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The End of the Road for George W. Bush

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Posted on Jan 13, 2008
Bush at sea
AP photo / David Furst, pool

President Bush, center, listens to Franciscan priests as they overlook the Sea of Galilee in the ancient village of Capernaum, Israel.

By Chris Hedges

The Gilbert and Sullivan charade of statesmanship played out by George W. Bush and his enabler, Condoleezza Rice, as they wander the Middle East is a fitting end to seven years of misrule.  Despots stripped of power are transformed from monsters into buffoons.  And this is the metamorphosis that is eating away at the Bush presidency. 

Bush stood in Jerusalem, uncomfortable and palpably bored.  He mouthed platitudes about a peace settlement that mocked the humanitarian crisis he aided and abetted in Gaza, the rapacious land grab by Israel in the West Bank and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.  The diminished George Bush, increasingly irrelevant at home and abroad, is fading into insignificance.  A year from now one half expects to see him stand up at the next president’s inauguration and screech “I’m melting!  I’m melting!” as he sinks into a puddle of slime.  He will return, I expect, to his ranch, where he will be able to spend the rest of his life doing the only task for which he has shown any aptitude—cutting down brush with a chain saw. 

He may yet rise again to torment us with an attack on Iran, condemning more innocents to slaughter.  He and his cigar-smoking soul mate Ehud Olmert would like to go out with one more flash of mayhem and violence.  But even this will not ultimately save him.  Bush will soon be reduced to the cipher he once was, left to spend the rest of his life trying to salvage a legacy of shame and deceit.  In a just world he would be put on trial, if not by the International Criminal Court of Justice then by the U.S. Congress.  He would be forced to face up to his lies and wars of aggression.  But the moral rot that infects the nation has seeped into the bowels of the legislative as well as the executive branch. 

World leaders, including those whom Bush desperately wants to intimidate, now dismiss him.  Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said a few days ago that relations with the United States are of “no benefit to the Iranian nation.  The day such relations are of benefit, I will be the first one to approve of that.”

Bush will have flown from Israel to Palestine to Kuwait to Bahrain to the United Arab Emirates to Saudi Arabia to Egypt in search of a legacy, one that he hopes will lift up his name in history.  But, isolated and deluded, he has yet to grasp that he and the United States are reviled and detested for our violence, arrogance and greed.  The bands played on the tarmac.  He was toasted at state dinners.  But even our allies, including Kuwait and Egypt, know Bush is a danger to himself and others. 

He publicly displayed his inability to connect rhetoric with reality.  He promised peace and cooperation, a new era, a Palestinian homeland.  He promised solutions that will arise from negotiations that do not exist.  Negotiations, in his eyes, are always about to begin.  They were about to begin a year ago.  They were about to begin with Annapolis.  They are about to begin now.  The messy issues between the Israelis and Palestinians that he and his administration have never attempted to address—the borders, the expanding Jewish settlements and outposts, the plight of Palestinian refugees and Jerusalem—will all be seamlessly solved ... one day.  But the brutal reality of the Israeli occupation barrels forward.  The Jewish settlements and outposts continue to be expanded.  The crisis in Gaza, with the cuts in fuel and electricity, the deadly army incursions and airstrikes, has turned the world’s largest walled prison into a swamp of human misery.  And huge new settlements, like Har Homa, continue to rise up on Palestinian soil. 

When Bush met with the Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas in Ramallah he blithely defended the patchwork of Israeli roadblocks that have turned the West Bank into a series of ringed Palestinian ghettos.  The roadblocks, he told Abbas, are necessary for Israeli security.  He announced that the 1949 Green Line, the borders established by the United Nations, would never be restored.  There would be no discussion, he said, of the status of Jerusalem.  And the plight of Palestinian refugees would be solved by setting up an international fund, meaning, of course, that none would ever return.  In short, he offered an unequivocal endorsement of right-wing Israeli policy with not a murmur of dissent.  And the Palestinians can either have it rammed down their throat or rot.  Bush will be back, he has promised, in May to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the founding of the Jewish state.  Olmert, no doubt, will again be fulsome in his praise, which is probably what Bush’s trip to the Middle East is, at its core, really about.  Bush desperately wants someone to pretend with him that he is an agent for peace and statesmanship.  Olmert, who knows the callow American leader will give him everything he desires, is happy to oblige.

