As we defend liberty and justice abroad,
we must always honor those values here at home.
– George W. Bush, October 28, 2003
George W. Bush came to the presidency promising
prosperity, peace, and humility. Instead, Bush has spawned record federal budget
deficits, launched an unnecessary war, and made America the most hated nation
in the world. Bush is expanding federal power and stretching prerogatives in
almost every area that captures his fancy. Though Bush continually invokes freedom
to sanctify himself and his policies, Bush freedom is based on boundless trust
in the righteousness of the rulers and all their actions.
Truth is a lagging indicator in politics. A president's promises and speeches
receive far more publicity than subsequent reports and revelations about how
his cherished programs crash and burn. This book does not aim to analyze all
Bush policies. Instead, it examines an array of his domestic and foreign actions
that vivify the damage Bush is inflicting and the danger he poses both to America
and the world.
Bush governs like an elective monarch, entitled to reverence and deference
on all issues. Secret Service agents ensure that Bush rarely views opponents
of his reign, carefully quarantining protesters in "free speech zones"
far from public view. The FBI has formally requested that local police monitor
antiwar groups and send information on demonstrators to FBI-led terrorism task
forces. Thanks to the campaign finance act Bush signed, Americans have also
lost much of their freedom to criticize their rulers – at least in the 60 days
before an election.
After 9/11, privacy is a luxury Americans supposedly can no longer afford.
The administration has left no stone unturned, giving itself powers to sweep
up people's e-mail with the FBI's Carnivore system, unleash FBI agents to conduct
surveillance almost anywhere, allow G-men to secretly search people's homes,
bankroll Pentagon research on creating hundreds of millions of dossiers on Americans,
expand the military's role in domestic surveillance, and vacuum up personal
data to create a federal "color code" for every air traveler. The
administration is defining freedom down, pretending that protection from federal
prying is no longer relevant to liberty. Americans are supposed to accept that
freedom from terrorism is the ultimate freedom – and nothing else matters any
more.
Bush is dropping an iron curtain around the federal government. The Bush administration
is hollowing out the Freedom of Information Act, making it more difficult for
citizens to discover government actions and abuses. Bush invoked executive privilege
to block a congressional investigation into the FBI's role in mass murder in
Boston and in framing innocent men for those murders. The Supreme Court tacitly
endorsed the Bush doctrine that the feds may carry out mass secret arrests and
suppress all information about the roundup (including names of those detained,
charges, and details on prison beatings).
Bush is wrapping himself in a flag drenched with the blood of Americans who
died due to the failure of the federal government he commanded. The Bush reelection
campaign is running television ads showing an American flag flying in front
of the ruins of the World Trade Center towers and a flag-draped corpse being
carried out of Ground Zero by firefighters. The Republicans will hold their
national convention in New York days before the third anniversary of the terrorist
attacks. Bush exploits the 9/11 dead while he stonewalls the 9/11 commission.
The Bush reelection team seems convinced that Bush's actions on that day entitle
Bush to rule Americans for four more years.
KING OF ALL BOONDOGGLES
Americans will be forced to pay trillions of dollars in higher taxes in the
coming decades to finance George Bush's 2004 reelection campaign. Bush browbeat
Congress into enacting the biggest expansion of the welfare state since Lyndon
Johnson's Great Society. The White House blatantly deceived Congress about the
cost of the new Medicare prescription drug entitlement, withholding key information
that would have guaranteed the defeat of Bush's giveaway. The administration
launched a federally financed ad campaign showing a crowd cheering Bush as he
signed the new law; federal auditors ruled that the ads were illegal propaganda.
The new drug benefit will expedite Medicare's bankruptcy and do nothing to improve
medical care for most seniors.
Vote-buying is the prime motive of many Bush policies. Bush signed the most
exorbitant farm bill in history in 2002, bilking taxpayers for $180 billion
to rain benefits on millionaire landowners and other deserving mendicants. Bush
repeatedly bragged that his farm bill was "generous" – as if Washington
politicians have carte blanche to redistribute Americans' paychecks to any group
they choose. Bush imposed high tariffs on steel imports, wantonly destroying
thousands of American manufacturing jobs simply because he wanted to try to
snare the endorsement of the United Steel Workers and to boost his reelection
chances.
After 9/11, almost every expansion of government became a coup for homeland
security. When Bush announced plans to bloat the AmeriCorps "paid volunteer"
program, he declared: "One way to defeat terrorism is to show the world
the true values of America through the gathering momentum of a million acts
of responsibility and decency and service." While Bush portrays AmeriCorps
recruits as heroes, AmeriCorps members busy themselves putting on puppet shows
to persuade three-year-olds of the value of smoke alarms, hoeing corn at tourist
farms, and sanctimoniously picking up litter in bad neighborhoods. Bush summoned
every citizen to give four thousand hours of "service." After dubious
federal statistics showed a marginal rise in volunteering, Bush hyped the uptick
as proof that his leadership is morally rejuvenating America.
