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The
State Of Denial
by Anthony Wade
January 30, 2007
As the resounding echo
of the unnecessary clapping ends tonight we will have heard nothing
new from the 43rd President of the United States. Each year brings
a new opportunity for the President to try and turn around what
is the worst legacy since Herbert Hoover. Yet each year George
Bush insists that up is down and black is white. Each year he
reminds us that he does not listen, he does not learn. He simply
plods through each State of the Union Address using specious arguments
and flat out lies to advance the neoconservative agenda that has
been soundly rejected by the American people.
The chamber this evening
was quite tepid actually. That is because most realize, even the
republicans, that this president is the lamest lame duck we have
ever seen. After a very conciliatory start by acknowledging the
first woman speaker and the newly elected democratic Congress,
Bush quickly went back into the vault of failed policies, broken
promises and empty rhetoric. On the education front Bush took
credit for his failed No Child Left Behind Act, which has been
left largely unfunded so that measuring its true success, is not
possible. That was it for education; nothing to see-move along.
Why spend any time dealing with education when poor kids can sign
up for the Army!
Moving quickly, the
president then entered fantasy land to discuss the economy. It
is important to understand that the only thing that George Bush
has ever supported economically is business and the super-rich.
The Holy Grail of this president's economic vision is his extremely
unfair and slanted tax cuts. His goal when he came into office
was to roll taxes back, with 95% of the money going to the top
1% of the rich in this country. Not you or I, just the rich. A
spade is a spade, and I am tried of people crying "class
warfare" while they are waging warfare on the middle class
and working poor. Make no mistake about it America; George Bush's
primary domestic imperative is to keep the tax cuts for the rich
permanent. In order to do this, he must pretend that these tax
cuts have spurred the economy. In order for that fairy tale to
be true, he needs to pretend that the economy is somehow doing
well, when it clearly is not. I have heard all about the fake
statistics and the irrelevant stock market. The average person
on the street knows full well that that there are two economies.
The one for the rich is doing very well; hence the stock market
increases. The one for the average American though, is failing
them every day. The jobs acquired today are worse than the ones
we had ten years ago. Healthcare is not affordable. Gas prices
are still unacceptable. College tuition is out of reach. These
are the realities facing Americans each and every day but all
George Bush can do is pretend they do not exist. He is forced
to pretend that "uninterrupted job growth" demands that
the rich get richer, even though he cannot create enough jobs
to keep up with the new job seekers. In closing on the economy,
Bush offered two other proposals that were so funny I had to laugh.
One was to balance the budget, even though he never has and the
second one was to eliminate earmarks, even though he never vetoed
one GOP spending bill in his presidency. The smell of hypocrisy
was pungent in the air, as Congresspersons winked and nodded.
Moving into healthcare,
we again saw nothing new. This president has never cared about
healthcare. Millions more Americans are without healthcare under
his watch and his "initiatives" will do nothing to solve
this problem. Tonight he discussed more tax incentives which sound
good on paper but are not realistic for middle class and working
poor. His example was about a family of four earning 60 thousand
dollar per year, indicating how far away he is from reality. He
closed this area by dragging out two other failed neoconservative
schemes. He discussed the inevitable "Health Savings Accounts",
which are tax havens for the rich and useless for the middle class
and working poor. They are a scam to help the more affluent in
America put more money away tax free. The other scheme he dredged
back up was the imaginary notion that medical liability reform
is needed to prevent "junk lawsuits." This has been
sufficiently debunked, as junk lawsuits actually only account
for less than 1% of healthcare costs. Never let the facts get
in the way of a failed policy!
After slogging through
immigration, Bush talked about our dependency on foreign oil.
I note this because he has talked about it in every State of the
Union he has delivered, six now and counting. He has done nothing
after those speeches however, which is why he can only talk about
it each year. Because ultimately he has no intention of doing
anything substantive about it. Bush is an oilman, born and raised.
His actions belie his words. After that he brushed past his nomination
of judges, falsely asserting that it is Congress responsibility
to provide a quick up and down vote. Nonsense. It is the job of
Congress to advise and consent, not vote quickly.
Having put behind the
subjects he does not live for, Bush then moved into his bread
and butter, the War on Terror/Iraq. He began without any shame,
his staple, by invoking 911, linking that to terror, linking terror
to Iraq, and voila! We must continue to fight in Iraq, because
of 911. Like a master magician, he trumped up some alleged "terror
plots" that were supposedly broken up, quoted bin Laden and
Zarqawi for fear factor, and wrapped it up with his patented "ideological
struggle of our time" nonsense. He even tried to attach the
Sunnis to al Qaeda and the Shia to the Iranians, desperately trying
to make the factions fighting the civil war in Iraq into terrorists.
All of this of course failed on its face. America is well aware
that this war is not about terror. There are less then 5% of the
people fighting in Iraq that are linked to al Qaeda. So Bush dragged
out his failed lies, his failed policies, and his failed war for
another public flogging. It generated very little positive reactions,
even from his own party and the Joint Chiefs of Staff. In fact
the only time there was a positive reaction in this area was when
Bush shamelessly used the troops and said we had to support them,
as if anyone has ever said anything else. In wrapping up the war
portion, he dragged out the lies about Afghanistan, where the
Taliban is partly back in control but Bush keeps pretending he
has installed a democracy there. He reinforced the purple thumb
day as being some hallmark in Iraq, instead of what it was, a
precursor to Civil War.