But as Bush basks in the glow of his own fantasy, the suffering in Gaza, one of the world’s worst humanitarian disasters, along with the savage occupation of Iraq, continues to fuel widespread anger and rage.  Bush has spent his time in office bolstering the Middle East’s most despotic regimes, including that of Gen. Hosni Mubarak in Egypt.  He approved a $20-billion arms package for these states.  He has backed efforts to crush mainstream Islamic groups that have electoral legitimacy and popular support.  He has stood by as these regimes have stifled democratic dissent, and he has, with Israeli encouragement, isolated governments, even friendly governments, in the Middle East that raised feeble protests.  But his day is past.  There is open revolt.  Opinion polls show that two-thirds of Palestinians, and three-fourths of Israelis, do not believe Bush can affect events in the Palestinian territories.

The agenda of the Bush White House is exposed as irrelevant, myopic and counterproductive.  Most Arab countries are in open defiance of Washington and are actively reaching out to Iran.

“As long as they [Iran] have no nuclear program ... why should we isolate Iran? Why punish Iran now?” Arab League Secretary-General Abu Moussa told The Washington Post.

The chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Mohamed ElBaradei, is in Iran for talks.  President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad attended December’s Gulf Cooperation Council summit.  The Iranian president attended the just-completed hajj in Mecca at the invitation of the Saudi monarch, King Abdullah.  Tehran is exploring the resumption of diplomatic ties with Egypt, cut since the 1979 revolution, and has offered to cooperate with Cairo in the production of nuclear energy.  And the Syrian and Lebanese governments have ignored Washington’s warnings to sever ties with Hezbollah and Hamas. 

It is the end of the road for George Bush.  The world takes less and less notice of him.  He strutted and swaggered across the stage.  He bellowed and raged.  He plundered and murdered.  And now he wants to be anointed as a peacemaker.  His presidency, like his life, has been a tragic waste.  But he at least he has a life.  There are tens of thousands of mute graves in Gaza, Lebanon, Iraq and Afghanistan that stand as stark testaments to his true legacy.  If he wants to redeem his time in office he should kneel before one and ask for forgiveness.

Chris Hedges, the former Middle East bureau chief for The New York Times and author most recently of “American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America,” can be found every other Monday on Truthdig.

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Comment Pages: «1 2 3 4 5 »

By ender, January 15 at 8:14 am #
(131 comments total)

Bush may end up as an historical scapegoat

But nothing will change just because Hillary or Osama get elected.  Guantanamo may dissapear, and torture may lose it’s “instititional status”, but our wars of aggression will continue.
Sorry if you’re sick of reading this.
The public faces of gov’t are not the true power brokers in the US.  Most are not on the ‘list of wealthiest people’ either.  Bill Gates has more influence on our national policy than you or I, but not significantly more.  Bush, Cheney, and Rummy may have been an “Axis of Evil” but neither they and the think tank kids like Rove and Libby are just tools of the old money families where money is in private businesses and trust with unclear ownership and control.
The elite most likely look at the monkeys in the White House as dumb kids just having a little fun. 
If they start WWIII, so what?  The small group of families that wield true power are so international and own enough of all of the channels of wealth, that any calamity only funnels more wealth upward.  They can’t lose.  And I suspect they get a secret pleasure in a time such as this when we are shown we are sheep with no real control of our national policy or direction.
If you think the Democrats are any different you are sadly mistaken.  They work for the same people and that ain’t you or me.
The American economy is vaporware.  We produce very little, while even food production, one of our most prolific resources, is now only part of a global supply chain that can be turned off overnight if we misbehave.  They don’t need us anymore, hence the open borders, free trade, offshoring and H-1B workers widen the gap and keep us invested in the survival of conspicuous consumerism as our national religion.
The only real threat to that elite in recent years has been Iraq engaging in oil trade in Euros vs the Dollar, and now Iran has begun to do so. The Federal Reserve issues money on an imaginary value that actually is tied to the world’s largest commodity market, Oil.  If the dollar becomes unhinged from the oil market, any intrinsic value is lost, and the emperor’s new close aren’t there anymore.
That is why the only way Iran can avoid being the ‘cause of WWIII’ is to rejoin the Dollar base oil bourse.  Saddam refused and we saw his fake execution.  The Iranian people probably won’t be so lucky.
Israel is a convenient tool to maintain the unrest in the Mideast that keeps despots in power.  We can deal with despots.  Educated, thinking humans that attempt to exercise control over their own lives are much harder to deal with.  As long as they are busy hating and scratching out an existence in ignorance, the money and power just keep flowing up.

