.
 George
Bush and Winning by Losing
by Ben
Bagdikian: 04/16/03
The last individual I would associate as tactical twins would be a
merchant I once encountered in Tangier, Morocco years ago and President
George W. Bush. Bargaining for an item, the merchant mentioned a
ridiculously high price. I suggested half his price. We haggled for an
hour and then agreed amiably on what I suspect was a nice profit for the
merchant who was a man who knew how to "win by losing."
I suspect that George Bush has discovered how to win by
"losing." He proposes absurd and calloused social policies and
after some noisy protests he gets half or more of what he wants, that
half still irrational. In the appearance of a legislative
"compromise," his policies remain destructive for the social
and economic health of the country.
George Bush has been winning by "losing" almost from the
start. Even though he began his term with halting and inarticulate
manner, he has learned to adopt the posture of Stalwart Leader of the
Free World. And he has been winning while average Americans have been
losing.
When Ariel Sharon ordered the first organized Israeli incursion into
Palestinian territory. President Bush publicly demanded that Israel
"withdraw immediately." Israel ignored the President and has
been continuing its inroads ever since. Normally it would be humiliating
for the most powerful nation in the world to order a small nation, a
client state at that($2.8 billion in 2001), to stop what it was doing
and be ignored.
It is considered folly, whether in a schoolyard or international
confrontation, to issue an ultimatum without an "or else." If
the ultimatum is ignored and nothing happens, you lose. Bush survived
with a momentary approval from Muslim countries but by permitting Sharon
to increase the incursions and Bush wash his hands of the whole bloody
tragedy, yet still seen as a friend of Israel.
By Labor Day, 2002, the mid-term prospects were promising for a
definitive Democratic majority in the Senate and only a slender
Republican majority the House. The big issues were good for Democrats:
rising unemployment, Bush's refusal to extend unemployment compensation,
widespread corporate corruption, personal embarrassments about both the
President's and Vice President Cheney's stock market actions, and much
more.
But in September, after 11 years of quiescence, Bush suddenly discovered
that it was critical to take military action against Iraq. The impending
war wiped the domestic problems and recession off the front pages and
Republicans gained definitive control of both House and Senate.
Bush had used as his reason for immediate war with Iraq the need to
eliminate weapons of mass destruction including possible nuclear bombs.
When the international inspection team found none in its preliminary
first sweep but said it needed more time, Bush changed the prime reason
for war was not so much Iraqi weapons of mass destruction as the urgent
need for "regime change."
(There was some reason for the United States to believe Iraq at some
time had "weapons of mass destruction." Most of these were
sold and approved by the U.S.. Government in the 1980s because our enemy
at that moment was Iran and Saddam Hussein was our friend. Neither Bush
nor the major media made that clear in the increasing controversy over
Bush's preparation for war. No informed person would deny that Hussein
did unspeakable things to his dissidents, though he had no monopoly on
that kind of ruthlessness and he was doing those unspeakable thingst
when he was our "friend" and we were selling him war goods.)
Before the 2002 mid-term elections, the U.S. flags came out, Democrats
permitted themselves to be cornered into accepting the war or be accused
of not "supporting our troops." They should have repeated the
large letters on a theater marquee in Piedmont, California--- "We
Support our Troops--Bring Them Home." We are now in a messy war
that may or may not disclose Iraqi weapons of mass destruction and may
or may not create even more global explosions, but with unpredictable
loss of life, and though one way or another our military will win
command of Iraq, there is an unknown aftermath.
The President's tax cut plan is another case that he won by losing. On
any economic or social grounds, it was a cruel and destructive plan. He
had a war to pay for, there were Social Security and Medicare funds to
beef up, most of the benefits went to the wealthiest five percent of
Americans and did nothing to jump start the deepening recession. It was
based on the discredited supply side economics of Ronald Reagan. Those
Reaganomics saddled the country with a huge deficit and accelerated what
is still going on, sending our wealth flowing upward to the richest
corporations and families while providing little for the mass of
Americans or the desperate cities in need of their former federal
grants.
