Ziggurat
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2003
- Messages
- 61,795
I disagree with that. Few politicians are as selective in areas of foreign policy as George W. Bush.
When forming policy, his practice is to listen to those with whom he agrees, and pay no attention to others.
But now you're no longer discussing his speech, you're discussing his decision-making process, which wasn't the topic of the OP. And you're also in much more uncertain waters, because from our external position we really can't know what Bush considers when making decisions, we can only know what the final decisions are.
When advocating a policy publicly, his practice has been to stress only those things in favor of his view, and ignore the others.
But that ISN'T any different than other politicians. That IS politics.
Virtually no one in the world trusts Bush, and with good reason.
Trust is a funny thing, and there are different kinds of it. If Bush says he will do something, even our enemies trust that he will probably do it. That kind of trust is worth quite a lot. I doubt someone as "trustworthy" as Carter, for example, had as much of that kind of trust as Bush does.
You did not see this extreme selectivity from Clinton, who insisted upon being told both good news and bad, and who declined to paint a rosy picture when the picture wasn't rosy.
Back to speculation. And off topic as well: Clinton's actual speeches were still always given from a very definite perspective, and did not dwell on all the possible counterarguments. That's the way it has always been, and that's perfectly acceptable. I wouldn't want Lincoln, for example, to have talked about the possibility of making peace with the South during his Gettysburg address, even if it made his speech more "balanced" and less "selective".