Saturday, September 03, 2005

BUSH REGIME BRINGS THE ART OF SPIN TO NEW HEIGHTS (DEPTHS)-- ORWELL MUST BE ROLLING OVER...

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If you've never read George Orwell's classic book, 1984, and never came across the term "Newspeak," you might be missing some of the irony in the way the Bush Regime and its apologists approach objective reality. Newspeak, which Orwell wrote an essay about in an appendix to his masterpiece, went far beyond old-fashioned "lying" in an attempt to make thought that was subversive to the totalitarian order impossible. When I typed in "Orwell" + "Newspeak" into Google just now, I came up with 58,000 articles. You'd be better off reading the book-- since the Bush Regime seems to use it as a game-plan-- but it'll take 15 minutes on Google for you to become an expert. Of course, if you follow the Bush Regime's pronouncements and propaganda, you already are an expert. Yesterday the Associated Press ran a report by Ron Fournier that startled me with its clear and unvarnished examination of how the Bush Regime uses language to lie and distort reality. The title is NEWSVIEW: RHETORIC NOT MATCHING REALITY. If Howard Kurtz wasn't the biggest Bush Regime ass-kisser on CNN his weekend program would be a look into the Fournier article. But since he is, here's the article itself:


The Iraqi insurgency is in its last throes. The economy is booming. Anybody who leaks a CIA agent's identity will be fired. Add another piece of White House rhetoric that doesn't match the public's view of reality: Help is on the way, Gulf Coast.
As New Orleans descended into anarchy, top Bush administration officials congratulated each other for jobs well done and spoke of water, food and troops pouring into the ravaged city. Television pictures told a different story.
"What it reminded me of the other day is 'Baghdad Bob' saying there are no Americans at the airport," said Rich Galen, a Republican consultant in Washington. He was referring to Saddam Hussein's reality-challenged minister of information who denied the existence of U.S. troops in the Iraqi capital.
To some critics, President Bush seemed to deny the existence of problems with hurricane relief this week. He waited until Friday to acknowledged that "the results are not acceptable," and even then the president parsed his words
Republicans worry that he looks out of touch defending the chaotic emergency response.
"It's impossible to defend something like this happening in America," said former House Speaker Newt Gingrich.
"No one can be happy with the kind of response which we've seen in New Orleans," said Republican Gov. Mitt Romney of Massachusetts.
Bush got himself in trouble by trying to put the best face on a horrible situation. The strategy is so common in Washington that operatives have a name for it, "spin," and the Bush White House has perfected the shady art.
This is what the president had to say about the relief effort earlier in the week:
-"There's a lot of food on its way, a lot of water on the way, and there's a lot of boats and choppers headed that way."
-"Thousands have been rescued. There's thousands more to be rescued. And there's a lot of people focusing their efforts on that."
-"As we speak, people are moving into New Orleans area to maintain law and order."
Technically, the president may have been right. Help was on the way, if not fast enough to handle one of the largest emergency response efforts in U.S. history. But the words were jarring to Americans who saw images of looters, abandoned corpses and angry, desperate storm victims.
It was worse when he was wrong. In one interview, Bush said, "I don't think anybody anticipated the breach of the levees." In fact, many experts predicted a major storm would bust New Orleans' flood-control barriers.
One reason the public relations effort backfired on Bush is that Americans have seen it before.
On Iraq alone, the rhetoric has repeatedly fallen far short of reality. Saddam had no weapons of mass destruction. The mission wasn't accomplished in May 2003. Most allies avoided the hard work of his "coalition of the willing." And dozens of U.S. soldiers have died since Vice President Dick Cheney declared that insurgents were in their "last throes."
Bush often touts the health of the U.S. economy, which is fair game because many indicators point in that direction. But the public doesn't share his rosy view. The global economy had most Americans worried about job and pension security even before rising gas added to their anxieties.
Bush's spokesman said anybody involved in leaking the identity of a CIA agent would be fired, but no action has been taken against officials accused of doing so.
The president himself promised to fully pay for his school reform plan and strip pork-barrel spending from a major highway bill. The school money fell short. The pork thrived.
The list goes on. But this didn't start with Bush. Former President Clinton certainly had his rhetoric vs. reality problems. Indeed, most politicians do. At some point, however, the spin can take a toll.
Bush crafted a reputation as a blunt-speaking, can-do leader from his response to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Five months later, about three-fourths of Americans viewed him as honest.
But his trust rating dropped gradually to a slim majority by the 2004 election year and remained at the mid-50s through the early part of 2005. In August, an AP-Ipsos poll showed 48 percent of respondents considered Bush honest, the lowest level of his presidency.
Americans like straight-shooters, especially in an era that has seen vast failures by government and social institutions. People are witnessing another institutional failure in the Gulf Coast, and Bush reluctantly acknowledged it Friday.
"This is a storm that's going to require immediate action now," he said. Few would disagree.

