All Posts Tagged With: "9-11"
America is moving perilously close to fascism, part 1
I began this project after speaking to a friend. He called to ask if I’d ever seen the information on the web outlining how the Bush administration is transforming us into a fascist state. I had, of course, seen it but not for a while. So, I went to take a look for myself. It’s still there, but it was in need of updating. It was through this self-imposed project that I discovered just how perilously close we are to becoming a fascist state.
The basis for this article comes from Laurence Britt. In his article, “Fascism Anyone?” he outlines the 14 common characteristics of some of the world’s most potent fascist regimes: Hitler (Germany), Mussolini (Italy), Franco (Spain), Suharto (Indonesia), Salazar (Portugal), Papadopoulos (Greece) and Pinochet (Indonesia). They are:
Powerful and continuing expressions of nationalism
Disdain for the importance of human rights
Identification of enemies and/or scapegoats as a unifying cause
Military supremacy of paramount importance
Rampant sexism
Controlled mass media
Obsession with national security
Government and religion are intertwined
Power of the corporations is protected
Labor’s power is suppressed
Disdain for and suppression of intellectuals and the arts
Preoccupation with crime and punishment
Rampant cronyism and corruption
Fraudulent elections
Let’s hope that some day we’re not reading an updated version of the Britt article with ‘Bush (America)’ included. However, if you don’t recognize the above 14 points running rampant within our present imperial regime, then you are not paying attention. If you are still showing blind faith in our elected leaders, then you are naïve. If you are waiting for the next president to assume power and reverse everything Bush has done, you are delusional. If you are simply one of the many who believe ‘it can never happen here in America,’ then you are displaying a level of misguided patriotism that is a danger to our democracy. It can, and is, happening in America.
Powerful and continuing expressions of nationalism
“When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the American flag.”
-Huey Long
The marketing of war started in earnest with George Herbert Walker Bush and his administration, coining the moniker ‘Operation Desert Storm.’ His son has carried on with the tradition by coining the slogans ‘Operation Enduring Freedom’ and ‘Operation Iraqi Freedom.’ I’ll argue that the present Bush administration took it one step further by glamorizing the blanket bombing of innocent people by reducing it to a mainstream media sound byte, ‘Shock and Awe.’ Having spent more than thirty years in advertising and public relations, I can tell you without reservation that these slogans, which the Bush administration combined with powerful images, were intended to brainwash the American people into supporting the war.
That these slogans have been engraved on the headstones of those killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, often without the final consent of the surviving family members, is nothing short of disgusting. What if the family members, dare I say even the deceased, did not support these wars? Certainly it is public knowledge that George Bush and his minions lied about everything leading up to the war in Iraq. The legality of this war is certainly more than in question. The government’s intrusive behavior is just another warning sign of the danger posed to our individual rights and freedoms.
Since 9-11, we’ve been barraged with a plethora of patriotic mottos and slogans, symbols and songs. Then there’s the American flag, which has adorned almost everything from bridges to bank statements. The most intense usage of the flag, however, has to be the lapel pin. To some, like conservative columnists and pundits, Barack Obama’s lack of an American flag lapel pin is the most important issue in this presidential race. It’s not the economy. It’s not the war. It’s not the housing crisis. It’s the lapel pin, stupid. Of Obama removing his American flag lapel pin, conservative commentator Laura Ingraham says, “It just goes to show he’s not ready for the big time.” (George Bush, of course, wears the lapel pin.) The effervescent Sean Hannity declared that we wear lapel pins because “our country is under attack!”
Indeed, our country is under attack. It is under attack from within, from the very likes of Hannity and Ingraham and those in the administration who feed their paranoia, not from Iraq. And not from Afghanistan.
Disdain for the importance of human rights
In fascist regimes, the people are persuaded to forfeit their civil rights in exchange for ‘security.’ That this administration has utilized fear mongering since the September 11 terrorist attacks is well accepted, by everyone it seems. A panicked Congress passed the ill-advised USA Patriot Act a mere six weeks after 9-11, without giving it much thought. It was rammed through in Bush style, with some lawmakers admittedly not having an opportunity to read it.
According to Ron Paul (R-TX), “They played all kinds of games, kept the House in session all night, and it was a very complicated bill. Maybe a handful of staffers actually read it, but the bill was definitely not available to members before the vote.” Oddly enough, Ron Paul and Representative Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) voted against the Patriot Act. When Kucinich was asked during one of the 2008 debates why he voted against it, he said it was because he actually read the bill.