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By JimBob, January 15 at 8:15 pm #
(67 comments total)

Re: Re: Bush may end up as an historical scapegoat

Where do you get those numbers, please?  Trillion??

Report this

By Marc Linn, January 15 at 7:42 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

History, Bush, Lincoln

If the US Government still runs the schools in 100 years or so, chances are schoolkids will be told that GW Bush was a great man who tried to save the world, etc etc ad nauseam. 

History is written by the victors, or at least those with the most guns… look at how Lincoln is held up as the savior of the black race, humanitarian, whatever. I believed this myself (went to public schools) until I began looking at some of the evidence to the contrary.

Sorry if this offends the Lincoln lovers but his record speaks for itself. Google Thomas DiLorenzo for a look at some of Lincoln’s real accomplishments.

And Lincoln isn’t really my main point here: it’s that evil routinely gets transformed into good (or at least “not really that bad") by history.

And why does this matter? Because the same stupid mistakes continue to be made, largely as a result of our “forgetting” the wretched results from the last time (and the time before that, etc etc).  Welcome to the world!

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By M Gillespie, January 15 at 7:36 am #
(5 comments total)

RdV

If you wish to be taken seriously, RdV, you’ll have to go beyond issuing rude, crude comments based on sophomoric reasoning anonymously.

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By Louise, January 15 at 7:32 am #
(761 comments total)

Afterthought:

Look at that picture.

I think the caption should be:

“President Bush, center, is restrained by two Franciscan Priests, as he determines he can and will walk on the Sea of Galilee.”

Just an afterthought. smile

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By cyrena, January 15 at 1:23 pm #
(4164 comments total)

Re: Afterthought:

Louise,

I think your afterthought is exactly on target. That’s exactly what is going on here.

It’s those flippin’ Franciscan Priests...just as bad as the Jesuits, always trying to be the humanitarians, and saving people from themselves, and ministering to the poor as well as the mentally incapacitated.

They’re just a bunch of bleeding hearts, those Franciscans. They should have let his ass walk as long and as far as he ‘thought’ he could get, right across that sea.

Now THAT would have been a true act of humanity for the world. Matter-of-fact, that would have been enough to get ME back to Mass, not to mention tripling my collection basket deposits.

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By John Borowski, January 15 at 10:03 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Re: Afterthought:

If Bush is attempting to walk the Sea of Galilee I’m praying he is a good swimmer.

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By Maani, January 15 at 9:54 am #
(1271 comments total)

Re: Afterthought:

Louise:

ROFLMAO!!

Peace.

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By RdV, January 15 at 6:23 am #
(176 comments total)

What a load of crap

“For what it may be worth, Common Dreams routinely censors--removes--comments critical of Hillary Clinton, Madeline “We think the price is worth it” Albright, and the other Clinton neocons..”

As a regular participant at CD, I know this statement is a crock. You don’t even have to read--just take a look at the photos selected to accompany articles re Hillary. I do not think CD has ever posted a promotional comment or a flattering word about any Clinton or their hanger-ons.

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By mary, January 15 at 6:01 am #
(197 comments total)

From the Undisclosed Location...

“when they saw what they could do with puppets, they opted for the ultimate one, a farting, ball scratching, nose picking moron who has been pickled in alcohol”

Cyrena, I always look for your comments, as as usual, you haven’t disappointed me. You’re always spot on!

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By SamSnedegar, January 15 at 5:31 am #
(155 comments total)

good things about the war

1. we have oil
2. we don’t have massive unemployment
3. our military reserves get far better training than “weekend warriors” used to do; in fact, a lot of them die in the process, taking the unemployment number down even farther.
4. writers make a lot of money selling books about the war which never discuss why we went to war or what would comprise winning it.

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By Ga, January 15 at 5:57 pm #
(178 comments total)

Re: good things about the war

1. At a monstrous $100.00 per barrel while the oil companies are making billions in profits.
2. But we have stagnant or dropping wages and benefits except corporate CEOs who are making millions.
3. Our reserves/national guard are fighting and dying overseas rather than helping the public during disasters here.
4. Books pro and con have been on the best-seller lists.

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By M Gillespie, January 15 at 5:31 am #
(5 comments total)

Discussed at Common Dreams?

