Why Bush doesn't read newspapers, or, "When the news just sucks."
It struck me immediately, upon checking in at the Washington Post website that there might be good reasons for President Bush to forego newspapers and mainstream media. Some days the news must just be mind-numbing around the White House. Imagine being the poor bas-- . . . . I mean, imagine being the unfortunate person in the administration whose job it is to pay attention to mainstream news sources for the president.
So along comes the Washington Post:
It would seem strange to some of us that the rising democratic tide in Iraq should be somehow unsatisfying to Bush; he wanted to bring democracy to Iraq and now the people are screaming for it. Sistani seemed to be a headache to the administration, but with the blow dealt by Chalabi's endorsement of the direct-election idea, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rove & Bush, Inc.--America's foremost lawless firm--cannot ignore that the democracy they wanted is coming faster than would suit their agendas. Such is irony, albeit minor. In the end, if the Iraqis get their own state out of this, reasonably elected, well, there will be that. Bush seems to trust that Americans will remember him as a pioneer of democracy in the Middle East because he invaded Iraq; he has reason to be confident, as few will remember that democracy, in the end, had to tap Mr. Bush on the shoulder and say, "Ummm ... you can't keep ignoring me."
Nonetheless, with Democratic candidates smelling blood in the water, neither democracy in Iraq nor the rising death toll among American soldiers is healthy for the Bush junta's outlook. Five soldiers dead, and while these are the costs of war, more dead that the president doesn't have time to publicly receive are just bad news for the administration.
Meanwhile, the Vice-President goes to Davos and gives a speech that cable chatterbox news tickers described as a spirited defense of Halliburton. Regardless, I would not want to have to explain to the President that, while the atmosphere was brighter this year at Davos, the delegates gave only courtesy applause to Cheney and cheered the dissent, and that nobody's really impressed ....
And Powell ... it's his turn. Many of us who found Powell one of the reasonably likable things about the Bush junta were stunned at the downright erroneous case he stated to the UN in support of the Iraqi Bush Adventure. And he knew it then, and he knows it now. It's his turn to extricate himself from all of this, because in the end we must remember to blame George W. Bush, Jr., the forty-third President of the United States.
But come on ... if you were Bush, would you want to read today's Washington Post?
One wonders if the colony might issue a Declaration sooner or later. I won't personally dwell much on the irony until the situation develops further; I'm not sure whether it deserves a wan smile or not.
Notes:
• Allen, Mike. "Cheney Reaches Out To Iraq War Critics." Washington Post, January 25, 2004; page A17. See http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A45118-2004Jan24.html
• Constable, Pamela. "3 Bombs Kill 5 U.S. Troops And 4 Iraqis." Washington Post, January 25, 2004; page A01. See http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A45151-2004Jan24.html
• Slevin, Peter. "Powell Voices Doubts About Iraqi Weapons." Washington Post, January 25, 2004; page A14. See http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A45117-2004Jan24.html
• Wright, Robin and Anthony Shadid. "Changes in U.S. Iraq Plan Explored." Washington Post, January 25, 2004; page A01. See http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A45188-2004Jan24.html
It struck me immediately, upon checking in at the Washington Post website that there might be good reasons for President Bush to forego newspapers and mainstream media. Some days the news must just be mind-numbing around the White House. Imagine being the poor bas-- . . . . I mean, imagine being the unfortunate person in the administration whose job it is to pay attention to mainstream news sources for the president.
So along comes the Washington Post:
The grand total of the major Iraq--related headlines littering the Post's A-section is grim for the administration's political sensibilities.• "The Bush administration has produced a list of possible changes for Iraq's political transition, with some U.S. and British officials acknowledging for the first time that the original plan could even be scrapped altogether if the United States is to preempt the growing clamor for elections." (Wright and Shadid)
• "Five U.S. soldiers and four Iraqis were killed Saturday and dozens of people were injured in three bombings in the volatile region known as the Sunni Triangle that extends north and west of the capital." (Constable)
• "Administration officials said the atmosphere in Davos was much warmer than last year, when the United States was on the brink of invading Iraq and Secretary of State Colin L. Powell was met with a barrage of complaints. But the reaction to Cheney's 58-minute appearance was tepid. The audience withheld applause during the speech and then clapped for hostile questions about the U.S. government's handling of Arab visitors and its treatment of military detainees at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba." (Allen)
• "Secretary of State Colin L. Powell, who urged the United Nations to endorse a preemptive war to strip Iraq of its weapons of mass destruction, conceded yesterday that Saddam Hussein's government may have no longer had such munitions." (Slevin)
It would seem strange to some of us that the rising democratic tide in Iraq should be somehow unsatisfying to Bush; he wanted to bring democracy to Iraq and now the people are screaming for it. Sistani seemed to be a headache to the administration, but with the blow dealt by Chalabi's endorsement of the direct-election idea, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rove & Bush, Inc.--America's foremost lawless firm--cannot ignore that the democracy they wanted is coming faster than would suit their agendas. Such is irony, albeit minor. In the end, if the Iraqis get their own state out of this, reasonably elected, well, there will be that. Bush seems to trust that Americans will remember him as a pioneer of democracy in the Middle East because he invaded Iraq; he has reason to be confident, as few will remember that democracy, in the end, had to tap Mr. Bush on the shoulder and say, "Ummm ... you can't keep ignoring me."
Nonetheless, with Democratic candidates smelling blood in the water, neither democracy in Iraq nor the rising death toll among American soldiers is healthy for the Bush junta's outlook. Five soldiers dead, and while these are the costs of war, more dead that the president doesn't have time to publicly receive are just bad news for the administration.
Meanwhile, the Vice-President goes to Davos and gives a speech that cable chatterbox news tickers described as a spirited defense of Halliburton. Regardless, I would not want to have to explain to the President that, while the atmosphere was brighter this year at Davos, the delegates gave only courtesy applause to Cheney and cheered the dissent, and that nobody's really impressed ....
And Powell ... it's his turn. Many of us who found Powell one of the reasonably likable things about the Bush junta were stunned at the downright erroneous case he stated to the UN in support of the Iraqi Bush Adventure. And he knew it then, and he knows it now. It's his turn to extricate himself from all of this, because in the end we must remember to blame George W. Bush, Jr., the forty-third President of the United States.
But come on ... if you were Bush, would you want to read today's Washington Post?
One wonders if the colony might issue a Declaration sooner or later. I won't personally dwell much on the irony until the situation develops further; I'm not sure whether it deserves a wan smile or not.
Notes:
• Allen, Mike. "Cheney Reaches Out To Iraq War Critics." Washington Post, January 25, 2004; page A17. See http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A45118-2004Jan24.html
• Constable, Pamela. "3 Bombs Kill 5 U.S. Troops And 4 Iraqis." Washington Post, January 25, 2004; page A01. See http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A45151-2004Jan24.html
• Slevin, Peter. "Powell Voices Doubts About Iraqi Weapons." Washington Post, January 25, 2004; page A14. See http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A45117-2004Jan24.html
• Wright, Robin and Anthony Shadid. "Changes in U.S. Iraq Plan Explored." Washington Post, January 25, 2004; page A01. See http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A45188-2004Jan24.html