The first USA Patriot Act began the administration’s assault on the Constitution by completely gutting the First, Third, Fourth and Fifth Amendments, as well as seriously compromising the Seventh and Tenth. When the Center for Public Integrity, a non-partisan think tank, published the full text of the Domestic Security Enhancement Act of 2003 (or Patriot Act II) we found that, in addition to the civil rights violations from the previous version, George Bush had reorganized the entire federal government -and many areas of state government - under the control of the Justice Department, the Department of Homeland Security, and the FEMA NORTHCOM military command. He did all of this under the guise of keeping us safe. How do you spell dictatorship?
America’s freefall doesn’t stop there. We are now pretty much internationally viewed as a torture state, and with good reason. In April of this year, President Bush admitted to ABC News that he knew that his senior staffers discussed ‘enhanced interrogation’ techniques and that he approved of them. If I worked for the mainstream media, I’d probably be using the phrase ‘shocking admission.’ However, nothing is shocking when it comes to this administration. In fact, I venture to say that most logical-thinking people had to know that this was a top-down torture plan. The only shocking aspect of this whole issue is the arrogant and righteous nature of Bush’s admission. Somehow our twisted-thinking leader has managed to reconcile the depraved behavior at Abu Ghraib [Please note: these are very graphic images] and the use of ‘extraordinary rendition’ (or deporting detainees to countries that are known to employ torture) with his supposed rock-solid Christian values.
The administration has come up with sanitized terms like ‘enhanced interrogation techniques’ instead of calling it exactly what it is - torture. The mainstream media simply parrots those terms back to us, rather than calling it torture. Our supposed military and legal experts have been reduced to quibbling about just exactly what constitutes torture. However, Common Article 3 of the Geneva Convention is pretty clear when it refers to “violence to life and person” (death and mutilation) as well as “outrages upon personal dignity” (cruel treatment). Having studied the photos and read as much as I can read about what happened at Abu Ghraib and at Guantanamo, I’d have to say the United States crossed both of those lines. And, as is so often the case with encroaching fascism, the voices of our civic and moral leaders have fallen silent on this issue and the American public, rather than believe it could actually be happening here, finds it easier to ignore torture and execution.
The administration managed to pass the Military Commissions Act of 2006, giving the president the absolute power to decide who is an enemy to our country and to imprison people indefinitely without charging them. It suspends the Constitutional due process right of habeas corpus, the basic right to have a court decide is a person is unlawfully imprisoned. To remove this core value makes us more like those we are trying to defeat. Among its other evils, it allows the president to sidestep the Geneva Convention definitions of torture, permits the inclusion of evidence gained through torture and abuse, and provides protection retroactively. How did this happen? Even though the stipulations outlined in the Geneva Convention have seen us through the Korean and Viet Nam wars, the administration argued that the definitions were too vague. As has been par for the course for the last eight years, Congress was asleep at the switch. One has to seriously wonder if they even read what is sent to them.
Identification of enemies and/or scapegoats as a unifying cause
Americans have been unified in patriotic fervor since the 9-11 terrorist attacks to identify and eliminate ‘enemies of the state.’ Most often, the targets have been Islam and those our president chooses to call terrorists. However, immigrants, liberals, gays and lesbians, ethnic and religious minorities are not immune.
In January of 2007, having lost his Senate seat, Rick Santorum joined a conservative Washington think-tank to run a program called ‘Protect America’s Freedom.’ The program studies “threats posed to America and the West from a growing number of anti-Western forces that are increasingly casting a shadow over our future and violating religious liberty around the world.”
Conservative shock jocks and hate mongers like Ann Coulter, Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Bill O’Reilly, Michael Savage, and Mike Gallagher, some of whom our president met with at the White House after the November 2006 elections, continually paint those who oppose George Bush and his policies as unpatriotic. After Joy Behar (The View) offhandedly compared Donald Rumsfeld to Adolph Hitler, Mike Gallagher went so far as to suggest that anyone critical of the administration should be rounded up and put in detention camps because they are traitors. Yet all of these hate mongers have absolutely no problem doing the exact same thing to liberals. None seem to grasp that all Americans are guaranteed freedom of speech. Their understanding is that freedom of speech applies only to those who share their ideology.
While America’s immigration policy is always a hot topic, CNN’s Lou Dobbs is like a one-man wrecking crew when it comes to immigration. Peddling his insidious brand of racism under the CNN shield, Dobbs uses the ‘Broken Borders’ segment of his show to blame all of America’s problems - from a faltering educational system to the floundering economy - on what you are led to believe is a massive daily influx of illegal aliens.
