by James Bovard
June 04, 2020
from
MISESInstitute
Website
Spanish version
Former president
George W. Bush has returned to
the spotlight to give 'moral guidance' (sic) to America in these troubled
times.
In
a statement released on Tuesday, Bush announced that he was
"anguished" by the "brutal suffocation" of George Floyd and
declared that,
"lasting peace
in our communities requires truly equal justice.
The rule of law
ultimately depends on the fairness and legitimacy of the legal
system. And achieving justice for all is the duty of all."
Bush's declaration
was greeted with thunderous applause by the usual suspects who
portray him as the 'virtuous Republican' in contrast to Trump.
While the media
portrays Bush's pious piffle as a visionary triumph of principle,
Americans need to vividly recall the lies and atrocities that
permeated his eight years as president.
In an October 2017
speech in a "national forum on liberty" at the George W. Bush
Institute in New York City, Bush
bemoaned that,
"Our
politics seems more vulnerable to conspiracy theories and
outright fabrication."
Coming from Bush,
this had as much credibility as former president
Bill Clinton bewailing the decline of chastity.
Most
media coverage
of Bush nowadays,
either ignores the falsehoods he used to take
America to
war in Iraq or portrays him as a
good man who received
incorrect information.
But Bush was lying
from the get-go on Iraq and was determined to drag the nation into
another Middle East war.
From January 2003
onwards, Bush constantly portrayed the US as an innocent victim
of Saddam Hussein's imminent aggression and repeatedly claimed that
war was being "forced upon us."
That was never the
case...
As the Center
for Public Integrity reported, Bush made,
"232 false
statements about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and another
28 false statements about Iraq's links to Al Qaeda."
As the lies by
which he sold the Iraq War unraveled, Bush resorted to vilifying
critics as
traitors in a 2006 speech to the Veterans of Foreign Wars.
Bush's lies led to
the killing of,
more than four thousand American troops and hundreds
of thousands of Iraqi civilians...
But since those
folks are dead and gone anyhow, the media instead lauds Bush's
selection to be in a
Kennedy Center art show displaying his borderline primitive
oil paintings.
In February 2018,
Bush was paid lavishly to give a prodemocracy speech in the
United Arab Emirates, ruled by a notorious Arab dictatorship.
He
proclaimed:
"Our
democracy is only as good as people trust the results."
He openly fretted
about
Russian "meddling" in the 2016 US election.
But when he was
president, Bush acted as if the United States were entitled to
intervene in any foreign election he pleased.
He boasted in 2005
that his administration had budgeted
almost $5 billion,
"for
programs to support democratic change around the world," much of
which was spent on tampering with foreign vote totals.
When Iraq held
elections in 2005, Bush approved a massive covert aid program for
pro-American Iraqi parties.
The Bush
administration spent over $65 million to boost their favored
candidate in the 2004 Ukraine election.
Yet, with boundless
hypocrisy, Bush proclaimed that "any (Ukrainian)
election…ought to be free from any foreign influence."
US government-financed organizations helped spur coups
in Venezuela in 2002 and
Haiti in 2004.
Both of those
nations, along with Ukraine, remain political train wrecks.
In that October
2017 New York speech, Bush
proclaimed:
"No
democracy pretends to be a tyranny."
But ravaging the
Constitution was apparently part of his job description when he was
president.
Shortly after 9-11,
Bush turned back the clock to before 1215 (when the Magna Carta was
signed),
formally suspending
habeas corpus and claiming a
prerogative to imprison indefinitely anyone he labeled a terrorist
suspect.
In 2002, Justice
Department lawyers informed Bush that the president was
entitled to violate the law during wartime - and the war on
terror was expected to continue indefinitely.
In 2004, Bush White
House counsel Alberto Gonzales formally asserted a "commander-in-chief
override power" entitling presidents to ignore the Bill of
Rights.
Under Bush, the
US government embraced barbaric practices which did more to destroy
America's moral credibility than all of Trump's tweets combined.
Bush's "enhanced
interrogation" regime included,
After the Supreme
Court rebuffed some of Bush's power grabs in 2006, he pushed through
Congress a bill that retroactively legalized torture - one of
the worst legislative disgraces since the Fugitive Slave Act of
1850.
During his years in
the White House, Bush perennially denied that he had approved
torture.
But in 2010, during an author tour to promote his new
memoir, he
bragged about approving waterboarding for terrorist suspects.
Is Bush nominating
himself to be the nation's 'racial healer'...?
When he was
president, Bush inflicted more financial ruin on blacks than any
president since Woodrow Wilson (who
brought Jim Crow barbarities to the federal government).
Bush trumpeted his
plans to close the gap between black and white homeownership rates
and promised in 2002 to "use
the mighty muscle of the federal government" to solve the
problem.
Bush was determined
to end the bias against people who wanted to buy a home but had no
money.
Congress passed Bush's
American Dream Downpayment Act in 2003, authorizing federal
handouts to first-time homebuyers of up to $10,000 or 6 percent of
the home's purchase price.
Bush also swayed
Congress to permit the Federal Housing Administration to make
no-down payment loans to low-income Americans.
Bush proclaimed:
"Core
American values of individuality, thrift, responsibility,
and self-reliance are embodied in homeownership."
In Bush's eyes,
self-reliance was so wonderful that the government should subsidize
it.
And it didn't
matter whether recipients were creditworthy, because politicians
meant well. Bush's 2004 reelection campaign trumpeted his down
payment giveaways, a shining example of "compassionate
conservatism."
Thanks in large
part to his policies, minority households saw the fastest growth in
homeownership leading up to the 2007 recession.
The housing
collapse ravaged the net worth of black and Hispanic households.
"The
implosion of the subprime lending market has left a scar on
the finances of black Americans - one that not only has wiped
out a generation of economic progress but could leave them at a
financial disadvantage for decades," the Washington Post
reported in 2012.
The median net
worth for Hispanic households
declined by 66 percent between 2005 and 2009.
That devastation
was aptly described in a 2017 federal appeals court dissenting
opinion as "wrecking
ball benevolence" (quoting a 2004
Barron's op-ed I wrote).
But almost none of
the media coverage of the ex-president reminds people of the
economic carnage of this Bush vote-buying binge.
It is possible to
condemn police brutality and, even more importantly,
the evil laws and judicial doctrines that enable police to tyrannize other
Americans without any help from a demagogic ex-president who ravaged
our rights, liberties, and peace.
As I commented in
an
August 2003 USA Today op-ed,
"Whether Bush
and his appointees will be held personally liable for their
[Iraq War] falsehoods is a grave test for American democracy."
The revival of
Bush's reputation vivifies how our political media system failed
that test.
As long as George
Bush doesn't turn himself in for committing war crimes, all of his
talk about "achieving justice for all" is rubbish...
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