More
than three years still remained in George W. Bush’s presidency when it had
already collapsed by the end of 2005. The Bush revisionism industry has thus
enjoyed an unusually long period of time in
which
to plan out its action and predict their man’s comeback as a misunderstood,
unduly maligned and — dare they say it? — successful president. The opening of
the Bush museum today has opened up a flood of pent-up Bush
revisionism.
It
is worth noting that Bush did some good things during his presidency. Some of
these received due credit at the time (his education reform, his support for
treating disease in
It
is also true that Bush’s party unfortunately decided, after his presidency, that
he failed primarily by being too moderate, too compassionate, and too
bipartisan, and moved even further right since, making Bush look retrospectively
sane. At the time, some of us simply took for granted Bush’s choices to avoid
anti-Muslim bigotry and not propose enormous cuts to government programs for the
sickest and most vulnerable Americans. By the standards of the present-day GOP,
these decisions make Bush look fair-minded and even
statesmanlike.
But
the Bush revisionist project has far more ambitious aims than to merely
salvage a few specks of decency from the ruins. It aims for a wholesale
restoration, both characterologically and
substantively.
Keith
Hennessey, a former Bush aide, has written a long, wounded
attack on those of us who doubt the intellectual faculties of the 43rd
president, under the provocative headline “George W. Bush is smarter than you.”
The headline is not an exaggeration. Hennessey really means
it:
President
Bush is extremely smart by any traditional standard. He’s highly analytical and
was incredibly quick to be able to discern the core question he needed to
answer. It was occasionally a little embarrassing when he would jump ahead of
one of his Cabinet secretaries in a policy discussion and the advisor would
struggle to catch up. He would sometimes force us to accelerate through policy
presentations because he so quickly grasped what we were
presenting.
Hennessey
writes this with such conviction that the effect is stunning. Ezra Klein concedes, “I’m inclined to agree, actually.
You don’t get to be president without being pretty
smart.”
I
suppose all this hinges on what we mean by “pretty smart.” How smart do you have
to be to become a governor, or to make it onto a presidential ticket? That’s
just one step away from becoming president, but I wouldn’t call Sarah Palin
“pretty smart,” at least not by the standards that ought to apply to a job like
president. If you’re talking about a bunch of people you knew from high school,
then sure, maybe you’d say Bush or Palin were pretty
smart.
But
if we’re defining intelligence as an ability to grasp public policy issues, to
synthesize information in a coherent way, I would not call George W. Bush
“pretty smart.” All the public evidence available to us shows a man who thinks
in crude, simplistic slogans. Bush did suffer a lot of ridicule for his speaking
flubs. But I don’t think awkward speaking was the problem. His way of discussing
policy bore all the hallmarks of a highly simplistic mind. Here he is trying to
explain himself on foreign policy:
If
you like and sympathize with Bush’s program, you might find some deeper
intelligence there. I see only evidence of a man who not only lacks the ability
to think analytically but disdains the very notion of
it.
One
defense of Bush, offered by less sycophantic figures like David Brooks, is that the man on public
display is a far dumber version of the real thing. This is fairly hard to
believe, but it is also at odds with a fair amount of indirect
evidence.
Former
administration figures like John O’Neill and John DiIulio have painted a
disturbing picture of Bush as closed-minded and simplistic. (“The incurious President
was so opaque on some important issues that top Cabinet officials were left
guessing his mind even after face-to-face meetings.”) Richard Perlerecalled, after briefing Bush, that “he
didn’t know very much.” Bush didn’t seem to grasp his own limitations —
insisting that Sweden didn’t have an army, and holding to his position even when told he was thinking of
Switzerland:
One
congressman -- the Hungarian-born Tom Lantos, a Democrat from
''I
don't know why you're talking about
Lantos
paused, a little shocked, and offered a gentlemanly reply: ''Mr. President, you
may have thought that I said
Bush
held to his view. ''No, no, it's
When
Bush first appeared on the political scene, and especially during the apparently
successful first couple of years of his presidency, his defenders swatted away
questions about his mental acuity by pointing to his success. If he’s so dumb,
how has he achieved so much? Well, he didn’t. He oversaw a disastrous
administration for precisely the reason his critics always grasped: Bush was an
intellectual simpleton, a man who made up his mind in absence of the facts, who
swatted away inconvenient realities as
annoyances.
So
the main question hanging over Bush is his record itself. The most useful
defense of the Bush record is probably Jennifer Rubin’s — useful because it is so slavish and so
crude it inadvertently exposes all the catastrophic weaknesses in the Bush
record that more clever defenders have usually learned to tiptoe
around.