Evangelical Christian leaders continue to spread messages of fear and hate to their followers. The Reverend John Hagee, until just recently one of John McCain’s spiritual guides, has preached that Hurricane Katrina happened because New Orleans had a Gay Pride parade planned for the Monday Katrina came ashore. (It should be noted, however, that Mr. McCain didn’t reject Hagee until his unfortunate comment about Nazis.) The Reverend Rod Parsley - still a spiritual guide in good standing with John McCain - has repeatedly exhorted his minions to protect themselves against the angry gay population. He feeds an already-frenzied following with a powerful parade of lies, including that they have to protect themselves against a the gay population on the attack to “pervert God’s original intention.” He also routinely communicates to his followers a powerful hatred of Islam.
Military supremacy of paramount importance
In fascist societies, the ruling elite always identify with the military and the businesses that support it. A disproportionate amount of funding is directed to the military, while the domestic agenda is neglected. Soldiers and military service are glamorized. Frankly, that sounds exactly like America today. Between funding for the Pentagon and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, many domestic programs are falling short.
The total Department of Defense budget for 2009 is $515.4 billion dollars, a 74% increase over 2001 levels. Of that, a total of $70 billion is allocated for the ‘war on terror’ (read: the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan). Then comes the disclaimer: “The Administration will request additional funding once the specific needs of are troops are better known.” At a cost of $12.5 billion per month, it’s easy to do the math and figure out how quickly the $70 billion allocated to the war is exhausted. Typically, President Bush requests emergency funding to cover the shortfall, adding sometimes $100 billion in war spending. When any of this is questioned, which is quite infrequently, we’re told that it’s to keep America safe from terrorists. In the meantime, the Department of Education limps along at $59.2 billion and the Department of Health & Human Services comes in at $737 billion in 2009.
One of the supposedly successful cornerstones of the Bush legacy is No Child Left Behind. Yet, some states claim it is under funded, in some cases falling $12 billion dollars short of the legislation requirement. The state of Vermont conducted a fiscal analysis of the program and discovered that there would have to be a 28% funding increase per state for the legislation to be appropriately funded. Because of this, several states have simply voted not to implement NCLB. Educators claim it is too heavily weighted toward standardized testing and test preparation, ‘dumbing down’ the classroom, and it punishes rather than helps poor and minority students. There are other disturbing aspects of NCLB, steeped in ideology and having nothing to do with education, which I doubt most parents know are buried in the 1,000-page bill.
For example, schools are now required to turn over student contact information to the military for recruiting purposes, and districts must certify that no policy prevents the participation in “constitutionally protected prayer in public schools.” In addition, no school or district can prevent the Boy Scouts or any other group listed as a “patriotic society” under U.S. code access to the school’s facilities. The Department of Education must certify Title 1 reading programs as “scientifically based.”
Our president, who has no problem asking Congress for billions of dollars for an illegal war that is killing American soldiers and innocent Iraqi civilians on a daily basis, seems to have a problem supporting the Webb GI Bill for expanded educational benefits for those serving in Iraq and Afghanistan. The current Montgomery GI Bill pays for only a fraction of today’s bloated tuition costs. The Webb legislation would bring the GI Bill into the 21st century by paying 100% of tuition costs (not to exceed the most expensive state school in the veteran’s home state). The president calls the provision “too generous” at somewhere between $2.5 to $5 billion per year while he authorizes roughly $12.5 billion per month for the war in which these veterans serve. John McCain is taking the side of Pentagon officials who are worried that the legislation might make enlistees leave the military sooner than they originally planned just to get an education. The legislation has broad bi-partisan support, so perhaps a Bush veto can be overridden. The point is that it should not have to be threatened with a veto in the first place.
At the end of 2007, recognizing that health care was in a crisis state, the Democratic-run Congress sought to expand the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) to cover an additional 3.3 million uninsured children whose parents did not qualify for Medicare but who could not afford private insurance. It would come at a cost of $35 billion over five years, but it would be covered by a 61-cent-increase in the federal excise tax on cigarettes. This is yet another domestic program that President Bush refused to support. I read two different articles on his veto and he had two different reasons for vetoing the bill. In one, he disagreed on philosophical grounds, stating that the expansion would change the original intention of the legislation. In a different article, Bush resorted to his usual complaint of ‘fiscal irresponsibility.’ The Senate had the votes to override, but the House fell 15 votes short. President Bush subsequently reauthorized the bill through March of 2009 at present levels.
