Brown
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2001
- Messages
- 12,984
On the day after Election Day, I visited the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston. I found it to be a surprisingly emotional experience.
Here were exhibits about Kennedy's mastery of the new medium of television; of his remarkable speeches (including handwritten notes concerning how to pronounce "Ich bin ein Berliner"); of the Peace Corps, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Space Program, and so on.
Kennedy was in office for less than three years. Yet he had some stellar accomplishments and a remarkable legacy as President.
And now there is talk about a library and museum to be devoted to little Bush.
Little Bush will have been in office for eight years. But what has he accomplished?
I suggest that he will not have a single accomplishment that he can point to in his library, unless his people decide (as some say they already have) to engage in historical revisionism.
There may be an exhibit devoted to September 11, 2001, but it is unlikely there will be any exhibit devoted to the warnings that the Bush folks received and ignored. It is almost certain that there will not be a video showing the President sitting in a chair for seven minutes, looking like he peed his pants, after hearing that "America is under attack."
There may be an exhibit devoted to Iraq, but it is doubtful that any of the following will be touted as accomplishments: the tales told to the UN, Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo, Halliburton, Curveball, Blackwater, the rise of insurgency, General Shinsecki, the Valerie Plame Affair, and Bush's excrement-headed remarks. There may be a monument to the "Mission Accomplished" spectacle, without any explanation of what mission had actually been accomplished.
Will there be an exhibit devoted to Hurricane Katrina and little Bush's pathetic response? Or an exhibit devoted to the disgraceful way in which he attained office? Will he trumpet his stomping upon stem cell research or his intervention in the Terri Schaivo matter? Will there be an exhibit devoted to his financial irresponsibility, or the absurd nomination of Harriet Miers, or the criminal escapades of his cronies? Will there be an exhibit that suggests that Dick Cheney was, by any reasonable standard, a good Vice President?
Will we see exhibits devoted to cronyism and incompetence? To Bush's preference to speak to fawning crowds rather than to people who might ask hard questions?
Certainly there will be nothing to indicate that Bush acted to prevent (or even slow the course of) environmental damage. There will be not a word about curtailment of liberties. And there will not be a shred of information indicating that Bush's policies were in any way responsible for the economic troubles we currently face.
Here were exhibits about Kennedy's mastery of the new medium of television; of his remarkable speeches (including handwritten notes concerning how to pronounce "Ich bin ein Berliner"); of the Peace Corps, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Space Program, and so on.
Kennedy was in office for less than three years. Yet he had some stellar accomplishments and a remarkable legacy as President.
And now there is talk about a library and museum to be devoted to little Bush.
Little Bush will have been in office for eight years. But what has he accomplished?
I suggest that he will not have a single accomplishment that he can point to in his library, unless his people decide (as some say they already have) to engage in historical revisionism.
There may be an exhibit devoted to September 11, 2001, but it is unlikely there will be any exhibit devoted to the warnings that the Bush folks received and ignored. It is almost certain that there will not be a video showing the President sitting in a chair for seven minutes, looking like he peed his pants, after hearing that "America is under attack."
There may be an exhibit devoted to Iraq, but it is doubtful that any of the following will be touted as accomplishments: the tales told to the UN, Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo, Halliburton, Curveball, Blackwater, the rise of insurgency, General Shinsecki, the Valerie Plame Affair, and Bush's excrement-headed remarks. There may be a monument to the "Mission Accomplished" spectacle, without any explanation of what mission had actually been accomplished.
Will there be an exhibit devoted to Hurricane Katrina and little Bush's pathetic response? Or an exhibit devoted to the disgraceful way in which he attained office? Will he trumpet his stomping upon stem cell research or his intervention in the Terri Schaivo matter? Will there be an exhibit devoted to his financial irresponsibility, or the absurd nomination of Harriet Miers, or the criminal escapades of his cronies? Will there be an exhibit that suggests that Dick Cheney was, by any reasonable standard, a good Vice President?
Will we see exhibits devoted to cronyism and incompetence? To Bush's preference to speak to fawning crowds rather than to people who might ask hard questions?
Certainly there will be nothing to indicate that Bush acted to prevent (or even slow the course of) environmental damage. There will be not a word about curtailment of liberties. And there will not be a shred of information indicating that Bush's policies were in any way responsible for the economic troubles we currently face.
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