The Transportation Security Administration and its 45,000 member airport occupation
army is one of the Bush administration's biggest shams. Despite more than $10
billion spent since 9/11, airport screeners are not any more competent than
they were in 1987. Yet, as long as TSA brags about seizing millions of pointy
objects each year from grandmothers and other scofflaws, Americans are supposed
to believe that the endless delays are worthwhile. TSA is punishing critics,
slapping fines of up to $1,500 on airline passengers guilty of showing the wrong
"attitude" as they pass through TSA checkpoint gauntlets.
Some of Bush's cherished reforms consist of little more than finding new names
for old boondoggles. Bush sharply boosted foreign aid and created a new program,
the Millennium Challenge Account. Bush denounces traditional foreign aid for
bankrolling corruption, and insists that his program rewards governments for
being honest. Even though the aid still goes to many of the same Third World
politician-looters, the new program's lofty rhetoric automatically converts
the money into a force for goodness.
Political cosmetics pervade many Bush policies. The No Child Left Behind Act
is perhaps Bush's biggest domestic fraud. The act was falsely sold as giving
freedom to local school officials. In reality, it empowers the feds to effectively
judge and punish local schools for not fulfilling arbitrary guidelines. Many
states are "dumbing down" academic standards, using bureaucratic racketeering
to avoid harsh federal sanctions. Though the No Child Left Behind Act promised
to permit children to escape "persistently dangerous" schools, most
states defined that term to claim that all their schools were safe. As long
as people believe Bush cares about children, it doesn't matter that his education
policy is a charade.
While Bush hypes himself as a "compassionate conservative," his drug
policy relies on wrath and harsh punishment (except for special cases like his
niece Noelle Bush and talk show host Rush Limbaugh). John Walters, Bush's drug
czar, demonized drug users in federally funded TV ads, portraying people who
buy drugs as terrorist financiers threatening America with complete destruction.
Federal drug warriors have arrested cancer patients who smoke marijuana to control
their chemo-induced nausea, busted doctors who give suffering patients more
pain killers than the DEA approves, and carried out high-profile crackdowns
on targets ranging from hemp food makers to comedian Tommy Chong (busted for
bong trafficking).
TERRORIZING IN THE NAME OF ANTITERRORISM
Bush appears determined to force Americans to pay almost any price so that
he can be a world savior. He declared in December 2003: "I believe we have
a responsibility to promote freedom [abroad] that is as solemn as the responsibility
is to protecting the American people, because the two go hand in hand."
But the Constitution does not grant the president the prerogative to dispose
of the lives of American soldiers any place in the world he longs to do a good
deed. Though Bush is adept at destroying freedom in America, he has yet to demonstrate
any ability to create it in foreign lands.
Bush greatly exaggerates the benefits of his conquests. After the Afghan war,
Bush repeatedly told Americans that they had liberated Afghan women and that
Afghan girls were now going to school. Yet, women are still heavily oppressed
in most of Afghanistan and most Afghan girls still do not attend schools. While
Bush portrays Afghanistan as a liberated new democracy, most Afghans are brutalized
either by warlords or the resurgent Taliban. But the Bush White House rarely
allows cold facts to impede a warm and touching story line.
For Bush, the right to rule apparently includes the right to lie. In his 2004
State of the Union address, Bush proclaimed that, as a result of actions such
as the U.S. invasion of Iraq, "No one can now doubt the word of America."
A year earlier, in his 2003 State of the Union address, Bush rattled off a long
list of biological and chemical weapons that he claimed he knew that Iraq possessed.
No such weapons have been found. Bush has never shown a speck of contrition
for his false prewar statements. Instead, he acts like a clumsy magician who
assumes his audience is too feebleminded to recognize the elaborate trick that
fell to pieces in front of their eyes.
The war in Iraq is the most visible debacle of the Bush war on terrorism. The
president pirouetted in a flight suit on the deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln
on May 1, 2003, in front of a giant banner proclaiming, "MISSION ACCOMPLISHED."
But Iraq subsequently became far more treacherous. On July 2, when asked about
Iraqi attacks on American forces, Bush issued a taunt: "Bring 'em on!"
In the subsequent months, more than 600 American soldiers were killed and thousands
were wounded and maimed as Iraqis took up the Bush challenge. While Bush continually
brags of how the United States "liberated" 25 million Iraqis, the
U.S. military government vigorously suppresses television stations and shuts
down newspapers that criticize American forces or U.S. policy. While Bush rhapsodizes
about winning Iraqi hearts and minds, U.S. troops carry out crackdowns with
names such as Operation Iron Hammer, conduct thousands of no-knock raids in
people's homes searching for weapons, routinely demolish the houses of suspected
resistance fighters, imprison people solely for being relatives of insurgents,
and kill hundreds of innocent civilians. Bush-style benevolence was best captured
by U.S. Army Lt. Colonel Nathan Sassaman, commanding a battalion that enclosed
an entire Iraqi town with barbed wire, when he observed: "With a heavy
dose of fear and violence, and a lot of money for projects, I think we can convince
these people that we are here to help them."