Fournier makes some valuable observations and points out, politely, that Bush is a lying sack of shit and that lying-sack-of-shitism is the official policy of his regime, a regime, afterall, built on stealing an election in Florida and a re-election in Ohio. NOTHING that Bush or his inner cadre assert can ever be believed. All honest men and women, like Bush's first EPA head, former Gov. Christie Whitman, John DiIulio, his director of the White House Office Of Faith-based and Community Initiatives, and his first Secretary of the Treasury, Paul O'Neill, have fled with their integrity from Bush's employ, leaving only the sycophants and criminals. Diluilio characterized Bush's regime as a bunch of Mayberry Machiavellis and Whitman and O'Neill both wrote books-- respectively, IT'S MY PARTY TOO: THE BATTLE FOR THE HEART OF THE GOP AND THE FUTURE OF AMERICA and THE PRICE OF LOYALTY-- that are highly critical of the inherent dishonesty that permeates every facet of the regime. When Americans look back at the deprecations of this regime they will never be able to claim they weren't warned. Like Hitler's adoring, enabling German masses, Americans knew and Americans will bear the responsibility for what Bush has done (to them and to others around the world). Democratic "leaders" like the Clintons, the 2 reactionary Joes-- Lieberman and Biden-- and the whole DLC bear much of the burden of guilt for the disasters Bush's regime is creating. These Democrats are craven, cowardly careerists with little regard for Truth or for the welfare of our nation and they deserve the same fate as the members of the Bush Regime for whom they provide cover.

1 Comments:

At 8:04 AM, Blogger DownWithTyranny said...

An editorial in yesterday's INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE about the Bush Regime's poisonous attitude (and illegal actions) toward whistle-blowers should go hand in hand with an understand of the Regime's policy about Newspeak (as well as out-and-out lying).

BANISHED WHISTLE-BLOWERS

The New York Times
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2005

The Bush administration is making no secret of its determination to punish whistle-blowers and other federal workers who object to the doctoring of facts that clash with policy and spin. The blatant retaliation includes the army general sidelined for questioning the administration's projections about needed troop strength in Iraq, the Medicare expert muted when he tried to inform Congress about the true cost of the new prescription subsidies and the White House specialist on climate change who was booted after complaining that global warming statistics were being massaged by political tacticians.
 
We agree with critics like congressman Rahm Emanuel, Democrat of Illinois, who has tracked a long list of abused federal workers who should be applauded, not penalized, for their dedication. The latest victims include Bunnatine Greenhouse, a career civilian manager at the Pentagon. She was demoted from her job as the top contract overseer of the Army Corps of Engineers after she complained of irregularities in the awarding of a multibillion-dollar no-bid Iraq contract to a subsidiary of Halliburton, the Texas-based oil services company run by Dick Cheney before he became vice president.
 
Greenhouse made complaints internally, then publicly, describing the contract as "the most blatant and improper contract abuse I have witnessed." Recently, Greenhouse was ordered removed for "poor performance," just as unfairly as the administration forced out Lawrence Greenfeld as director of the Bureau of Justice Statistics. Greenfeld's sin was to stand fast against senior political appointees intent on watering down a study's finding that blacks and Hispanics were subject to more searches and force in police traffic stops.
 
Damage control is a political hallmark of any administration. But the Bush team is taking it to the most destructive extreme.
 

 

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