Bush Goes Out Like Truman
Posted on January 12th, 2009
by Patrick J. Buchanan |
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With his public approval where Harry Truman’s stood when he left office, George W. Bush gave his last press conference yesterday.
And like that predecessor he often identifies with, Bush showed a Trumanesque defiance of his critics — and a Trumanesque failure to understand what ruined his presidency.
He denounced protectionism, as he has with dismissive contempt since he went to New Hampshire a decade ago. But nowhere in his defense of free trade was there any explanation for how Middle America lost 3 million manufacturing jobs in his first term and a million more in the last year.
Nowhere does there seem an awareness that the ideas he absorbed at his father’s knee and the Harvard Business School had resulted in the de-industrialization of his country, an enormous and growing dependency on Japan, China, and Asia for the essentials of our national life, and, now, for the borrowed money to pay for them.
Someone once defined tragedy as what happens when a beautiful theory collides with a fact. And this is what has happened every time a great empire — be it the Spanish, British, or American — embraced free trade as its salvation.
President Bush says it was freedom that prevailed when he rejected the pleas of weak-sister Republicans and backed the surge. But what spared us a debacle in Iraq was an infusion of 30,000 combat troops, an uprising against the murderers of al-Qaeda and a U.S. decision to buy off the Sunni tribes, a strategy besieged empires have pursued for centuries.
Nor does there appear in Bush’s self-assurance any awareness of the cost of his Freedom Agenda. In Iraq, it is 4,000 U.S. dead, 30,000 wounded, hundreds of thousands of Iraqi dead, millions of refugees, a pogrom against an ancient Christian community, and a strategic victory for Iran and its Shia allies across the Middle East. When last heard from, the Ayatollah Sistani — the chief Shia cleric in Iraq, who has welcomed Iranian but not American visitors — was calling for Muslims to stand up against Israeli criminality in Gaza.
Like Woodrow Wilson before him, Bush appears to believe that the nobility of his goals — expanding freedom and bringing an end to tyranny in our world — validates and will sanctify his decisions.
Like Wilson, he is a utopian. He fails to understand that idealism has its delusions and disasters.
The war Wilson led us into “to make the world safe for democracy” gave us Vladimir Lenin, Joseph Stalin and 70 years of the most barbaric empire in all history.
The peace Wilson brought home led straight to Adolf Hitler, the Third Reich and a second world war far worse than the first.
The West’s road to hell has been paved with good intentions.
President Bush rightly denounces Europeans who see Israel as always wrong. Yet he behaves as though Israel can do no wrong. Sixteen days into the Gaza war, with the Palestinian dead and wounded near 5,000, and a humanitarian catastrophe at hand, has our “compassionate conservative” president uttered one word of compassion for those whose losses outnumber the Israelis’ 100 to one?
In defending his rejected immigration reform, President Bush clearly sees himself as in the vanguard of decency, and admonishes his party against being perceived as anti-immigrant.
But is this president oblivious to what is happening in his country because of his and his father’s failure to secure the border? Even in rich, liberal Montgomery County, Md., one reads over the weekend that there is a hardening of attitudes toward illegal immigration after a spate of crimes and killings. Working-class Americans pay the price of the idealism around the dinner table at the Crawford ranch.
In his first five years, Bush himself has admitted, 6 million aliens were arrested at the border, breaking into this country. One in 12 — 500,000 — had criminal records. Is it anti-immigrant to demand a halt to this invasion, even if it means troops on the border? Is it truly compassionate, or an act of cravenness, to insist that the answer is amnesty for 12 million to 20 million illegals and absolution for the businesses that hired them?
Choleric and cocky Harry Truman may be Bush’s role model. But it was Dwight D. Eisenhower who had to clean up the mess Harry left behind.
Six months into office, Ike had ended the Korean War. He had the courage no president has since shown to tell the Israelis they must get off occupied land. They did.
While surely repelled by Nikita Khrushchev, especially for the Hungarian bloodbath of 1956, Ike had him up to Camp David in 1959 because, wicked as the Bolsheviks were, they had nuclear weapons, and one must talk to them.
Prudence is the mark of the true conservative. Ike and Ronald Reagan had it. Neither Bush nor Truman did. And that is why the former left the country so much better off than did the latter.
Goodbye, Mr. President, and God bless.
COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC
Filed under: Foreign policy, Politics, Trade








If people get the government they deserve, we’re not getting a president better than Bush anytime soon. Goodbye, Mr. President, and God help us.
http://www.rightklik.net/
No, not even like a Truman who at least had an admirable if not pugnacious sense of pride and regard for his office. With poetic timing and justice Ehud Olmert of all people has just now chiseled the epitaph of shameful fecklessness that will forever mark the Bush years by bragging about how he could call Bush, jerk him out of the middle of a speech, and at the last minute get him to instruct Condi Rice to abstain from voting in favor of a U.N. resolution that Rice herself painstakingly helped prepare. With such bragging by Olmert being done openly, in public.
So this is how Bush leaves; despised by most, publicly disdained and humiliated even by those he so truckled after, and leaving the office of the U.S. presidency looking like the job of a water boy.
‘With poetic timing and justice Ehud Olmert of all people has just now chiseled the epitaph of shameful fecklessness that will forever mark the Bush years by bragging about how he could call Bush, jerk him out of the middle of a speech, and at the last minute get him to instruct Condi Rice to abstain from voting in favor of a U.N. resolution that Rice herself painstakingly helped prepare. With such bragging by Olmert being done openly, in public. ‘
Bush never left any speech to talk to Ohmert but the point is still valid. Israel got the US to abstain from voting on our own initiative at the UN. Our president is being ordered around by another country’s leader. Where is the Red State Strike Force when you need them?
I understand the anger about immigration but troops on our borders? Are you insane? You dis Lenin and Stalin (rightfully of course) then want to imitate them by putting a steel curtain around America? Weird.
What’s the point of building a wall with a big ‘KEEP OUT’ sign on it if right below that sign is another reading:
‘Help Wanted, Low Wage Positions Available, Apply Within’.
PJB needs to cut HST some slack. Truman, for all his faults, was a far better president than Bush. In office almost as long as W, Truman handed over a prosperous, intact nation, self-confident and proud of its heritage. Bush hands over a nation near economic ruin, invaded by millions of illegal aliens, demoralized and deracinated to the point where the terms, “American” and “foreigner” have become almost indistinguishable, and equally meaningless. And Truman had us bogged down in only one, not two, wars.
Beau Martin wrote:
“And Truman had us bogged down in only one, not two wars.”
Good point, and recalls the other even more poetic parting judgment passed on Bush’s tenure that I suspect history will always remember and mark it by too: At least if Truman had gone to South Korea they wouldn’t have thrown their shoes at him.
“Goodbye, Mr. President, and God bless.”
Goodbye, Mr. President, and good riddance. Fixed.
” Israel got the US to abstain from voting on our own initiative at the UN. Our president is being ordered around by another country’s leader. ”
I am reminded of a quote by the late Admiral Moorer, decorated WWII veteran and former chairman of the Joint Chief’s of Staff:
“I’ve never seen a president - I don’t care who he is - stand up to them [the Israelis].
It just boggles your mind. They always get what they want….If the American
people understood what grip those people have on our government, they would rise up in arms.
Our citizens don’t have any idea what goes on.”
( They Dare to Speak Out - former Congressman(R) Paul Findley, Third Edition, p. 174)