The Reagan and Bush supply side economics has been discredited for
decades. The results are described by what might be called John Kenneth
Galbraith's Horse:
If you stuff a horse with enough oats, sooner or later, the horse will
leave something behind for the sparrows.
The irrationality of the Bush tax cut has been proven but it is still a
win for the rich and a loss for the general good. The original Bush tax
cut would be $1.6 trillion over 10 years. In the end, there was a
compromise and Bush ended with $1.35 trillion over 11 years. The
"compromise" hinted that Bush had lost something, but in
reality he had gained what was still an accelerated march toward
plutocracy.
In another act of bravado, Bush reacted to word that the North Koreans
were working hard to develop nuclear weapons. North Korea was part of
Bush's "evil empire." But he was belatedly sending troops to
Iraq, the Afghanistan victory was turning nasty with fragmentation and
lawlessness beyond Kabul, and a thousand miles to the south there were
escalating explosive battles in the Phillippines involving American
troops. But once more, Bush declared an implied ultimatum, saying he
would not even talk to North Korea until it got rid of its weapons of
mass destruction. North Korea responded by "test firing" a
missile into the Sea of Japan.
Presumably, someone must have reminded the President that there are
37,000 U.S. troops guarding the demilitarized zone between North and
South of Korea. What if the unpredictable North Korean leader decided to
follow up Bush's refusal to talk by lobbing some missiles on or near the
American troops? It would endanger American troops and South Korea at a
time when the country was already split and fearful about consequences
of the war in Iraq. The earlier declaration against even talking to
North Korea, had been spoken with a firm hauteur. But not long afterward
the White House discovered diplomacy: "Of course we're going to
have direct talks with the North Koreans," Deputy Secretary States
Richard Armitage told a hearing of the Senate Foreign relations
Committee..
Bush entered office by withdrawal from international treaties and
denigration of the United Nations as "a debating society," his
Secretary of Defense dismissed "old Europe" as no longer
significant in the world, and Bush issued sneering words toward the
United Nations. When Germany and France opposed Bush's war, that was no
loss, it was suggested, because we had more than 13 allies in the Iraqi
war. Forget Germany and France. After all, we had Slovakia on our side.
When in Iraqi battles, some American troops were captured, Bush declared
firmly that Iraq was obligated to treat American POW's by rules of the
Geneva Convention. When asked about suspected Al Qaida prisoners held at
Guantanamo Bay under conditions violating the Geneva Convention, Bush
said they were not subject to international laws.
Professional soldiers do not see the Geneva Convention as a
pie-in-the-sky exercise in liberal fantasy. The military know that in
any war both sides will have some of their troops held prisoners and the
Geneva Convention, spotty as it is in its application during bitter
battles, is protective for all military people who wish some rules of
treatment for their own captured troops.
The President looking toward an end of the fighting in Iraq and at least
two years of occupation and reorganizing the politics of Iraq on a
democratic model, now says this is a job for the United Nations. He had
given joy to the conservative troglodytes who had never accepted the
legitimacy of the United Nations, so Bush won that also because the
anti-UN crowd among Bush followers can laugh up their sleeves if they
think they will unload the clean-up after the war onto the United
Nations.
Unfortunately, the Democratic Party has been losing by losing. If it had
found its tongue earlier, it would have created a real choice for the
electorate. In the years of absence of such clear choices, the
percentage of eligible voters actually going to the polls has been
dropping for years. It is not too late for the Democratic Party, which
has access to the major media, to revive itself by making clear and bold
statements for the 2004 elections, of endorsing necessary national
policies like universal health care, a tax plan that reintroduces more
rather than less progressivity in the income tax, large-scale building
of low-cost affordable homes for low- and -middle-income Americans, and
attack the cruel joke of the present minimum wage that requires a
working couple with two children to work 132 hours a week to stay out of
poverty. Go for it all in unapologetic declarations.