Re: “By the way, this Truthdig article is also being discussed at CommonDreams.org at http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/01/14/6354/”

For what it may be worth, Common Dreams routinely censors--removes--comments critical of Hillary Clinton, Madeline “We think the price is worth it” Albright, and the other Clinton neocons, who, by the way, were champing at the bit to go to war against Iraq long before Cheney and Rumsfeld took advanage of the opportunity represented by the 9/11 attacks.  See: http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/9802/18/town.meeting.folo/

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By Mike Mann, January 15 at 5:21 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

The human anal sex miraculous conception named Dubya

Before Y2K there should have been a constitutional amendment in place to outlaw the offspring of a dormer president, who was ousted after 1 term, from being anywhere near the White House and the whole world would have been different as the last 7 yrs have been nothing but destruction and mayhem allowing some pampered spoiled rotten silver spoon ex-cokehead drunk selected by Daddys pals to sit in the position he has and screwup everything he touches.
Gas was 1.30 a gallon in 2000. Gas in 2008 is 3.30 a gallon and rising.
Millions of jobs have left for China and trillions have been borrowed from them by this wasteful elitist idiot who has maxed out the worlds biggest cred card like any good spoiled rotten rich punk.
Lies lies and more lies about 911 that has never been fully answered created bogus jew wars and the brave Iraquis who fought and died stopped this madman tyrant Lincolnite from continuing his pillaging although we know Iran was the next jew target and still is.
Never allow a drunk drug addict in office again. Daddy is the blame for this and should be arrested and executed.
We know Daddy wanted to make up for his loss in 1992 to the real southern peasant not the carpetbagger poser from Texas he and the Bush Crime Family ar and the fake tears he shed at the jew holohoax momorial is right on tap with the idiot this moron is and has been.
We need a new amendment to stop anymore Bush trash from entering the WH and there are many waiting in line as we know Daddy was crying because he knew Jeb was out.

Ron Paul for president.

America has been screwed.

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By Monte, January 15 at 5:02 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Awesome Article!!

Despite the spin of most of our media outlets, truthdig tells it like it is.

It is funny that the rest of the world can see us spinning out of control, but we can’t. If we attack Iran, may God forgive us and show mercy on us. Because some us of do not have the power to stop this Mad man named George Bush.

If we do not attack Iran, may God forgive us for our 60 years of support for Israel and her racists actions against her own brothers and sisters; the Palestinians.

What a terrible 8 years we have had under Bush’s run. I hope that we are able to elect a president that can restore our credibilty.

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By John Borowski, January 15 at 4:35 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

TWO TYPES OF PERSONALITIES

There are two types of personalities in this world. An example is a rapist that will rape and kill one hundred women before he is caught. When a newspaper reporter will ask the rapist does he have any remorse for his evil deed, the rapist will look quizzically at the reporter and you know what he is thinking. He probably is thinking why should I have remorse, it is the raped women that should have remorse. Another type that would rape and kill one hundred women would have a guilty conscience that would cause him to have severe nightmares. To quell the nightmares he would have to resort to religion, alcohol, or drugs. The fact that Blair changed religion from Protestant to Catholic belief (Maybe Protestant religion isn’t working) is to me very troubling. (I hope I’m not correct on this supposition)

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By Eso, January 15 at 5:12 am #
(50 comments total)

Re: TWO TYPES OF PERSONALITIES

PTSD or post-traumatic stress disorder is not a phenomenon noted only among returning soldiers. It visits many a politician, most of who--like combat veterans--turn to alcohol for a cure. Mr. Blair’s turn to Catholic belief is not likely to work, if he is indeed suffering PTSD. Most likely, he has hit the bottle. No doubt, other politicians have done so and will.

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By Shallel, January 15 at 12:24 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

You've got me rollin' !

You’ve got me rollin’ !

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By marksmanwhotakesorders, January 15 at 12:02 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

What is this?

What or who is this gloating NYT writer?  Certainly no one who is digging out the truth.  Bush has always been a puppet and someone hardly worth wasting words upon.  Those who control him will still be in power and the Constitution will still be grossly violated after he is long gone.  We likely face another rigged election, and New Hampshire, with its results “that don’t pass the smell test”, nor agree with the ballots counted by hand, sure looks like the start.

Did someone hire this guy to engage in purposeful misdirection?  And why is this piece even appearing on “Truth"dig?

