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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jim McMannis who wrote (135628)4/3/2001 8:59:44 AM
From: stribe30  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 1584048
 
Is George W. Heading for a Crash on the Newt Gingrich Highway?

Jim.. remember that I've been saying that environment would be a Bush Achilles Heel? Looks like others are starting to agree.
---------------------------------------

A series of tone-deaf environmental and budget decisions is
getting the new administration off to an ominous start, says
Lance Morrow
BY LANCE MORROW

Monday, Apr. 02, 2001

Even where we find ourselves now — on the far side of the Bridge to the
Twenty-first Century, in a post-millennial America so long at peace abroad that it
has entered into a chronic state of warfare with itself at
home, just to have something to do with its nastiness —
even here, there are rules of decorum. And there are laws
of political physics.

There are things you can and cannot do. George W. Bush
and his friends don't seem to know this. I'm afraid they are
going to find it out the hard way, in November 2002.

That's a guess. Maybe I am wrong. Maybe the Bush
conservatives will get the working majorities they need and
will, after 2002, ride from triumph to triumph in chariots of
fire, rescinding Clinton and completing Reagan and
building a New Jerusalem.

Could be. But the Gingrich Republicans overinterpreted
their mandate of 1994, and look at the ditch they landed in.
The George W. Bush Republicans have no mandate to
overinterpret. They are proceeding now by the metaphysics
of Wile E. Coyote, who ventures bravely into midair, until
he notices that he is standing on thin air above the deep
canyon, into which, presently, he begins a long, whistling
plummet that ends in a distant "poof!" on the canyon floor.

I do not say that Bush is entirely wrong in the positions he
has staked out. Nothing, in any case, is more satisfying to
behold than the indignation of the Streisand Left when it has
been given the finger. But it's not enough to be right, or to
think you're right; Bush could be right about everything (he's
not), and still fail.

America is not divided in two. It is divided in three: a third
(liberal), a third (middle) and a third (conservative). Bush
is losing his touch with the middling third.
The left third
and the right third operate from principle, and are stable in
their allegiances. The middle third may change loyalties,
blown this way or that by sometimes fatuous notions of
decorum. If Bush continues to offend the middle's sense of
the American story, he is headed for disaster in less than 18
months.


Decorum about what? The environment, above all.Bush is
repeating the Clinton administration's early errors of
symbolism and priority. As Clinton stupidly allowed gays
in the military to become an opening issue of his
administration, so Bush has given early prominence to
carbon dioxide emissions, arsenic in the water, rejection of
the Kyoto treaty, and oil drilling in Arctic Alaska. Dumb.


A successful president needs timing and an instinct for the
emotional chemistry of issues. The middle third care about
environment, more than ever. In just 10 weeks, the Bush
environmental dossier has gotten to be a toxic political
accumulation. I'm not talking about the merits of individual
policies. I'm talking about the moral impressions on which
Americans will cast their votes next time. A presidency
develops like a Polaroid picture. The emerging picture of
the Bush administration is ugly.


The middle third respond to issues of economic unfairness.
They may reject leftist class-warfare rhetoric, but they get a
scrupulous twitch when people with plenty of money seem
to be having too much of a party while the markets dive,
and too many others seem to be sleeping under bridges.
Bush's tax cut and his banker-friendly plan to make
bankruptcy tougher may lead the middle third to think they
are watching a Charlie Chaplin movie.


There is a rock of ideology in the snowball of George W.
Bush's frolicksome charm. Fine. He's a conservative. But in
this country, now, conservatism without discretion is mere
doctrine, and principles without brains or strategy are
indistinguishable from stupidity: dead weight. If George W.
Bush begins to suffer an ignominious nightly death-by-Leno
— the vast middle third of America tucked in bed and
laughing derisively at the Homer Simpson in the White
House — then Bush is gone.

He's in greater danger than he thinks.

time.com