(Let conservatives in the Democratic Party look at the growing
fragmentation of political movements in the country and read the history
of growth and death of political parties.)
The Democrats would not win every one of those proposals in full. But it
would put these urgent needs back into the national discourse. No matter
who wins in 2004, those issues would be in the minds of the general
public and the major news media. Even if the proposals were only
partially successful in Congress, the public will start winning by
"losing." Given the present unpredictability of national and
international affairs, those issues, sooner or later, might even win by
winning, as will their sponsors.
ZNet Commentary
Mark Twain Speaks to Us
by Norman Solomon
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2003-04/21solomon.cfm
With U.S. troops occupying Iraq and the Bush administration making
bellicose noises about Syria, let's consider some rarely mentioned words
from the most revered writer in American history.
Mark Twain was painfully aware of many people's inclinations to go along
with prevailing evils. When slavery was lawful, he recalled,
abolitionists were "despised and ostracized, and insulted" --
by "patriots." As far as Twain was concerned, "Loyalty to
petrified opinion never yet broke a chain or freed a human soul."
With chiseled precision, he wielded language as a hard-edged tool.
"The difference between the right word and the almost right
word," he once commented, "is the difference between lightning
and the lightning bug." Here are a few volts of Twain's lightning
that you probably never saw before:
* "Who are the oppressors? The few: the king, the capitalist and a
handful of other overseers and superintendents. Who are the oppressed?
The many: the nations of the earth; the valuable personages; the
workers; they that make the bread that the soft-handed and idle
eat."
* "Why is it right that there is not a fairer division of the spoil
all around? Because laws and constitutions have ordered otherwise. Then
it follows that laws and constitutions should change around and say
there shall be a more nearly equal division."
* "I am an anti-imperialist. I am opposed to having the eagle put
its talons on any other land."
At the turn of the century, as the Philippines came under the wing of
the U.S. government, Mark Twain suggested a new flag for the Philippine
province -- "just our usual flag, with the white stripes painted
black and the stars replaced by the skull and cross-bones."
While the United States followed up on its victory in the
Spanish-American War by slaughtering thousands of Filipino people, Twain
spoke at anti-war rallies. He also flooded newspapers with letters and
wrote brilliant, unrelenting articles.
On Dec. 30, 1900, the New York Herald published Mark Twain's commentary
-- "A Greeting from the 19th Century to the 20th Century" --
denouncing the blood-drenched colonial forays of England, France,
Germany, Russia and the United States. "I bring you the stately
matron named Christendom, returning bedraggled, besmirched and
dishonored from pirate-raids in Kiao-Chou, Manchuria, South Africa and
the Philippines, with her soul full of meanness, her pocket full of
boodle and her mouth full of pious hypocrisies.. Give her the soap and a
towel, but hide the looking-glass."
Twain followed up in early 1901 with an essay titled "To the Person
Sitting in Darkness." Each of the world's strongest nations, he
wrote, was proceeding "with its banner of the Prince of Peace in
one hand and its loot-basket and its butcher-knife in the other."
Many readers and some newspapers praised Twain's polemic. But his essay
angered others, including the American Missionary Board and the New York
Times.
"Particularly in his later years," scholar Tom Quirk has
noted, "the fierceness of Twain's anti-imperialist convictions
disturbed and dismayed those who regarded him as the archetypal American
citizen who had somehow turned upon Americanism itself."
What Mark Twain had to say is all too relevant to what's happening these
days. But policymakers in Washington can rest easy. Twain's most
inflammatory writings are smoldering in his grave -- while few
opportunities exist for the general public to hear similar views
expounded today.
"None but the dead are permitted to speak truth," Twain
remarked. Even then, evidently, their voices tend to be muffled.
______________________________________________
Norman Solomon is co-author of the new book "Target Iraq: What the
News Media Didn't Tell You." For an excerpt and other information,
go to: www.contextbooks.com/new.html
target
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