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By Terry, January 14 at 10:39 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

God told bush to do

God told bush to do this, so this murder and mayhem that he has wrought was once again done in the name of religion, so I ask you bush this one simple question, and being a yale man no doubt you have the intellect to work this one out.

Can omniscient God, who
Knows the future, find
The omnipotence to
Change His future mind?

Other than that I have no strong feelings either way

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By RetiredJudge, January 14 at 10:01 pm #
(1 comments total)

This Column Is Crap

George W. Bush has been an overall good president.

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By Ron, January 16 at 5:50 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Re: This Column Is Crap

You wrote, “George W. Bush has been an overall good president.”

Right. You smoking rope? And don’t forget the other big lies - I’ll call you, the check is in the mail, this won’t hurt much and one other lie dealing with a sex-related lie involving your mouth.

What cave have you just crawled out of?

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By Pam, January 15 at 8:10 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Re: This Column Is Crap

What is crap is that you need to put down the crack pip you moron !!!!

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By David Dixit, January 15 at 4:30 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Re: This Column Is Crap

RetiredJudge (of what, one wonders ?!)
You are either stupid, demented or possibly both. George W. Bush has not been overall good at anything… and he has been very very bad at most. The world is worse off for his existence.

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By John Borowski, January 15 at 7:33 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Re: Re: This Column Is Crap

I have always wondered why a judge would spend millions of dollars for judgeship when he might be in his sixties and it would take years to make up the difference. I found out the reason years ago in a trial. I was driving up Watchung Mountain in NJ when a drunk speeding down the mountain couldn’t hold his side of the road and side swiped my car from front to back. The policeman, a lieutenant from the Watchung police came up to me and gave his name and telephone number and said this man smells from liquor and all of the debris and tire marks are well on your side of the road. At the trial the lieutenant testified for my defense and stated he has been investigating accidents for seventeen years. The woman as a passenger in the drunk’s car presented a bill that stated she spent two hundred and fifty dollars because of the accident. My lawyer presented a statement from her doctor that she paid two hundred and fifty dollars, but it was not for any accident, but it was for a woman’s change of life. The judge choose not to pass judgment in front of the people at the trial, but later in his private office. Despite the woman’s perjury for her two hundred and fifty dollar bill, I had to pay two hundred and fifty dollars to her. (A hefty sum in the sixties)

Report this

By Melissa, January 15 at 12:57 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Re: This Column Is Crap

Dude, do you live on this planet?

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By tom melton, January 15 at 12:12 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Re: This Column Is Crap

Are you deaf, and/or blind? or both? Thank you for your inane endorsement of a moron, elected by fraud, reelected by fraud, and I go, ever more disillusioned by what I gave a shit for. I will not care any more, any more, or any more. I cry, Argentina, because it is happening here in my chosen country.

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By Ron Ranft, January 14 at 11:30 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Re: This Column Is Crap

I’m glad you are retired as either you had no good sense to begin with or you lost what little you had. I cannot begin to imagine by what even delusional standards one could use to say that Bush has been a good President. I hope you saved a lot of your ill gotten gains because when the bill comes due for two illegal invasions of soveriegn countries you are going to have to pay your share. And I hope that some day soon you realize how you aided and abetted the demise of a country that held such great possibilities!

Bush needs to answer to this country for all the crimes he and his evil friends have perpetrated on the world. And it cannot come soon enough!

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By GW=MCHammered, January 15 at 8:01 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Re: Re: This Column Is Crap

Top Down-Bottom Up, one upside-down split-nation thanks to lapdog GWB. No surprise that anyone in gov’t thinks GWB has been good. Just like the private sector, time to start pulling public retirements.

Report this

By Expat, January 15 at 12:56 am #
(867 comments total)

Re: Re: This Column Is Crap

May I add my voice to your statement?

Report this

By Greg Bacon, January 14 at 9:51 pm #
(114 comments total)

What can one say about

What can one say about a sub-human life form like GW, except to say that he is a THIEF, a LIAR and a MURDERER… and a MASS MURDERER at that.

But, we musn’t be too hard on Junior. He’s just folllowing in the footsteps of his father, GH Bush and grandfather, Prescott Bush.

Poppy Bush lied us into the “Operation Desert Slaughter, Part I” with the lies about Kuwaiti babies being tossed out of incubators by those mean ol’ Iraqi’s.
He liked the money he got from Panama’s dictator Noriega, until Noriega wanted too much of the swag and had to be taken out so another US friendly bagman could take his place.

