Re: The Lord of the Rings

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anyone know who wrote this?


=================================



President Bush will get his $87 billion for a year's worth of victory in 
Iraq and Afghanistan, but he will have to endure a lot of nyah-nyah-nyah
and 
I-told-you-so along the way. He could have avoided all this
irritationóand 
he is just the kind of man to find it incredibly irritatingówith two
little 
words in his TV address last Sunday evening: "I'm sorry." If he had 
acknowledged with a bit of grace what everyone assumes to be trueóthat
the 
administration was blindsided by the postwar challenge in both these 
countriesóthis would have cut off a politically damaging debate that
will 
now go on through the election campaign. And he would have won all sorts
of 
brownie points for high-mindedness. Instead, he and his spokesfolk will
be 
defending a fairly obvious untruth day after day through the election 
campaign.

Why do politicians so rarely apologize? Why in particular won't they
admit 
to being surprised by some development? Lack of scruples can't explain
it: 
Denying the obvious isn't even good unscrupulous politics. For that
reason, 
it is beyond spin. If spinning involves an indifference to truth, what's 
going on here looks more like an actual preference for falsehood. The
truth 
would be better politics, and the administration is fanning out to the
talk 
shows to lie anyway.

This is not meant to be a partisan observation. Bush's predecessor was,
if 
anything, a more flamboyant liar. What's going on here is something like 
lying-by-reflex. If the opposition accuses you of saying the world is
round, 
you lunge for the microphone to declare your passionate belief that it
is 
flat. Or maybe it has something to do with the bureaucracies that
political 
campaigns have become. The truth, whatever its advantages, is messy and 
out-of-control. A lie can be designed by committee, vetted by
consultants, 
tested with focus groups, shaped to perfection. Anyone can tell the
truth. 
Crafting a good lie is a job for professionals.

This $87 billion request is a minefield of embarrassments, through which
a 
simple "We got it wrong" would have been the safest route. After all,
Bush 
either knew we'd be spending this kind of money for two or more years
after 
declaring victoryóand didn't tell usóor he didn't realize it himself.
Those 
are the only two options. He deceived us, or he wasn't clairvoyant in
the 
fog of war. Apparently, Bush would rather be thought omniscient than
honest, 
which is a pity, since appearing honest is a more realistic ambition. 
Especially for him.

What's more, this would have been a truth without a tail. Telling one
hard 
truth can lead you down, down, down into a vicious circle of more truth, 
revelation, embarrassment, and chagrin. That's one reason for the
truth's 
dangerous reputation. But the Bush administration's failure to realize
how 
much its postwar festivities would cost is a truth that doesn't lead 
anywhere in particular. Clearly knowing about the $87 billion bill for
Year 
2 would not have stopped Bush from conducting the war to begin with. Nor 
would this knowledge have stopped opponents from opposing it. Among 
supporters, there may be a few people who bought Bush's initial 
war-on-terrorism rationale, didn't mind the bait-and-switch to his
revised 
freedom-and-democracy rationale, reveled in the military victory, and
yet 
would have opposed it all if they'd known about the $87 billion. But it
is 
an odd camel whose back is broken by this particular straw.

Bush needs some truth-telling points, because another aspect of this $87 
billion request is driving him to dishonesty that he can't abandon so 
blithely. That issue is: If he gets the $87 billion, where will it have
come 
from? Bush is sending Colin Powell around the world with a begging cup.
But 
whatever can't be raised from foreigners apparently can be conjured out
of 
thin air.

Raising taxes to pay the $87 billion would be a bad mistake, Bush says: 
Economic growth?fed by tax cuts?will cover the $87 billion and then
some. 
But however miraculous Bush's tax cuts turn out to be, economic growth
will 
not be $87 billion more miraculous just because that much more is
suddenly 
needed in Iraq and Afghanistan. Nor does Bush plan, or even concede the 
necessity, to harvest this $87 billion at some point by raising taxes
(or 
not cutting them) by that amount. And although he talks vaguely about 
spending restraint, he and the Congress controlled by his party have
shown 
very little of it. He certainly has not pinpointed $87 billion in other 
spending that the new $87 billion can replace.

So, spending $87 billion costs nothing, apparently. This makes it even 
sillier to deny being blindsided. What difference does it make?

While apologizing to the citizenry, Bush could win even more brownie
points, 
at almost no cost, by apologizing specifically to his predecessor. Bush 
ridiculed Bill Clinton's efforts to follow up military interventions
with 
"nation building." Believe it or not, this was a pejorative term,
implying 
unrealistic ambitions. Now Bush talks about turning Iraq into a
Jeffersonian 
democracy.

And if Bush wants credit for a Gold-Star Triple-Whammy Zirconium-Studded 
apology, he should apologize to his father, who stopped Gulf War I at
the 
Iraqi border. Armchair Freudians believe that in going to Baghdad and 
toppling Saddam, George II was playing Oedipal tennis with George I. If
so, 
junior has lost. The elder Bush's most notorious decision as president
looks 
better every day. And not just because of the $87 billion.


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