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A Few Last Desperate Consistently Self-Oriented Moves

5 December 2008

Many people have been forced into having their own verbal and intellectual lenses for explaining the behaviors of George Bush.

He can’t just be insane, so — what is it?  What explains his behavior?

Today, as Congress fished around for money to save the U.S. auto companies, in a pickle because they had not invested earlier in alternative – energy projects, George Bush gave a speech, suggesting that Congress take the money from alternative energy projects to prop up the dying carmakers.

Is he really an idiot?

Some day, in the not so distant future, several things may happen:

1. As laid out in Harper’s this month, the President, the Real President (Cheney) et. al may face domestic or international criminal charges for war crimes.

2. Not that George can not pardon himself or others for international crimes, as in the Nurnburg Trial.  Even if he escapes domestic prosecution, he may end up like Pinochet, hounded worldwide by courts elsewhere, kidnapped, dragged around, arrested and jailed elsehwhere, etc.

3. The simplest way to understand the entire Cheney/Bush regime is to assume that family ties to the Saudis were more important than catching bin Laden, that oil in general was more important than anything Bush swore to uphold on that Bible during his inauguration, and that Bush et. al (the heading on future lawsuits, ad infinitum) were embarked on an intentional, planned, consistent program of looting taxpayer monies for their personal and private benefit.

It is impossible to forget: We still have a month and more to go.  There are plenty of miscreants on a master scale who would like to have a parting shot at screwing everything up for normal people in return for private gain, at the cost of a single large check to the Bush Library (Bush doesn’t read books; what a joke).

Bend over, and Get ready.  George never cared for us then, and he still doesn’t today.  He serves only his family, and a few close “friends.”

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    8 Responses to “A Few Last Desperate Consistently Self-Oriented Moves”

  1. Marci Says:

    My fondest hope is that Cheney & Co. will be prosecuted at the Hague. What they did is as illegal as what Hitler did, albeit perhaps not as dire — I don’t know, since I wasn’t born then. Forget about impeachment, just waste of our time here in the US. We have enough to deal with right now — thanks to this group. A friend told me the US would never go along with prosecution of a US President, or former President, at the Hague. I say bull! President or not, if he broke international military or whatever law, let him be tried impartially — there.

  2. Bryan Says:

    If you ever wonder why I canceled my subscription to SNS, one need look no farther than this posting. I might expect this kind of amateur political tirade from Rosie O’Donnell or Whoppie Goldberg, but not from SNS.

    What happened to SNS being an *objective* source of news analysis and commentary? All the conspiracy theories, political tirades and blatant agenda-based journalism this past year has made SNS into nothing more than another version of the Daily KOS of the Huffington Post.

    2008 will be remembered as the year that objective journalism and analysis died in this country. It’s unfortunate SNS (which was once an outstanding technology/economics newsletter) has contributed to this.

  3. mark anderson Says:

    Bryan’s response is kind of fascinating. While I am sorry my writing about the Bush administration did not meet his approval, here is the much more important question:

    Exactly what kind of objective review of the Bush administration, if it were negative (as almost all currently are), would he embrace?

    In other words, it is unfortunate that Bryan cannot appreciate what actually is an objective review of Bush et. al, because it is negative, and he can’t tolerate a negative outcome.

    Let’s propose: Bush did a poor job, and there will be many negative reviews. Are negative reviews not objective? Of course they are.

    Bryan, I’m sorry, but you are the one who has lost perspective, and frankly, losing perspective in this way has to be embarrassing.

    I want to add a more useful note for those readers who remain, themselves, objective on this, even if they think Bush has done a bad job.

    I did not write this blog piece as a slam on Bush, which is clearly how Bryan seems to have taken the piece. So, Bryan, please ignore the next sentence.

    I wrote the piece because I think I really came to a new level of understanding the Bush administration, and I wanted to share that with blog readers. While many have criticized Bush for other problems (stupidity, partisanship, anti-government behavior, etc.), I think I’ve come to a new, and perhaps deeper, understanding of the entire history of the administration.

    The problem, of course, is that it seems so “surface.” It is. At the moment, my best understanding of Bush is what I wrote in this piece: Bush has been dealing to himself and his friends. I don’t think there is more to it. It will take decades to figure out where the trillions went, who got the money, when, by which action. But this, I think, best defines all of the actions of a man whose actions have been, under any other lens, almost impossible to understand.

    Bryan, you need to realize that an objective review of Bush can lead to a negative outcome. There will be many, many more of them, both objective and negative. Get used to it.

  4. Bryan Says:

    Actually, I’m not a fan of the Bush administration, so the premise of your reply is incorrect.

