Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

The Case for George W. Bush (Excellent article from a Lefty magazine, LONG READ).
Esquire ^ | Aug 01 '04 | by Tom Junod

Posted on 07/29/2004 11:10:58 PM PDT by Gforce11

The Case for George W. Bush i.e., what if he's right?

by Tom Junod | Aug 01 '04

Page 1 of 3

It happened again this morning. I saw a picture of our president—my president—and my feelings about him were instantly rekindled. The picture was taken after his speech to the graduating seniors at the Air Force Academy. He was wearing a dark suit, a light-blue tie, and a white shirt. His unsmiling visage was grim and purposeful, in pointed contrast to the face of the elaborately uniformed cadet standing next to him, which was lit up with a cocky grin. Indeed, as something more than a frozen moment—as a political statement—the picture might have served, and been intended to serve, as a tableau of the resolve necessary to lift this nation out of this steep and terrible time. The cadet represented the best of what America has to offer, all devil-may-care enthusiasm and willingness to serve. The president, his hair starting to whiten, might have represented something even more essential: the kind of brave and, in his case, literally unblinking leadership that generates enough moral capital to summon the young to war. Although one man was essentially being asked to stake his life on the wisdom of the other, both were melded in an attitude of common purpose, and so both struck a common pose. With the cadet bent slightly forward and the commander in chief leaning slightly back, each man cocked his right arm and made a muscle. They flexed! I didn't know anything about the cadet. About President George W. Bush, though, I felt the satisfaction of absolute certainty, and so uttered the words as essential to my morning as my cup of Kenyan and my dose of high-minded outrage on the editorial page of the Times : "What an asshole." Ah. That feels better. George W. Bush is an asshole, isn't he? Moreover, he's the first president who seems merely that, at least in my lifetime. From Kennedy to Clinton, there is not a single president who would have been capable of striking such a pose after concluding a speech about a war in which hundreds of Americans and thousands of Iraqis are being killed. There is not a single president for whom such a pose would seem entirely characteristic—not a single president who might be tempted to confuse a beefcakey photo opportunity with an expression of national purpose. He has always struck me as a small man, or at least as a man too small for the task at hand, and therefore a man doomed to address the discrepancy between his soul and his situation with displays of political muscle that succeed only in drawing attention to his diminution. He not only has led us into war, he seems to get off on war, and it's the greedy pleasure he so clearly gets from flexing his biceps or from squaring his shoulders and setting his jaw or from landing a plane on an aircraft carrier—the greedy pleasure the war president finds in playacting his own attitudes of belligerence—that permitted me the greedy pleasure of hating him.

Then I read the text of the speech he gave and was thrown from one kind of certainty—the comfortable kind—into another. He was speaking, as he always does, of the moral underpinnings of our mission in Iraq. He was comparing, as he always does, the challenge that we face, in the evil of global terrorism, to the challenge our fathers and grandfathers faced, in the evil of fascism. He was insisting, as he always does, that the evil of global terrorism is exactly that, an evil—one of almost transcendent dimension that quite simply must be met, lest we be remembered for not meeting it . . . lest we allow it to be our judge. I agreed with most of what he said, as I often do when he's defining matters of principle. No, more than that, I thought that he was defining principles that desperately needed defining, with a clarity that those of my own political stripe demonstrate only when they're decrying either his policies or his character. He was making a moral proposition upon which he was basing his entire presidency—or said he was basing his entire presidency—and I found myself in the strange position of buying into the proposition without buying into the presidency, of buying into the words while rejecting, utterly, the man who spoke them. There is, of course, an easy answer for this seeming moral schizophrenia: the distance between the principles and the policy, between the mission and "Mission Accomplished," between the war on terror and the war in Iraq. Still, I have to admit to feeling a little uncertain of my disdain for this president when forced to contemplate the principle that might animate his determination to stay the course in a war that very well may be the end of him politically. I have to admit that when I listen to him speak, with his unbending certainty, I sometimes hear an echo of the same nagging question I ask myself after I hear a preacher declaim the agonies of hellfire or an insurance agent enumerate the cold odds of the actuarial tables. Namely: What if he's right?

As easy as it is to say that we can't abide the president because of the gulf between what he espouses and what he actually does , what haunts me is the possibility that we can't abide him because of us—because of the gulf between his will and our willingness. What haunts me is the possibility that we have become so accustomed to ambiguity and inaction in the face of evil that we find his call for decisive action an insult to our sense of nuance and proportion.