But in a moment of
unbridled subterfuge, we saw new lies emerge. After finally admitting
that Iraq is a cauldron of sectarian violence, Bush let this whopper
fly:
"This
is not the fight we entered in Iraq, but it is the fight we are
in. Every one of us wishes that this war were over and won. Yet
it would not be like us to leave our promises unkept, our friends
abandoned, and our own security at risk."
A lot of new lies here
to wade through. First of all, this WAS the fight we entered in
Iraq. These sides have been warring for centuries and Bush's father
had enough common sense to not get involved in disposing of Saddam
because he knew this would happen. The second lie is that it certainly
appears that not all of us wish the war was over. If Bush truly
wished it was over he could END IT. No America, George Bush does
not want the war to end because if it does, he loses and his dream
is to have another president have to send in the helicopters and
evacuate the troops. Next, our promises are kept. We said that
Saddam Hussein had WMD and had to be removed. We removed him and
discovered, oops, there were no WMD. Mission accomplished, let's
go home. Lastly, we would still be involved politically and diplomatically
so the notion that we would be abandoning our friends and that
our security would be at risk is rhetoric not based in reality.
Nor was there any reality
in Bush's frightening vision of what would happen if we withdrew.
The scare tactics are no longer working. America has awoken. No
matter that Bush then tried to wrap Iraq back up in 911. The Civil
War in Iraq, with less than 5% al Qaeda involvement, will have
zero impact on terrorism in general, let alone against this country.
Faced with the enormous silence to his war on terror, Bush then
paid general lip service to AIDS, Malaria, and threw in the word
Darfur to make people feel good.
That was it America,
nothing new to see here, move along. Staring at a 28% approval
rating, George Bush strode to the podium tonight and showed why
72% of this country disapprove of him as president. He dragged
out tired old initiatives, empty old rhetoric, and failed old
policies and propped them up in a speech that ignored the opinions
of Americans everywhere.
In response, Democratic
Senator Jim Webb hit the ball out of the park. Sifting through
the piles of manure and tired old lies would have made no sense.
Webb instead went right after the two major points of disagreement
between the Democrats and the president. There are more areas
of disagreement but since Bush really doesn't care enough about
them to do anything anyway, Webb was able to boil it down to the
economy and the Iraq War. On the economy Webb correctly pointed
out, as I have in this article, that there are two economies.
One for the rich and one for the rest of us. He pointed out that
it takes a worker one year to make what a CEO makes in one day.
He talked about medical costs, college costs, wages at an all
time low and the dismantling of our production society. Perhaps
the best quote from this portion was:
"In
short, the middle class of this country, our historic backbone
and our best hope for a strong society in the future, is losing
its place at the table."
That is exactly the
problem. The middle class has been squeezed into the working poor
under this president. Remember when you hear this president or
his party claim the economy is doing well, it is only because
they want to make the tax cuts for the rich permanent. It has
nothing to do with you or me.
On Iraq, Webb drove
the point home with poignancy and resolve. He showed a picture
of his father, who served in WWII. He spoke about how he himself
served in Viet Nam, with his brother and how his son is serving
right now in Iraq. Jim Webb understands the word that Bush can
only mouth, sacrifice. He understands that war has a price beyond
the billions of dollars spent. It has a bottom line cost in blood
and that blood comes only after certain criteria are met. As Webb
said:
"Like so many
other Americans, today and throughout our history, we serve
and have served, not for political reasons, but because we love
our country. On the political issues those matters of war and
peace, and in some cases of life and death, we trusted the judgment
of our national leaders. We hoped that they would be right,
that they would measure with accuracy the value of our lives
against the enormity of the national interest that might call
upon us to go into harm's way.
We owed them our
loyalty, as Americans, and we gave it. But they owed us sound
judgment, clear thinking, concern for our welfare, a guarantee
that the threat to our country was equal to the price we might
be called upon to pay in defending it."
Jim Webb has it right.
He has the pulse of America. He understands where 72% of this
country is at right now. We do not want to hear the same old lies.
We do not want the failed policies of a failed ideology. We understand
that education deserves more than three sentences in a State of
the Union address. We understand that when we cannot put food
on the table the economy is not doing as well as the government
says, no matter how high the stock market gets. We understand
that healthcare is a real problem, not solved by providing tax
havens for the rich and empty words for the poor and middle class.
We understand that the blood of our children is worth more than
the lies of a president who is slowly disintegrating into oblivion.
At 28% approval and this sad statement of a speech tonight, George
Bush is moving into a Hooverville of his own making and like President
Herbert Hoover before him, he is simply clueless about his own
ineptitude; careening into the darker pages of this country's
history.
~~~~~~~~
Anthony Wade, a contributing
writer to opednews.com, is dedicated to educating the populace
to the lies and abuses of the government. He is a 39-year-old
independent writer from New York with political commentary articles
seen on multiple websites. Anthony Wade's Archive: http://www.opednews.com/archiveswadeanthony.htm
Email Anthony: takebacktheus@gmail.com
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