They Don’t Call it The “White” House for Nothing
Bush at the NAACP Convention
By Greg Palast
07/21/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- God lost this time. I counted: Bush mentioned
God only six times in his speech to the NAACP today. The winner was
‘faith’ — which got seven mentions, though if you count “The
Creator” as God, well, then the Lord tied it.
Coming in right behind God and Faith, other big mentions in the
First Home Boy’s rap included: The Voting Rights Act, his family’s
“commitment to civil rights,” the “death tax,” rebuilding New
Orleans and “public school choice” and “soft bigotry.”
As the philosopher Aretha Franklin once said, “Who’s zoomin’ who?”
Let’s take it one point at a time.
Death and Taxes — Inheritance taxes apply only to those who leave
assets exceeding $2 million. Mr. Bush realized how crucial this
issue was to the NAACP. He said, “The [current] ‘death tax’ will
prevent future African American entrepreneurs from being able to
pass their assets from one generation to the next.” His heart went
out to the families of Gulf Coast flood victims who discovered that
they could collect only the first two million bucks of their
inheritance tax-free. Apparently, Mr. Bush heard that, among the
2,000 folk drowned in New Orleans, there were several millionaires.
Luckily, the rumor proved false.
School Choice — Our Voucher Salesman-in-Chief offered the Black folk
a truly exciting deal:“When we find schools that are not teaching
and will not change, our parents should have a different option…
charter schools and public school choice and opportunity
scholarships to be able to enable parents to move their child out of
a school that’s not teaching.”
What he meant in this statement that was nearly in English (“to be
able to enable”?) was that his No Child Left Behind Act gives all
parents the right to move their kids to better schools.
Indeed, the Behind Act does require school systems to offer that
choice. In New York, for example, a third of a million students
qualify under the law to escape poorly performing schools — but only
8,000 could do so. Mr. Bush forgot to include the money for the
moves. But hey, his parents never asked for a handout to move him to
Phillips Andover Academy.
Voting Rights Act — This was a big applause line. Bush gloated about
his convincing the White Sheets Caucus of the Republican Party to go
along with the renewal of the Voting Rights Act. But he forgot to
mention the fine print. The Southern GOP only went along with
renewing the law on the understanding that the law would never be
enforced. Think I’m kidding? Check this: in July 2004, the US Civil
Rights Commission voted to open a civil and criminal investigation
of his brother’s Administration in Florida for knowingly renewing a
racially-biased scrub of voter rolls. In April 2004, Governor Jeb
Bush, of the “family committed to civil rights,” personally ordered
this new purge of “felons” from voter rolls, despite promising never
to repeat the infamous scrub of 2000. The new purge violated a
settlement he signed with the, uh, NAACP.
It also violated the Voting Rights Act. The Civil Rights Commission
turned the case over to the US Justice Department which, two years
on, has yet to begin the investigation. That’s not to say President
Bush did nothing. He swiftly replaced every member of the Commission
who voted to investigate his brother.
Ownership Society — Our President was really excited recounting how
he spoke to actual Black people in Mississippi, asking how many of
them had 401(k) investment plans. Strangely, he didn’t ask them if
they had health insurance. Since Mr. Bush took office, the number of
African-American adults without it has grown to 7.3 million. That’s
a kind of death tax, too, Mr. President. Our President completed the
White-washing of his record by railing against, “the soft bigotry of
low expectations. If you have low expectations,” he said, “you’re
going to get lousy results.”
Well, the NAACP never expected much from this President, and the
results have proved his point.
Greg Palast is the author of the just-released New York Times
bestseller,
Armed Madhouse: Who’s Afraid of Osama Wolf?, China Floats Bush
Sinks, the Scheme to Steal ‘08, No Child’s Behind Left and other
Dispatches from the Front Lines of the Class War. Go to
www.GregPalast.com .