War and the military has not only been glamorized but sanitized with the advent of ‘embedded journalists.’ If you are a cable subscriber, you’ll find no fewer than four channels dedicated to the military and weapons, The Pentagon Channel, The Military Channel, The Military History Channel, and a show on Discovery called Future Weapons.
Part Two of this series on fascism will be posted next week.
Don’t look now, but the terrorists have won
Inarguably, the most seminal event in American history in the last half-century was the September 11 terrorist attacks. On September 13, 2001 President Bush stated, “The most important thing is for us to find Osama bin Laden. It is our number one priority and we will not rest until we find him.” We fell into line behind our elected leader, resolute in avenging this horrendous act. We spoke with bravado about how we would return to the American ‘way of life’ because we were determined to live in freedom. We would not let the terrorists win. It matters not that six months to the day Bush made the comment about finding bin Laden, he said, “I don’t know where bin Laden is. I have no idea and really don’t care. It’s not that important. It’s not our priority.” By then, we had our nationalistic blinders on and President Bush was successfully using the politics of fear to keep Americans in line. With a misguided sense of ‘patriotism’ we gave up our civil rights so that our leaders could keep us safe. And even after the President of the United States proudly stated on the national news that he approved torture and abuse, we cannot summon the stomach to impeach him. Don’t look now, folks, but the terrorists have won.
The nation we have become under George Walker Bush has been shaped in large part by the 9-11 terrorist attacks. After the attacks, there was a great opportunity to bring about unity on a national and international scale. That opportunity was squandered by this administration. From the beginning, George Bush took the position that if certain nations did not do his bidding, they would be considered siding with the terrorists. When the families of those killed on 9-11 started to ask questions and press for an investigation, they were stonewalled for months. The administration finally relented and appointed the supposedly bi-partisan 9-11 commission, and then proceeded to first stonewall it, then lie to it. There are certainly enough holes in the official story to warrant an investigation, but we will never see it while George Bush is in office. The reality that every American has to face is that, at the very least, the Bush administration saw this tragic event as a broad-scale political opportunity and took advantage of our fears. That’s what dictators do.
For all the rhetoric that comes from this administration about democracy and freedom, the fact is that our civil liberties have been significantly curtailed and more are coming under assault every day as a result of 9-11. In October of 2001 our Congress foolishly passed the U.S.A. Patriot Act, giving the government unprecedented power to search telephone, e-mail, medical and financial records in the name of fighting terrorism. This was also the reason the Bush administration used to justify illegally wiretapping American citizens. The Protect America Act of 2007 retroactively legitimizes Bush’s illegal activity. If that isn’t enough, he also wants Congress to authorize retroactive immunity for the telecommunication companies that participated in this atrocious behavior.
If Ronald Reagan was ‘the great communicator,’ then George W. Bush is ‘the great liar.’ In October of 2002, Congress voted to give George Bush the power to unilaterally attack Iraq without so much as taking the time to verify and question the ‘facts’ used to justify the invasion: That Saddam Hussein was somehow involved in 9-11, that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and that Iraq tried to purchase yellowcake uranium from Niger. We now know that President Bush and several members of his administration, including Dick Cheney and Colin Powell, told these and many other lies in order to justify the invasion of Iraq. Had the Congress done its due diligence, the unnecessary death and destruction that this war has wrought could have been avoided.
Then we have the matter of torture. The United States has no business singling out nations like China and Cuba for human rights abuses when our president has violated (and continues to violate) the terms of the Geneva Convention. While the administration would have you believe that what happened at Abu Ghraib was the brainchild of low-level soldiers, we now know where the orders came from. President Bush himself proudly told ABC News just recently that he approved the torture techniques being used on detainees from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.
The terrorists have won because our government and way of life have become unrecognizable. We need not fear an attack from the outside because we are destroying ourselves from within. The U.S. Constitution, the cornerstone of our democracy, has been repeatedly violated by the Bush administration. Our system of checks and balances, anchored by a free and independent media and a Congress truly acting upon the will of the people, is all but gone. Finally, the American people themselves have become complacent sheep waiting out Bush’s term of office. We are not a stronger nation because of it. We are not a safer nation because of it. And the terrorists know that.
