Bush revisionism is back:
Why this latest, pathetic attempt is so dangerous
Leading pundits want you to think Bush isn't such a bad guy. Here's why that's
not just wrong -- but harmful ELIAS ISQUITH MAY 10, 2014
recent history on a recent execrable
piece from Yahoo!Õs national political columnist and former New York
Times Magazine scribe Matt Bai. The piece is titled ÒSo George W. Bush isnÕt
a monster, after allÓ and it encourages an approach to politicians and
politics that, if applied consistently, would have us believe that [racists
like ] George Wallace [are], at worst, misunderstood. BaiÕs piece is not very long, but hereÕs the short
version, nonetheless: When George W. Bush was president, he was maligned,
demonized and turned into a loathsome caricature by a political system that
encourages divisive partisanship at the expense of humane treatment of the
commander-in-chief. ÒThe truth is,Ó Bai writes, Òthat Bush was never anything
close to the ogre or the imbecile his most fevered detractors insisted he was.Ó
On the contrary, he was Òcompassionate and well-intentionedÓ and Òthe kind of
inclusive conservative you can deal with.Ó Bush, writes Bai, Òis enjoying a
public restoration,Ó a claim he supports by referencing a poll
about blame for the poor economy and puff pieces about BushÕs
kitschy paintings.
Now, as defenses of George W. Bush go, BaiÕs is
not only exceptionally weak but also quite strange. At no point does he
directly mention any of BushÕs policies or decisions; the focus is entirely on
the ex-presidentÕs increasingly cuddly public image, which Bai insists is not
the consequence of sympathetic media coverage but Òhas more to do, really, with
how we distort the present.Ó Instead of judging the man by the wars he
started, the torture regime he implemented, the city he left for dead or the
economy he helped crater, Bai would have us see Bush as the man wants to be
seen, as someone who Òreally does care deeply about the men and women he sent
to warÓ and Òreally did want to do good for the country.Ó Tens of thousands of people are dead
today because of George W. BushÕs choices, but heÕs quick to get misty-eyed
when thinking of the maimed bodies and shattered lives he left in his wake.
IsnÕt that what really matters?
In response to this flimsy defense, itÕd be understandable
if one concluded, as some on Twitter have,
that Bai is simply a crypto-Republican who is ready to play his part in the
epic quest to rewrite the legacy of the 43rd president. It turns out,
however, that BaiÕs argument is much more expansive — and destructive
— than that. ItÕs not a mere defense of Bush but rather a condemnation of
the way we treat our leaders, how we abuse and ridicule them because Ò[t]hereÕs
a lot of money to be made writing quickie books and giving speeches about the
utter depravity of a president.Ó BushÕs father, Clinton and Obama, too; all are
described by Bai as fundamentally good and likable people. (Carter,
curiously, goes unmentioned, despite having an average post-presidential
approval rating as of 2013 of 56.) Writing of Obama, but
implicitly of both Bushes and Clinton as well, Bai claims Òwe should all be
able to grant that heÕs at least a good American.Ó
For one thing, this is an argument
already made relatively recently
by National JournalÕs Ron Fournier
and, as a rule, if your article is a rehash of a Fournier troll-job, youÕre
probably making a huge mistake. More seriously, this view of what makes a
person ÒgoodÓ or ÒbadÓ is almost shockingly juvenile on its own, and becomes
nearly toxic when used to assess politicians. Ignoring my temptation to break
GodwinÕs Law, IÕll simply note that Richard Nixon and Francisco Franco [fascist
Spanish dictator], two men few of us would consider exemplars of humanity at
its best, also sincerely believed that their actions were for the greater good.
For that matter, so did Jefferson Davis and the leaders of the Confederacy.
Vanishingly few of us deliberately act in an immoral fashion; weÕre all the
heroes of our own stories.
The need to focus on consequences rather than intentions is all the more
pronounced when it comes to politics, the realm in which a personÕs decisions,
and their consequences, are the only rational metric the rest of us can use in
order to judge their suitability. . . To take an example less fraught than torture or war, if
you were someone who believed everyone should have a good-paying job and health
insurance, but you were only allowed to consider what each party says it wants
to occur, youÕd have no way of choosing between Republicans and Democrats, who
both say a wealthy and healthy middle class is their ultimate goal. Or, to return to my initial example,
anyone who followed BaiÕs advice would have a real tough time reaching a
conclusion about George Wallace that the rest of us wouldnÕt find obscene and
bizarre. What matters more, the fact that George Wallace stoked racial
resentment at a time when it was a force powerful and dangerous enough to murder innocent
children; or the fact that, while he did so, he went to bed every
night knowing that he was not only a beneficiary of hatred but a charlatan to
boot? What matters more, the time George W. Bush wrote Ron Fournier a nice thank you card,
or the millions of lives that would be better if he had not decided more than
10 years ago to destabilize the world with a war of choice? If we were talking
about people whose professional decisions werenÕt literally matters of life and
death, BaiÕs focus on people skills would be defensible. But weÕre not, and it
isnÕt. In the end, I canÕt
tell you any more than Bai can whether or not Bush is a ÒgoodÓ person. To
paraphrase the former presidentÕs
favorite philosopher, thatÕs above my pay grade. I wouldnÕt even
know how to pick the right criteria. What I can tell you is that George
Wallace, by the time he died, was a born-again Christian who said he believed
all forms of racial discrimination were wicked and wrong; and that George W.
Bush, today, most likely remains someone many of us would like to have a beer
with. The question, then, is this: Who cares and why does it matter?