So we invaded and blew to hell Panama, all over some busted drug deals.

Grandaddy Prescott helped finance the Nazi War Machine build up prior to WW II and even kept dealing with the Nazi’s after the U.S. government passed laws that forbade Americans from dealing with the Nazi’s.

When a family fortune has its roots in the massive war crimes and deaths of WW II, what do you expect out of the heirs?

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By SamSnedegar, January 14 at 8:49 pm #
(155 comments total)

From the Undisclosed Location

Cyrena:

“...Cheney manipulates them all, so that he can run his operation in total secrecy, using these minions, (geogie, Condi the Rice, etc) as the front. And none of THEM even know what Cheney and his regime are up to...”

unless . . . HE is being manipulated by a “board of directors” comprising Carlucci, Baker, Boyden Gray, etc. I suspect these people ran Reagan and Bush1 to a greater extent than known, and when they saw what they could do with puppets, they opted for the ultimate one, a farting, ball scratching, nose picking moron who has been pickled in alcohol.

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By Eugene Hayman, January 14 at 8:06 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

you are underestimating them

Mr. Hedges, love to read your stuff and occasionally catch you on the radio.  But I am afraid you are underestimating the neocons this time-- almost impossible to do for the last 8 years, its true. 

If you have not already read it, I recommend the book Strange Alliance.  It makes the situation abundantly clear.  BushCo are simply solidifying their western flank so that they can strike to the east.  And Billions of dollars in aid and bribes is sure to buy plenty of solidification.  Once they declare that some phony “Peace Agreement” has been signed, then the Iranians better proceed in an orderly fashion to the bomb shelters.  And the rest of us better get ready for $200 per barrel oil.

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By Eso, January 15 at 3:32 am #
(50 comments total)

Re: you are underestimating them

I have been saying something like this all along. I cannot believe that they who let happen 9/11 did so to be discovered, but to have an excuse for war. The war is on its way, because fishing for it has not ended. War is a time when even an eight year long presidency can be extended indefinately, perhaps until “the war on terror is won”.

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By thebeerdoctor, January 14 at 8:01 pm #
(218 comments total)

One of the benefits of

One of the benefits of the internet is all the information and misinformation traveling around the globe at the speed of light. I once had a Christian fundamentalist inform me that fiber optics are the Devil’s tools! This of course is delightfully frustrating to the ring masters of opinion. The recent expose on the mistranslation of the Farsi language is a case in point. Deliberate mistranslations have led to thousands upon thousands of deaths. This is the NewSpeak that George Orwell could hardly imagine.

So whatever is the accepted norm: 9/11 is exactly as you have been told, George W Bush is a good Christian man, He and Tony Blair never talked about blowing up Al-Jazeera, the Iraq war would be a slam dunk cake walk, Barack Obama is the second coming, John McCain is a straight shooter and Hillary Clinton after all, really does have a heart! I think it is good to remember the two most dangerous words in this world: QUESTION AUTHORITY.

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By Iskandar Rabeendran, January 14 at 6:35 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

wow

It often feels really good to read Hedges’ articles.
Chris Hedges, you are turning into one of our most eloquent and powerful political thinkers.

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By Keith, January 14 at 4:32 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

I Still Shake My Head

I still don’t get how BushCo suckered this country two times. All this idiot did was say God, Jesus, the Bible, and fear and he said this with a straight face. Honestly, I could see how he fooled the Repugs the first time, but DAMN!!! After all that came out about the lies, lying to his base, etc. BushCo won again. I have a good friend that is part of the BushCo base and he still screams Clinton, Clinton, Clinton when asked to explain mindset re BushCo support. I bring up accountability re BushCo and then all of sudden he has to pick up his kids from school, a pipe under his sink at home just broke and he has to go, etc.

I hope the Repugs that voted to put these criminals in office really sit back and think before the vote in the election. For you Christian conservatives remember just because a candidate says God, Jesus, I’m a Christian, and/or the Bible doesn’t mean they are as religious as they say. It was later found out that BushCo used you conservatives and Bush and Rove actually called you “freaks” after they pushed your “Jesus” buttons to get your vote. So think about what you got this country into, how many died, how many got maimed, how many got tortured, etc.