The American public is out of touch with reality
I was watching a BBC broadcast about the protests marking the fifth anniversary of the war in Iraq and came to the conclusion that the American public either has ADD or someone, maybe Dick Cheney, is spiking the public drinking water supply with LSD. I found myself becoming infuriated with the fact that the American people actually think the “war is going pretty well right now.” Those were the reporter’s exact words. I made it a point to write them down because I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. The propaganda about the “surge” working is apparently being bought lock, stock and barrel. I’m trying to understand how this administration could possibly have earned this level of trust, particularly since everything about this war is based on outright lies.
The lies are a matter of public record. A complete summary of the 935 lies manufactured by the Bush administration to justify the Iraq war, which of our public officials told them and when they were told can be seen at www.publicintegrity.org. Let there be absolutely no mistake here. What was done is both illegal and impeachable. George Bush looked the American people and Congress in the eye and lied and his minions, even Colin Powell, followed suit. They lied about weapons of mass destruction. They lied about finding a bio-weapons lab. They lied about Iraq trying to purchase yellowcake uranium from Niger. They lied about Saddam Hussein being involved in the 9-11 terrorist attacks. They continue to lie about this war. So, please, tell me again why Americans should believe one word out of our commander-in-chief’s mouth about the surge working. However, beyond the “illegal” aspect, I am ashamed that the American people could buy into a war that is so immoral on so many fronts.
Americans talk about Iraq like it’s nothing more than a mass of land. It isn’t. It’s a country made up of people just as is America. Until we invaded their country, Iraqis got up every day, went to work and took care of their families. While we sat glued to our television sets and reveled in the “shock and awe” of America’s military might, innocent men, women and children were dying for absolutely no good reason at all. More than a million Iraqis have died in this war, and at least two million have been displaced. Of course, Americans can assuage themselves by buying into the lie that the “surge” has resulted in decreased violence. While it’s true that there were fewer deaths in January (20 deaths a day due to political violence), there were increases in February (29 deaths a day) and March (39 deaths a day). While Dick Cheney was spinning his rosy view of the war during his unannounced visit to Iraq earlier this week, one of the deadliest days ever was unfolding in Karbala, where a suicide bombing killed 50 people and injured dozens more. The so-called “surge” is going in the opposite direction of what the administration wants you to believe.
Of course, it’s easy for Americans to look casually at war. We’ve never had a war on our own soil. We’ve not been displaced. We’ve not had a first-hand look at the violence of war and the innocent lives lost for the missteps our leaders take. We don’t worry about going to the market to buy food and perhaps dying in a roadside bombing. Yes, we look at images on a television, but we really only see what the perpetrators want us to see and we can turn it off any time we want. American culture glorifies and romanticizes war. It rarely focuses on its destructive effects. And while our president referred to the 9-11 terrorists attacks as being “at war,” what happened in New York City on September 11, 2001 pales in comparison to what has been going on in Iraq for the past five years.
Lest I’m accused of being a terrorist sympathizer or an unpatriotic citizen, I have not forgotten that we are approaching 4,000 American deaths in Iraq for a war that has had absolutely nothing to do with protecting our nation from attack. This senseless war is not about fighting for freedom or protecting the American way of life. It is not about avenging the terror attacks of 9-11. While some Americans seem to find comfort in the belief that we are fighting the good fight, the facts are that Iraq was not involved in the terrorists attacks and that America was never threatened or in imminent danger from Iraq. Even one American soldier’s death in Iraq would be too high a price to pay for this unjustifiable war.
President Bush has played the “God-is-with-us” card time and time again when justifying the invasion of Iraq, painting himself as God’s freedom warrior. Whether you’re Christian, Jewish, Buddhist, or Protestant, the notion that any “god” would approve of the death and destruction and the not-so-holy-acts of torture and abuse going on in Iraq is repugnant. It is the most immoral position of all for this president to take. And Americans who stand side-by-side with President Bush on the issue of Iraq should be considered immoral as well. It is time for Americans to look beyond their own comfort zone, make the Iraq war an election issue again, and demand an end to it.
What will be in the Bush Library?
There’s a lot of debate about George Bush’s legacy these days. Remember the spin surrounding the administration’s recently renewed efforts on the Middle East peace process? That was all about trying to bring one positive event to Bush’s legacy. Admittedly he hasn’t spent much time brokering peace between the Israelis and Palestinians, but that’s only because he’s been busy orchestrating war in Afghanistan and Iraq. A president only has so much time in a day. While others ruminate about Bush’s replacement, I’m delving into more concrete things, like the Bush Library at Southern Methodist University. What will go into that library? What will best represent the Bush Legacy? I have some suggestions.
