The Three "I"s - Integrity, Intentions and Intelligence
By Gerald Plessner
One of the funniest parts of this primary election season has been the amazement of Republican pundits about the dislike of so many voters, Democrats
and otherwise, for George W. Bush. I almost fell off my couch when Republican
leak-artist Robert Novak said he just didn't understand all this hatred
of the president.
You have to admire the acting ability of a pundit who can say something
like that with a straight face. It was like the last twelve years had never
happened.
A lot of people don't understand why the last two years have fermented
growing distrust and displeasure for George W. Bush. It is because people
are reacting to his failure to live up to their expectations about the
three "I"s - integrity, intentions and intelligence.
When it comes to integrity, George W. Bush has broken the mold. In his
campaign he said he would bring us together, but his 'leave no billionaire
behind' anti-environment record and tax breaks have show a devotion to
his financial backers that is so far to the right and cynical that no self-respecting
Democrat can support them - even if they were allowed into the room where
the decisions were made.
Calling himself a compassionate conservative, Bush slashes programs
that help the needy, the disabled and veterans. He boasts about his "Leave
no Child Behind" act but then doesn't budget enough money to make it happen,
making it one more unfunded mandate.
His appointments to important jobs are a mockery of his promise to return
integrity to the Oval Office. He brings admitted perjurers like Elliott
Abrams, who plea bargained to stay out of jail, into the center of his
White House, working for Condolezza Rice. His vice president funnels billions
of contract dollars to his former employer Halliburton, in which he still
has a financial interest, and the president thinks no-bid contracts are
a good idea.
Bush's defense department appointees cook up excuses to go to war and
through their arrogance, have corrupted what could have been an honorable
international action at reasonable cost. Then they feign ignorance on the
war's cost until after 500 Americans have died, thousands of Iraqis are
dead, and billions of dollars of debt is piled up. They refused to tell
Congress what the war might cost because that would have stopped their
plans cold if we had known the truth. And they still haven't been honest
about the future costs of their war.
What were their real intentions? Just when did Dick Cheney, Don Rumsfeld
and Paul Wolfowitz decide to take us to war against Iraq? Were their intentions
based on facts or ideology? Did they get their ideas of American imperialism
from a 1997 article by Irving Kristol, the godfather of neo-imperialism,
and then bring their intentions into government well before the atrocities
of September 11? We know the answer to all those questions now, and they
are a big reason why people don't trust this president or his people.
Americans must not be fooled again. We must understand that their intention
to go to war was related to their intention to run up the national debt
to sap the government of funds. They want to kill programs that Republican
Libertarians can't stand, the programs that help poor people and not big
corporations.
It isn't that they think deficits are good in themselves. They really
don't care about the debt they will pass on to our children and grandchildren.
Their intentions are to force cutbacks on programs for people or face national
bankruptcy, a real possibility in the next decade. Their plan is shown
for what it is in their latest budget, which makes major cuts in programs
they hate. And they haven't included in that budget the costs of attaining
peace in Iraq either.
Many of the issues that have cost hundreds of lives, thousands of wounded
and billions of dollars in Iraq could have been less expensive except for
the lack of a truly engaged leader, one with self-confidence bred of the
intelligence needed to keep bright people in line.
Such a president would have told Donald Rumsfeld to stop establishing
foreign policy and offending our friends because we would need them after
Saddam Hussein was removed. He would have demanded legislative programs
that were built on honest and accurate cost estimates and talked straight
to the American people. He would have been the fiscally conservative president
that candidate Bush promised he would be.
The hardest thing for his admirers to see is that George W. Bush is
not that man. They can't admit that they have been taken. By his own admission
Bush sleeps ten hours a night and works out on a treadmill two hours a
day. By his own admission he doesn't read newspapers, preferring to be
told what is important by the people around him. He refuses to have impromptu
news conferences and reads every statement written for him. His only endearing
quality is his admission of his own limited intelligence.
And that is why so many people are mad about George W. Bush and the
Republican party. And it isn't about Florida in 2000, although for some
that would be reason enough. Many Americans - including the long-time Republicans
who write me to say they won't vote to re-elect this president - are mad
as hell and they aren't going to take it any more.
Gerald Plessner is a Southern California businessman who
writes regularly on issues of politics and culture. He would be pleased
to hear from you and may be contacted at gerald@geraldplessner.com
www.democraticunderground.com/
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