Be proud Repukes!!! Be proud!!!!

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By PatrickHenry, January 14 at 4:19 pm #
(1113 comments total)

For you Howie.http://www.antiwar.com/orig/norouzi.php?articleid=11025

For you Howie.

http://www.antiwar.com/orig/norouzi.php?articleid=11025

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By Douglas Chalmers, January 14 at 2:32 pm #
(2932 comments total)

By G.Anderson, January 14: [i]"Congress

By G.Anderson, January 14: “Congress will have enough to keep itself busy for at least two decades. That’s probably how long it will take the country to clean up the mess that Mr. Bush left behind.... Quite often, a shift in political mood can result in unexpected consequences to those that were once in power...”

Actually, Congress won’t have time to pre-occupy themselves with the Bush administration’s follies, G.Anderson. One reason will be the recession but, more significantly, climate change imperatives must be finally and conclusively accepted and thoroughly addressed.

What does this mean? Well, NO MORE WARS for a start. And, what does that mean? Uhh, finally getting rid of convenient excuses and the people who tend to rely on them, cutting the military-industrial complex down to a DEFENCE FORCE ONLY and giving up the Machiavellian political agenda once and for all, dare I say.

How is this done? Genuinely TRADING for oil, accepting the value of the $US as it really is, repaying foreign debt, withdrawing military bases on foreign soil, NOT constructing a new enriched-uranium cartel, and actually seriously FOCUSSING on domestic imperatives such as health, welfare and infrastructure, etc etc.

By the way, this Truthdig article is also being discussed at CommonDreams.org at http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/01/14/6354/

And thank you to all those who kindly defended my name against the spurious attacks and distortions of the malicious Zionist agenda.

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By thebeerdoctor, January 14 at 2:49 pm #
(218 comments total)

Re: By G.Anderson, January 14: [i]"Congress

Douglas Chalmers I agree with you on NO MORE WARS. Yes there is a way out of this tunnel. But those who are engorged in this slaughter will hear nothing of the kind. That is a tragedy for the entire world.

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By steve, January 14 at 1:00 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

I agree with Louise.

I agree with Louise.  I suspect Bush will go down in history like other presidents maybe even better than most.  A good president who kept us safe during trying times.  Just look at the polls.  Looks like we haven’t really learned anything in the last seven years.  I hope I’m wrong.

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By sophrosyne, January 14 at 12:54 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Hedges is Right

A brilliant summary of the war against America conducted by the Bushies for over 7 years.  None of us are safe until he and his ideas are gone.

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By Louise, January 14 at 12:37 pm #
(761 comments total)

How will history treat Bush?

Kindly I suspect.

Look at how history treats Napoleon.
A man consumed with his own conceit. His own self love, his own larger than life vision of himself.

Driven by a need to prove to everyone how entitled he was, he crowned himself emperor, then set about destroying and killing and conquering, until he had destroyed his own military. A military that followed him to their own destruction, with unquestioning loyalty and love.

Napolion was a power hungry remnant of an imperialist conceit who managed to get a lot of people killed. Yet today he is revered as brilliant. A great leader and a military genius.

And what did France do to punish him for the damage he had done to their country and the world at large? They banished him. No real punishment. Just “go away forever” but he didn’t. He came back and tried again.

Finally the British kept him in exile, but not before he managed to get thousand’s more French and British citizens killed.

At least Napoleon had the measure of dignity to stay on the front lines with his troops. Our wannabee Napoleon, is far to cowardly to even do that.

Our wannabee Napolion will not be banished. Will not even have to answer to anyone for his crimes against the Constitution, the citizens of the United States, or the world to which he has added so much grief, suffering and chaos.

He will never feel guilt for the millions of deaths he is responsible for. He will never feel the humiliation of being asked to leave the country, leave the room. Or even shut up.

And in order to make their own greed and lust and blood-letting seem somehow worth while, somehow legitimate, the amoral will alter history. Will record Bush as some sort of great leader, no matter what the outcome of the horror he’s responsible for.

Polls tell us McCain is favored. What that says is the people in this nation are as ignorant today as they were the day Bush and his pack of liars moved into the White House.

Polls also tell us the next president will be a democrat. Pick a poll, then look at the leading candidates. A woman who when spouting policy, sounds like she’s repeating [albeit in better English] the policies of Bush. And a man who’s decided we need change, but beyond saying the word outlines very little.