I’d break it down into “rooms,” the first being The 9-11 Room. That was truly a watershed event, an opportunity both for domestic unity after a tainted election and unprecedented international cooperation. Instead President Bush very quickly reduced it to one giant photo op. Remember that photo of Bush at Ground Zero, holding a megaphone in one hand with his other arm around the shoulders of one of New York City’s finest? The firefighter in the photo is just one of the many men and women who spent days and nights breathing in the acrid smoke and sifting thorough the still-smoldering debris. The photo would certainly illustrate the President’s solidarity with these heroes. But there’s another story he wants to avoid. It’s the story of how the government suppressed the danger of breathing the air in New York in the days following the attacks. In 2006, ninety people died of illnesses tied to 9-11 recovery efforts; that’s up from about twenty. It’s a story about forgotten people, once hailed as heroes, suffering with chronic illnesses and slowly dying in obscurity with little support from the government they so willingly believed in and selflessly served.
Next, comes The Protect America Room with a copy of the U.S.A. Patriot Act, signed into law on October 26, 1991. This historic document marks the birth of the all-out attack on our Constitutional rights, giving the government unprecedented powers to search telephone, e-mail, medical and financial records without a court order all in the name of fighting terrorism. Let’s not forget the Protect America Act of 2007, a law that legitimizes Bush’s illegal wiretapping of his own citizens. According to the ACLU’s web site, it allows for the “massive, untargeted collection of international communications without court order or meaningful oversight by either Congress or the courts.” It’s still unclear which version of the act will be included, the one with or without retroactive immunity for the telecom giants that helped Bush before there was actually a law authorizing the wiretapping. While the bill has been passed without telecom immunity, our imperial president has stated that he will veto that version.
The War on Terror Room would come next. President Bush likes to call himself a “war president.” That timeless photo of the now-free Iraqis toppling Saddam’s statue would have to be included. However, the administration should refrain from using actual war photos. It’s never good to show people on either side being blown up by roadside bombs and/or shot. Instead, they can include a film clip time line of the speeches leading up to the Iraq war…the inspirational ones incorporating the 935 lies Bush and the key members of his administration told to justify the war. The Center for Public Integrity has already done all the work at http://www.publicintegrity.org! Bush should avoid any mention of the other war zone, Afghanistan, and the dismal effort made to capture the real architect of the 9-11 terrorist attacks.
The Domestic Policy Room would have its own Veto Zone. The President can tout his tax cuts for the richest Americans, while the poor and middle class stagger under a sagging economy of his creation. In the Veto Zone, Bush can showcase his tough stand against the “fiscally irresponsible” expansion of the Children’s Health Insurance Program Reauthorization Act. This law would have provided health care coverage to 3.9 million uninsured children at an additional cost of $34.5 billion dollars over five years (an increase that would be covered by a 61-cent increase in the cigarette tax and other tobacco taxes). In contrast, the Congressional Budget Office has estimated the monthly cost of the Iraq war to be as high as $12 billion. The total cost of the Iraq war could run up to $3 trillion. Do the math and determine who is truly fiscally irresponsible.
The misinformed won’t stop there. The Disaster Response Room will feature that powerful 2005 Hurricane Katrina speech where Mr. Bush says “the Gulf Coast must be rebuilt with an eye toward wiping out the persistent poverty and racial injustice plain to all in the suffering of the black and the poor in Hurricane Katrina’s wake.” It’s 2008 and many are still displaced and waiting to go back home. Others have given up entirely on ever returning to their home state. Brad Pitt’s Make It Right Foundation is doing more to build affordable housing in New Orleans than our own government. Instead, abandoned buildings are being purchased for conversion to high priced condos. The same thing is happening in Mississippi, where areas are turning into casino havens for the rich. The Bush administration’s version of the war on poverty is displacing and dispersing the poor throughout the rest of the country to fend for themselves.
Don’t forget The Interrogation Room. Here the torture techniques encouraged by this administration, continually honed at Guantanamo Bay and applied to extreme at Abu Ghraib will be hailed as powerful tools in the war on terror. It smacks of hypocrisy that George Bush once cited Saddam Hussein’s cruelty as a justification for removing him from power. Of course, our president doesn’t see himself in that light. He believes it’s his destiny is to bring freedom and democracy to the Middle East, one way or another. He answers to a higher power. The end justifies the means.
Finally, let’s finish the library with The Congressional Mastery Room. The bully president will be shown brazenly breaking many national and international laws and still escaping impeachment, while simultaneously holding a Democratic Congress hostage and preventing any legislation that might actually benefit the American people from becoming law.