    What I objected to in this post was the conclusion that was drawn based on a clear political bias rather than a factual analysis of what’s really going on. For example, you state: “Today, as Congress fished around for money to save the U.S. auto companies, in a pickle because they had not invested earlier in alternative – energy projects”

    OK, so let’s do an SNS pop quiz: are the U.S. auto companies in trouble because:
    1. They have a $2,500 per car cost disadvantage relative to foreign car companies due to labor costs they have been saddled with over decades of UAW negotiations, which were the consequence of the laws in the U.S. that have empowered unions relative to that of foreign automakers (Toyota, Honda, etc. don’t have near the labor costs or restrictions that the domestic suppliers face).
    2. The credit and equity markets collapsed, limiting the ability of the U.S. auto makers to borrow the funds necessary to continue to fund their operations. This was the result of the collapse of the sub-prime mortgage market which resulted from the government over the decades requiring looser underwriting rules from FreddieMac and FannieMae in an effort to expand home ownership (not necessarily a bad thing, but it had serious consequences).
    3. High environmental regulations in the U.S. relative to that of foreign markets which add about an additional $1,500 cost per car.
    4. The failure of the U.S. auto companies to invest in alternative-energy projects, when hybrid cars account for 2.2% of the U.S. market?

    Which one *really* is the cause of the problems in the U.S. auto market right now? If you answered #1-3 you are right. If you answered #4, you are wrong because the financial contribution of hybrid cars is so small relative to the market right now. There is no economic basis to argue that the failure to invest in alternative-energy projects is the root cause of the problem.

    That’s not to say the U.S. auto makers are blameless – they certainly are not, but let’s at least be clear about the cause of the turmoil right now. Certainly Citibank, AIG, Lehman, WaMu, etc. didn’t collapse because they failed to invest in alternative-energy projects and that’s not why the U.S. auto makers are in trouble today.

    I could go on and address your other arguments, but my point is that one needs to take a balanced approach to analyzing the root cause of problems if they want to be a successful analyst of economic and technology trends. Automatically blaming “Bush’s Stupidity”, “Cheney”, “Bush’s Saudi Friends”, etc. for everything that’s wrong I believe shows a shallow depth of understanding of what’s really happening in the markets and the U.S. auto industry in general.

  5. mark anderson Says:

    Hi Bryan,

    Well, this is confusing. It would seem we agree about the quite separate question of what is causing problems for the US auto industry. But that was not the discussion point.

    You state outright that your only concern was that I was not being objective in assessing Bush, but I think, in fact, that I have given first-rate predictions about his administration, what it would do, and what the effects would be, starting on the day of the election.

    In this case, one had to ask: when the car companies were failing because they had failed to make their own investments in more advanced energy vehicles, why would the President suggest taking money from a fund intended for advanced (or alternative) energy? To most people, this would appear to be either stupid (using monies for a good thing to reward bad behavior), or retro in some way (continued thoughtless behavior favoring car giants).

    But the most objective view, I think, is that Bush has always favored himself, his own family’s interests, and those of his friends. He has always favored oil, which means big cars, no CAFE standards, dirty air, and so on.

    If you have difficulty understanding how a president could, for instance, create not just a bad car funding decision, but a complete war, not out of necessity, but because it served his own family’s benefit, I’d be happy to recommend a number of books to you for reference. The first would be Craig Unger’s “House of Bush, House of Saud.”

    I’ll say it once more, and then I will leave this thread: today, I believe that the MOST objective view which best describes the Bush administration’s actions is not that the president was stupid, or overly partisan, or even militaristic; it was that, from the very beginning, he understood the office as a platform for self-dealing, including his friends.

    When people come to understand the depth of this perfidy, they will be truly horrified. And their dismay will be based on an objective review of this administration’s self-deals and self-interested actions.

    Yes, it is possible for me to be objective, to be right, and to say that Bush has acted all along as a self-dealer.

    You will notice I didn’t slide along sideways into the question of analysing the US car industry, but I have written extensively about it in SNS. Unfortunately, as a lapsed member, you are probably not aware of that writing.

    Finally, nothing you have written addresses the key question of this thread: is and was Bush a self-dealer? The answer, history will show, is a resounding Yes.

  6. William Duncan Says:

    Agree with your analysis. We just need to look at the way the administration dealt with global warming…..

    William

  7. ALex Says:

    You may not want to call Bush stupid, but i have no such problem. And yes, as you suggested, Cheney is likely pulling many of the strings. But i think George Bush Snr cleverly found a way to be in office for another 2 terms, by using his son as the front man. If anyone goes down, and in spite of wishing it to be so I doubt anyone will, Bush Snr will be implicated.

  8. Mark Kirby Says:

    I believe what explains Bush’s behavior is Mark’s number 3 modified in the following way:

    Big money special interests (corporations, wealthy individuals) and their lobbyists actually rule Washington, and in some sense, the world. Oil is one of the more powerful interests, but it is not the only one. The mass media are largely controlled by 5 major conglomerates, so the mass opinion is shaped accordingly.

    Bush, and every other politician, owes his allegiance to the special interests who gave him the campaign financing to get elected. Bush has done a fantastic job of paying them back. Particularly wall street, oil and military industrial. The law allows this because it works for the people in power.

    There is really only a thin veneer covering rampant corruption, right under our noses. The elephant in the room that hardly gets notice.

    Conclusion — yes, Bush is stupid. But that sort of misses the point. He’s just the front man.