Bush proudly declared last year: "No President has ever done more for
human rights than I have." In reality, Bush has done more to formally subvert
rights than any American president of the modern era. Bush claimed the right
to label people as enemy combatants and thereby nullify all of their legal rights.
Once detainees had no rights, torturing them apparently became permissible –
at least in the eyes of some Justice Department and Pentagon officials. The
Bush administration ignored warning after warning of the gross abuses that were
being committed against detainees in Afghanistan, Cuba, and Iraq. After the
torture photos from the Abu Ghraib prison became public in April 2004, Bush
repeatedly falsely claimed that the abuses were the result of a few wayward
soldiers. In speeches in his reelection campaign, Bush continued to brag about
ending Saddam's torture.
Foreign military "victories" have done nothing to increase the competence
of homeland security. Even though federal agencies' failure to combine terrorist
watch lists helped allow two known Al Qaeda members to enter the United States
before the 9/11 hijackings, the federal government still does not have a single,
up-to-date terrorist watch list. The General Accounting Office concluded in
late 2003 that the feds are still doing a lousy job of pursuing terrorist finances,
despite a vast increase in the financial surveillance of average Americans.
A federal commission on terrorist threats reported in December 2003 that federal,
state, and local government agencies are still doing a very poor job of sharing
key information about terrorist threats. And some of the information that the
feds do send along – such as the FBI warning that people carrying world almanacs
could be terrorist plotters – aids only late-night television comics.
Bush's foreign policies are creating more terrorists than he is vanquishing.
There are far more terrorist attacks in the Middle East now than before the
United States invaded Iraq. Rep. Jane Harman (D-Calif.), the senior Democrat
on the House Intelligence Committee, declared in early 2004 that "Al Qaeda
remains as dangerous as it was before September 11." British intelligence
experts warn that Al Qaeda is a greater threat than before. Bush's interventionist
policies and meddling are spurring intense animosity throughout the Arab and
Muslim world. And there is no evidence that the Bush administration is competent
to protect Americans from all the new enemies its policies are breeding.
REPEALING 1776
President George W. Bush, Attorney General John Ashcroft, and other administration
officials continually remind Americans that everything changed after 9/11. But
does that include the Constitution? Are the myths of 9/11 undermining the truths
of 1776?
The Founding Fathers taught Americans that power is dangerous regardless of
who wields it. Bush would have people believe that, after 9/11, America will
perish if the president lacks boundless power. The Founding Fathers saw individual
rights as bulwarks against government abuses. Bush acts as if individual rights
are barriers to public safety. The Founding Fathers sought to deter tyranny
with checks and balances within the federal government. Bush acts as if the
only legitimate check on his power is people's chance to cast a ballot once
every four years. Bush perennially talks as if tax cuts are the only protection
people need against Big Government.
The Bush presidency is continuing and accelerating many of the noxious trends
of the Clinton era, most of which started long before William Jefferson Clinton
became president. Many of the abuses of the last few years would likely have
occurred regardless of who was elected president in 2000. However, the glorification
of Bush after 9/11 would not have reached such extremes without the slavish
efforts of many Republican congressmen and much of the conservative news media.
The president's rarely challenged power grabs revealed the cravenness of many
of Washington's avowed champions of freedom.
Though this book focuses primarily on the blunders and deceits of Bush and
his team, Democratic members of Congress are either complicit in or acquiescent
to most of Bush's abuses. Most of the budget disputes in Washington involve
how to waste tax dollars, not whether tax dollars should be wasted. Some Democrats
did yeoman work – such as Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.) in opposing the war on
Iraq, Sen. Russell Feingold (D-Wis.) in opposing the Patriot Act, and Rep. John
Conyers (D-Mich.) in opposing Ashcroft. Yet Democratic members of Congress as
a group have been less vigilant and courageous in opposing misgovernment than
were Republicans during the first Clinton administration.
Regardless of who wins in November 2004, Americans must recognize the damage
the federal government is inflicting on their rights, liberty, and safety. Even
if Bush wins reelection, the more Americans who recognize the failures and frauds
of his first term, the more difficult it will be for Bush to perpetrate new
abuses in his second term. Americans must understand the Bush Betrayal if they
are ever to rein in the government.
Copyright ©2004 by James Bovard. All Rights Reserved. Reprinted
here with permission of the publisher, Palgrave Macmillan. Please feel free
to duplicate or distribute this file, as long as the content is not altered
and this copyright notice is intact.