Top

news

Stories

 

Ghost in the Shell: How George and Now Barack Mirror Our American Psyche

That’s our Bush!

When Barack Obama claimed his victory in Chicago’s Grant Park, he thanked many people. But the one name missing from the list was the man who perhaps did the most to win Obama the presidency: George W. Bush. More than anyone else, he showed the disastrous downside of being born rich, white and well-connected.

It seems an eternity since Election Night four years ago when my friends and I sat around cursing John Kerry (whose concession speech was the high point of his campaign), dreading the specter of a Bush not just triumphant but seemingly vindicated. The man who’d treated a crooked Supreme Court decision as a mandate had now won a clear majority (give or take some voter suppression), filling with panic all those who saw him as a born-again anti-Christ. You had to shudder at what he might try to do in a second term: Bomb Iran? Privatize the air? Appoint Ann Coulter to the Supreme Court? She is a lawyer, you know.

But history is tricky, as Obama’s mentor Lenin once said, and Bush will now go down as the lamest quackyfoot in the Oval Office since at least Herbert Hoover (who, unlike W., had actually been an impressive figure before entering the White House). Indeed, Bush has pulled off a paradoxical parlay. Not only is he widely seen as leading the country to disaster — even Republican candidates treated him like a Lone Star strain of Ebola — but he’s managed to do this while seeming wholly irrelevant to our national life. He’s become America’s version of George and Martha’s imaginary child in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? — at once blamed and invisible.

I don’t know anyone who would have predicted this in November 2004. Not me, that’s for sure. Back then I had just published a book that said being president was the only thing Bush had ever been good at. Yeah, I know. But this wasn’t quite as fatuous as it now sounds. I wasn’t suggesting that he was a good president (God forbid), but that he had proved extraordinarily skillful at imposing his will on a country that often didn’t want what he wanted them to want. Resentful at being misunderestimated, he was hell-bent on having a presidency that mattered — no Clintonian small-ball for George. Even his worst enemy has to admit he succeeded. A small man riding a big presidency, he quickly turned Clinton’s administration into a blip on history’s radar, assuring that ol’ Bill — an incomparably smarter and more gifted man — will forever be remembered for Monica.

Just look at all the big, quintessentially Bushean missions his administration has accomplished. Failure on 9/11 — and nobody fired. Maladroit wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Tax cuts enriching the already-rich and creating massive deficits. Failure to check the collapse of our whole financial structure. Egregious violations of the Constitution, including the embrace of torture. GOP apparatchiks rewriting scientific reports. A politicized Department of Justice. Knee-jerk reactionaries appointed to the Supreme Court. Polarization turned into an instrument of state. Call me an elitist, but I sometimes wonder at the 25 percent who still think he’s doing a good job. What would he have to do to lose them? Admit that he has gay friends? Declare that the world is more than 6,000 years old?

Although the seeds of Bush’s ruin had already been planted before his re-election, he began his second term flush with overconfidence. When the Washington Post asked why nobody was being held accountable for the botched occupation of Iraq, he snapped, “We had an accountability moment, and that’s called the 2004 elections.”

But that’s the thing about hubris: It’s easy to mistake it for strength. And so Bush overplayed his hand again and again. Driven by an almost religious belief in unregulated markets — reason is harder work than faith — he hoped to nudge the country toward privatizing Social Security but was outmaneuvered by the Democrats, who knew that the public didn’t want it. He kept insisting that things were going well in Iraq even as newscasts were flooded with images of blood-spattered markets and women keening over their dead children. The public had long accepted that Dubya wasn’t a details guy, but his words about Iraq made him look clueless, out of touch.

This image of him was forever confirmed by his response — or more accurately, lack of response — to Hurricane Katrina. Even as the horrified nation watched suffering people get no help, there was George doing everything wrong — staying on vacation, gazing down at the ruined city from the heights of Air Force One, uttering the line that may be his masterpiece, “Heckuva job, Brownie.” Although Bush was president for more than three years after saying these words, most Americans never again saw him as presidential. Katrina became a metaphor for his administration, and those who hated him hated him more than ever. Yet precisely because Katrina spelled the effective end of Bush’s presidency, that hatred began to diminish, especially after voters rebuked him in the 2006 congressional elections.

