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Politics : Impeach George W. Bush -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Skywatcher who wrote (23319)10/12/2003 11:38:02 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 93284
 
Sometimes the truth sounds rude
Sunday, October 12, 2003

seattlepi.nwsource.com

By PAUL KRUGMAN
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

It's the season of the angry liberal. Books like Al Franken's
"Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them," Joe Conason's
"Big Lies" and Molly Ivins' "Bushwhacked" have become
best sellers. (Yes, I've got one out there, too.) But
conservatives are distressed because those liberals are so
angry and rude. OK, they admit, they themselves were a bit
rude during the Clinton years -- that seven-year, $70
million investigation of a tiny money-losing land deal, all
that fuss about the president's private life -- but they're
sorry, and now it's time for everyone to be civil.

Indeed, angry liberals can take some lessons in civility from
today's right.

Consider, for example, Fox News' genteel response to
Christiane Amanpour, the CNN correspondent. Amanpour
recently expressed some regret over CNN's prewar
reporting: "Perhaps, to a certain extent, my station was
intimidated by the administration and its foot soldiers at
Fox News." A Fox spokeswoman replied, "It's better to be
viewed as a foot soldier for Bush than as a spokeswoman for
al-Qaida."

And liberal pundits who may be tempted to cast personal
aspersions can take lessons in courtesy from such
conservatives as Charles Krauthammer, who last December
reminded TV viewers of his previous career as a
psychiatrist, then said of Al Gore, "He could use a little
help."

What's really important, of course, is that political figures
stick to the issues, like the Bush adviser who told The New
York Times that the problem with Sen. John Kerry is that
"he looks French."

Some say that the right, having engaged in name-calling
and smear tactics when Bill Clinton was president, now
wants to change the rules so such behavior is no longer
allowed. In fact, the right is still calling names and
smearing; it wants to prohibit rude behavior only by
liberals.

But there's more going on than a simple attempt to impose
a double standard. All this fuss about the rudeness of the
Bush administration's critics is an attempt to preclude
serious discussion of that administration's policies. For
there is no way to be both honest and polite about what
has happened in these past three years.

On the fiscal front, this administration has used deceptive
accounting to ram through repeated long-run tax cuts in
the face of mounting deficits. And it continues to push for
more tax cuts, when even the most sober observers now
talk starkly about the risk to our solvency. It's impolite to
say that George W. Bush is the most fiscally irresponsible
president in U.S. history, but it would be dishonest to
pretend otherwise.

On the foreign policy front,
this administration hyped the
threat from Iraq, ignoring warnings from military
professionals that a prolonged postwar occupation would tie
down much of our Army and undermine our military
readiness. (Joseph Galloway, co-author of "We Were
Soldiers Once ... and Young," says that "we have perhaps
the finest Army in history," but that "Donald Rumsfeld and
his civilian aides have done just about everything they
could to destroy that Army.") It's impolite to say that Bush
has damaged our national security with his military
adventurism, but it would be dishonest to pretend
otherwise.

Still, some would say that criticism should focus only on
Bush's policies, not on his person. But no administration
in memory has made paeans to the president's character --
his "honor and integrity" -- so central to its political
strategy.
Nor has any previous administration been so
determined to portray the president as a hero, going so far
as to pose him in line with the heads on Mount Rushmore,
or arrange that landing on the aircraft carrier. Surely, then,
Bush's critics have the right to point out that the life story
of the man inside the flight suit isn't particularly heroic --
that he has never taken a risk or made a sacrifice for the
sake of his country, and that his business career is a story
of murky deals and insider privilege.

In the months after 9/11, a shocked nation wanted to
believe the best of its leader, and Bush was treated with
reverence. But he abused the trust placed in him, pushing
a partisan agenda that has left the nation weakened and
divided. Yes, I know that's a rude thing to say. But it's also
the truth.


Paul Krugman is a columnist for The New York Times. Copyright 2003
New York Times News Service. E-mail: krugman@nytimes.com