Run down the list - both party’s - and what you see appears to be a complete lack of conscience, or recognition of the horror being wrought in our name. A complete lack of moral courage to say what we all know is true.

Bush and his administration should be impeached.
Bush and his administration should be tried for war crimes.

That will never happen, because the candidates and most in congress would have to face similar charges for their own complicity in, and support of his behavior.

[There are three notable exceptions - but what chance is there that a completely corrupt system will allow an honest man to become president?]

How did we fall to such a state?

Perhaps it’s because we have failed to demand punishment in the past.

Bush and his administration get away with grand theft and war crimes because they know they can. And any future president, who refuses to disavow the policies Bush and his administration and a compliant republican congress have put in place, knows the same thing. That no matter how reprehensible their behavior, they will never be made to answer for their crimes against humanity, or the Constitution, or the people of this once great nation.

Does it strike anyone besides me as slightly incredible that no one, not any member of the Bush family, not any republican politician, not Nancy or Harry, not even the Clintons feel a twinge of embarrassment for the past two Bush terms, and their association with the man?

Outrage, anger, frustration, sorrow, regret, and shear disbelief felt by so many, doesn’t even register as embarrassment among the politically elite!

Amazing!

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By Nozferatu, January 14 at 2:51 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Re: How will history treat Bush?

I don’t know...last I checked, Napolean was considered a very smart a$$hole....but still an a$$hole.  Bush...he’s not smart...but he is an a$$hole.  He may go down in history as a good prez somewhere in a history book written in a Jesus Camp but nowhere else.

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By Mark A. Goldman, January 14 at 1:34 pm #
(17 comments total)

Re: How will history treat Bush?

Both you and Chris have saved me the trouble of trying to say it better.  This might lift your spirits though, as it did mine today…
http://www.opednews.com/articles/genera_alan_mil_08011 2_twenty_five_u_s__mil.htm

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By thebeerdoctor, January 14 at 12:55 pm #
(218 comments total)

Re: How will history treat Bush?

Louise, thank you for the amazing post. You get at the core of what my outrage about all of this is: the sheer inhumanity of it all. Robert Fisk in his profound book The Great War For Civilization, points out that the world has never come to grips with the pogrom of the Armenians in 1916 Turkey. I get the feeling that the United States will continue its cruel policies without ever acknowledging that these war crimes are not just against Iraq or Afghanistan, but all humanity. Your point about the Clintons and the democratic leadership is on target. The only thing that I take comfort from is there are still people like yourself, who stand up for the truth. My only prayer is Thank You.

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By weather, January 14 at 11:58 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Israel better Pray

Nothing happens to America, because if they didn’t help engineer 9/11 - they sure as hell were the cause of it.

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By ender, January 14 at 11:35 am #
(131 comments total)

Such elegant language from our traitorous friend

Once again lil’, please remove yourself to your home nation of Israel and stop attempting to pretend you are American or have American interest at heart.  I know articles like Hedge’s and post like Chalmers that expose the Zionist minority in Israel for the war criminals they are upset you, but the cursing really shows your ignorance.  The rest of your post just show your allegiance.

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By RdV, January 14 at 11:32 am #
(176 comments total)

Is it the end of the road for the Clintons yet?

Please make it so.

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By thebeerdoctor, January 14 at 12:39 pm #
(218 comments total)

Re: Is it the end of the road for the Clintons yet?

The House of Clinton like The House of Bush will rage against the dying of their light. There is nothing quite like being in a tunnel.

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By lilmamzer, January 14 at 11:06 am #
(871 comments total)

Hedges Feeds Chalmers

By Douglas Chalmers, January 14

“Settlements” built on the blood of the dispossessed with the $$$ donated by insane multi-millionaire Jewish/Zionists in Western countries. They should be tried for their war crimes in financing such an evil thing instead.

Not a “metamorphosis” so much as a metastasis growing on the face of humanity as it seeks to look the other way. What did the Jews in WW2 Germany once say? “We said nothing.... but, in the end, they came for us”!

Chris Hedges undid his belt, unbuttoned his pants and slid them down around his ankles.
He squatted and relaxed his anal sphincter, and out came this execrable piece of shit ("The End of the Road for George W. Bush") that passes for journalism on this tin-foil-hat website.

Chalmers, you eat this stuff up. That makes you a shit-eater, but we already knew that.

Bon appetit, you coprophage.

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