 elections --shame on us. The Mc-Palin ticket did not poll close enough to pull off a third fraud. "Lucky", perhaps, for us. The Bush era was the most stunningly SUCCESSFULL time period in our history FOR THE RULING CLASS. It was the era where the complete dumbification and commdification of the consumer intersected a powerful and naked-in-your-face repudiation of class accomodation by the capitalist class. All giving rise to the most gargantuan transfer of wealth accompanied by the complete truncation (by surrender) of policy debate. Worse, because it continues, is that this era also means the COMPLETE REPUDIATION of idea of responsibility; of the idea of the RULING class paying for the conseqeunces of their LAW BREAKING. VERY BAD for us. I do not think Obama will change much. The actors are replaced and the stage sets, costumes, and lighting will change BUT the THEATRE remains and the same auduence is still here. Some with tickets front row center, others way in the back, up in the balcony, and others hoping for no shows.