1 | 2 | 3 | Next Page >>
 
  • Pat R Iot 02/23/2010 12:43:00 AM

    Obama has turned out to be a colossal failure the likes of which we have not seen since Jimmy Carter. Wow this article sounds pretty stupid and naive now, doesn't it? Hahahah !!

  • Dan 12/03/2008 8:23:00 PM

    Pretty good article, I guess (I've had to open up my American Heritage paperback Second College Edition Dictionary 3 times so far....). Can anyone tell me where one can find a current definition for the term "apparatchknick" ? (or a guide which explains when it's gramitically or editorially acceptable to make up words which may have some kind of etymological acceptability? Inquiring minds want to know!

  • Zadie Smith 11/10/2008 1:48:00 AM

    Not multicultural enough. ;-X

  • Vikram T. Firefly 11/10/2008 1:44:00 AM

    Brilliant piece, written with an all-too-rare sense of humour, even though I agree with post #4 that GW Bush wasn't the main reason for Obama's success at the polls. Obama succeeded in the end because he is a citizen of the world, and everyone sees a bit of himself in this cosmopolitan, inclusive man. Only the isolationist hatemongers from the deep interior of the US (and on the melting ice floes of Alaska) can't see this, but that's fine because their time is over. John Powers, you are the only person worth reading in this publication!

  • Niki 11/08/2008 2:16:00 PM

    Nice article. At least the writer has a job and intelligence and uses it to contribute in visible ways for the good of society, which I can't do. But as someone who voted for Obama because of his positive strenghts and record of legislation for overseas American citizens, I think it's divisive and disrespectful for all the lax media to continue claiming that Bush Jr's record won this victory. And for Republicans to blame Palin. McCain was no friend to the troops (voted to not reduce deployments), no friend to veterans (voted to cut GI Bill and VA benefits), no friend to women (was against women in the military occupying combat roles, divorced a loyal wife who'd become handicapped), and knew nothing about economics. If we really have a democracy, we should all be looking at ourselves and how WE collectively allowed all this to happen. How only 22 senators "claim" they read an intelligence report before making a decision to spend public money and how 78 senators didn't read it and feel no personal shame. Congress and all their aides and were so complicit in all this, they couldnt' even muster up support for impeachment. Shame on all of us, not just Bush Jr.

  • Jennifer 11/08/2008 3:13:00 AM

    The thing that we all need to take from this is the idea that Obama has been proclaiming since the beginning- There are no quick fixes, we must all work to bring about the change that we want to see. This election has ignited the passions of more people then we have seen in years. The best way we can continue on this mission of reinvigorating pride and interest in our nation is to take pride in our communities. Volunteering for a cause that you care about or an organization that helps those less fortunate is the quickest way to rebuild the spirit of our towns and cities. At volunteermatch.org you can find links to over 60,000 nonprofit groups nationwide. Every year millions of people visit the site to find a way to become involved in their community. Whatever your passion may be, there is an opportunity out there for you.

  • Greg Wall 11/08/2008 1:51:00 AM

    Yes, John Powers and Marc Cooper COULD have a stupid contest, but how could one possibly win? It's also possible, I guess, that Powers dream will come true, that the gruesome behavior of the Press in service of George W Bush will be forgotten; and that the pretty damn excellent shape Clinton left the country in circa 2000 will fall to tales of Monica. Some may not even now know of Chris Mathews passionate licking of the Bathroom Floor to elect Bush (twice). Some of us, Powers, will none the less keep hope alive. Matthews, last time Coulter came by, said he'd always have her on, because they were "both in the same business." One to which, in every sense, you also belong.

  • you 11/07/2008 2:02:00 PM

    Extreme liberal bias... wow!!!

 

Most Popular Stories

Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places

    Voice Places

    Discover restaurants, nightlife, travel, shopping...

  • VOICE Daily Deals

    VOICE Daily Deals

    Get 50 to 90% off every day on restaurants, movies, massages...

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    More than 10,000 of the BEST things to eat, drink, and experience

  • My Voice Nation

    My Voice Nation

    Join the Village Voice community and get exclusive deals and info

  • Happy Hour

    Happy Hour

    Your local Happy Hour guide at your fingertips

or

Log in or Sign up

Social Connect:

Use your favorite account to access My Voice Nation.


Use your My Voice Nation account to log in:





Forgot password?
or

Sign Up or Log in

Social Connect:

Sign up for My Voice Nation with your preferred network.


Sign up for a My Voice Nation account:



Privacy policy