The people who dislike George W. Bush have convinced themselves that opposition to his presidency is the most compelling moral issue of the day. Well, it's not. The most compelling moral issue of the day is exactly what he says it is, when he's not saying it's gay marriage. The reason he will be difficult to unseat in November—no matter what his approval ratings are in the summer—is that his opponents operate out of the moral certainty that he is the bad guy and needs to be replaced, while he operates out of the moral certainty that terrorists are the bad guys and need to be defeated. The first will always sound merely convenient when compared with the second. Worse, the gulf between the two kinds of certainty lends credence to the conservative notion that liberals have settled for the conviction that Bush is distasteful as a substitute for conviction—because it's easier than conviction.

IN 1861, AFTER CONFEDERATE FORCES shelled Fort Sumter, President Abraham Lincoln suspended the writ of habeas corpus from Philadelphia to Washington and thereby made the arrest of American citizens a matter of military or executive say-so. When the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court objected to the arrest of a Maryland man who trained troops for Confederate muster, Lincoln essentially ignored his ruling. He argued that there was no point fixating on one clause in the Constitution when Southern secession had shredded the whole document, and asked, "Are all the laws but one to go unexecuted, and the government itself go to pieces, lest that one be violated?" During the four-year course of the Civil War, he also selectively abridged the rights of free speech, jury trial, and private property.

Page 1 of 3

(Excerpt) Read more at keepmedia.com ...


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bushdemocrats; casegeorgewbush; esquire; junod

1 posted on 07/29/2004 11:10:59 PM PDT by Gforce11
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: Gforce11

Bump to read later


2 posted on 07/29/2004 11:12:57 PM PDT by hoosiermama (prayers for all)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Gforce11

Bump for later!


3 posted on 07/29/2004 11:22:29 PM PDT by VRWCer (Unapologetically Un-PC. Cultural Marxism is for the weak of mind and spirit.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Gforce11
As easy as it is to say that we can't abide the president because of the gulf between what he espouses and what he actually does , what haunts me is the possibility that we can't abide him because of us—because of the gulf between his will and our willingness. What haunts me is the possibility that we have become so accustomed to ambiguity and inaction in the face of evil that we find his call for decisive action an insult to our sense of nuance and proportion.

The most compelling moral issue of the day is exactly what he says it is, when he's not saying it's gay marriage. The reason he will be difficult to unseat in November—no matter what his approval ratings are in the summer—is that his opponents operate out of the moral certainty that he is the bad guy and needs to be replaced, while he operates out of the moral certainty that terrorists are the bad guys and need to be defeated.

4 posted on 07/29/2004 11:30:44 PM PDT by GummyIII (I'm doin' better than I deserve!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Gforce11
If we do not find it within ourselves to identify the terrorism inspired by radical Islam as an unequivocal evil—and to pronounce ourselves morally superior to it—then we have lost the ability to identify any evil at all, and our democracy is not only diminished, it dissolves into the meaninglessness of privilege.

He clued in.

5 posted on 07/29/2004 11:34:30 PM PDT by jwalburg (Hatriots for Kerry)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: jwalburg
It's a good article...much better than I expected, and one needs to read all three pages to get the full gist of it. I would beg to differ on some parts, including calling our nation a "democracy" rather than a "republic", his historical allusions to Lincoln are a bit weak, but yet he uses some good arguments and is more reasonable than I would expect from an Esquire article.
6 posted on 07/29/2004 11:48:39 PM PDT by GummyIII (I'm doin' better than I deserve!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: Gforce11

An interesting read with a very real supposition. Maybe he (Bush) is right. A civil discourse on what President Bush is doing to protect the American people written by someone who does not like our President. It is nice to see someone on the other side trying look at the 'war on terror' through a historical perspective of Lincoln. Although I don't agree that Bush was 'dishonest', I do appreciate the writer's soul searching view in reviewing what President Bush has done to protect us from those who wish to destroy our way of life. I have forwarded this to all of my left leaning friends and family. This writer makes the case for a renewed Bush presidency.


7 posted on 07/29/2004 11:48:48 PM PDT by antceecee (quoth Teyreza "Shove it" ...Michael Moore!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Gforce11
Already posted: The Case For George W. Bush i.e. what if he's right?

It already has over 100 replies.

8 posted on 07/30/2004 12:00:08 AM PDT by Eagle9
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Gforce11

"It happened again this morning. I saw a picture of our president—my president—and my feelings about him were instantly rekindled....."

Me too

I needed this after seeing the Democrats in my face for the last 3 -4 days


9 posted on 07/30/2004 12:07:27 AM PDT by LittleMoe
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Gforce11

I'm stunned to find this on Esquire!


10 posted on 07/30/2004 12:38:32 AM PDT by lainde (Heads up...We're coming and we've got tongue blades!!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Eagle9

Oops, I did a search to see if it was posted, but it never showed up. Thanks for the link


11 posted on 07/30/2004 1:37:06 AM PDT by Gforce11
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 8 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson