Sacrifices
by digby
There’s plenty of commentary this morning about this Brian Williams interview with the president yesterday. But can I just point out that neither Williams nor Bush make any damned sense? Take this exchange:
WILLIAMS: When you take a tour of the world, a lot of Americans e-mail me with their fears that, some days they just wake up and it just feels like the end of the world is near. And you go from North Korea to Iran, to Iraq, to Afghanistan, and you look at how things have changed, how Americans are viewed overseas, if that is important to you. Do you have any moments of doubt that we fought a wrong war? Or that there’s something wrong with the perception of America overseas?
BUSH: Well those are two different questions, did we fight the wrong war, and absolutely — I have no doubt — the war came to our shores, remember that. We had a foreign policy that basically said, let’s hope calm works. And we were attacked.
WILLIAMS: But those weren’t Iraqis.
BUSH : They weren’t, no, I agree, they weren’t Iraqis, nor did I ever say Iraq ordered that attack, but they’re a part of, Iraq is part of the struggle against the terrorists. Now in terms of image, of course I worry about American image. We are great at TV, and yet we are getting crushed on the PR front. I personally do not believe that Saddam Hussein picked up the phone and said, “al-Qaida, attack America.”
Talk about dumb and dumber. I know the president is intellectually handicapped and I don’t expect much from Williams either. But couldn’t someone have written down the questions for him beforehand so he doesn’t ramble incoherently when he’s interviewing the president?
And why oh why can’t somebody pin the codpiece down when he says in one breath that the war came to our shores and that’s why we’re fighting in Iraq? Couldn’t Williams have followed up with, “but if Iraq wasn’t involved in the attacks, in what way was it part of the struggle against terrorism? Until we invaded, Iraq didn’t have any terrorists.” Bush would blather on about weapons of mass destruction and our oceans not protecting us, but at least it would be out there. That would be too much to ask, I guess.
The thing about how we are “great on TV but getting crushed on the PR front” is just bizarre. I have no idea what he meant by it other than it’s something someone said about about himself and he applied it to the country. I can’t figure out any other explanation.
This next part makes me feel sad for Bush the first. Junior is a terrible son, condescending and rude. Shakespeare is needed to explain it properly:
WILLIAMS: Is there a palpable tension when you get together with the former president, who happens to be your father? A lot of the guys who worked for him are not happy with the direction of things.
BUSH: Oh no. My relationship is adoring son.
WILLIAMS: You talk shop?
BUSH: Sometimes, yeah, of course we do. But it’s a really interesting question, it’s kind of conspiracy theory at its most rampant. My dad means the world to me, as a loving dad. He gave me the greatest gift a father can give a child, which is unconditional love. And yeah, we go out and can float around there trying to catch some fish, and chat and talk, but he understands what it means to be president. He understands that often times I have information that he doesn’t have. And he understands how difficult the world is today. And I explain my strategy to him, I explain exactly what I just explained to you back there how I view the current tensions, and he takes it on board, and leaves me with this thought, “I love you son.”
He speaks as if his father is some simple working class bloke who loves his highly successful son and keeps him grounded with homespun wisdom. Bush doesn’t listen to him about important things. But that’s ok, because his simpleminded old Dad “understands that often times I[Junior] have information that he doesn’t have.” Sad, sad, sad.
Williams actually asks one interesting question:
WILLIAMS: The folks who say you should have asked for some sort of sacrifice from all of us after 9/11, do they have a case looking back on it?
BUSH: Americans are sacrificing. I mean, we are. You know, we pay a lot of taxes. America sacrificed when they, you know, when the economy went into the tank. Americans sacrificed when, you know, air travel was disrupted. American taxpayers have paid a lot to help this nation recover. I think Americans have sacrificed.
Dear God. He brags endlessly about lowering taxes and then calls it a sacrifice for the war effort. It’s true that having air travel disrupted for a week was truly a lot to ask of us but we rose to the occasion. The economy he’s been pumping as being great for years is now seen to have “tanked” and caused Americans great suffering. I won’t even mention the war we didn’t need to fight that’s costing huindreds of billions of dollars — which he promised would be paid for with Iraqi oil revenues and which will instead cost every American child more than can even be calculated.
The truth is that we have been asked to make a lot of very important sacrifices. As the blogger Phila at Boufonia writes:
It’s often claimed that George W. Bush has asked for no sacrifices in this time of war. On the contrary, he’s asked us to sacrifice our humanity and our compassion. He’s asked us to sacrifice our privacy and freedom, and our respect for our fellow citizens. He’s asked us to sacrifice every irreducible ideal – and there were few enough of them, God knows – on which this country was founded, and whatever fragile steps we’ve taken towards implementing them under the law. He’s asked us to sacrifice any religious truth that would interfere with the dreary, mechanical pursuit of redundant wealth and false security. He’s asked us to sacrifice our souls and our conscience, in exchange for his snake-oil promise that we’ll never have to suffer the consequences of our own inhumanity. He’s asked us to sacrifice our present for his future, and our future for his present.
And we have to take off our shoes at airports too.
Update: I just saw an extended version of the interview and Williams did follow-up with Bush about al Qaeda in Iraq and as predicted, Bush blathered on about all the usual crap about “suiciders” and state sponsors of terrorism and the world being safer without Saddam. But the question was, at least, asked.
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