Rubin
begins by citing rising approval ratings for Bush in his absence from office
from which she infers, “Bush, like so many other presidents, can be judged best
with the passage of time.” Actually, a basic rule of public opinion is that
removing oneself from partisan controversy is a nearly foolproof way to enjoy
high approval ratings. That’s why first ladies (at least when they stay out of
politics) enjoy high approval ratings. It’s why Jimmy Carter has seen his
approval rating soar up into the mid-60s. Unless Rubin
wants to defend the proposition that Carter, too, is properly viewed more
accurately with the passage of time.
Rubin
praises Bush for enacting the “fiscally sober” Medicare prescription drug
benefit, unlike the “exorbitant program like Obamacare.” She seems genuinely
unaware that Bush financed his benefit entirely through deficit spending, while
Obama had to pay for Obamacare by finding spending cuts and higher taxes. She
praises Bush’s program as “popular” and Obama’s as “unpopular,” which is true,
largely because Obama had to do the unpopular thing of paying for the benefits
he created while Bush did not.
The
core of Rubin’s defense is that Bush was terrific if you exempt him from any
blame for the disasters that occurred during his presidency, and credit him
entirely for the non-disaster periods. This sentence is a particular
masterpiece: “Unlike Obama’s tenure, there was no successful attack on the
homeland
after
9/11.” In fact, it is not true — there were small terrorist attacks on the
Likewise,
Rubin touts “7 1/2 years of job growth and prosperity.” When you’re evaluating a
president who served for eight years, you should be suspicious of phrases like
“7 ½ years.” Why pick that time frame? Apparently Rubin is chopping off the
recession of 2001, which Bush defenders have always, not unfairly, blamed on
conditions that preceded him. She is also chopping off the recession of 2008,
which is harder to justify given the previous
decision.
So
the claim here is that, between the two recessions that began under Bush, we
were not in a recession. But the period between the two recessions was a giant
housing bubble. And even if we ignore that fact, absolve Bush for the first
recession because it came at the beginning of his term, absolve him for the
second recession because it came at the end, and absolve him for the bubble that
he did nothing to deflate, the fact remains that the job and income growth
during that middle period was extraordinarily and historically
weak.
If
you want to look kindly on Bush’s presidency, you can fairly say that, while he
deserves significant blame for ignoring warnings of an
The failures of Bush’s governing method — the staffing of hacks and cronies, the disdain for evidence — was perfectly reflected in the outcomes. The Bush presidency was a full disaster at home and abroad, and whatever small accomplishments that can be salvaged barely rate any mention in comparison with the failures. The general reckoning of Bush is not too harsh. It is too kind.
In 1970, seven Southern Resident orca whales were captured in the notorious Penn Cove roundup in Washington’s Puget Sound to be sold into the entertainment industry for display.
The violent roundup, and subsequent coverup of orcas and calves who died and had their bodies weighted down to keep them hidden and avoid having them counted in the “take,” caused public outrage and led to the passage of the Marine Mammal Protection Act in 1972, which bans the capture of marine mammals in U.S. waters and it’s not hard to see why.
You can hear haunting cries in the video below, as the orcas are rounded up and separated. Even some who participated still regret what they’ve done.
By 1987, all of the 45 orcas who had been kidnapped from their families in the wild had died in captivity except for Lolita. She has spent more than 40 years in an unacceptably (and illegally) small tank at the Miami Seaquarium where she has been entertaining curious onlookers. She has been alone since 1980, when her companion Hugo committed suicide by ramming his head into the tank wall, which caused an aneurysm.
Animal advocates have been fighting for Lolita’s freedom for decades and have finally had some success with an announcement from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) that it has accepted a petition filed by the Animal Legal Defense Fund, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals Foundation, the Orca Network and individuals to extend Endangered Species Act protection to Lolita.
The Southern Resident orcas, which include three distinct pods (J, K and L) that live in Puget Sound, the Strait of Georgia and the Strait of Juan de Fuca, were listed as endangered in 2005. As of now, there are only 84 of these orcas in the wild.
Lolita is from the L-pod and, and according to the Orca Network, she still calls out in the unique language used only by her family members. She remembers.
The Orca Network’s co-founder and president Howard Gannet told the Times Colonist that it’s a step in the right direction, but noted that it’s only one of many hurdles in the battle for Lolita’s freedom. He added that if she is successfully listed, it’s likely she would be freed.
“They can’t hold a member of an endangered species captive for business reasons,” he said.
However, Brian Gorman, spokesman for the NMFS in Seattle said that it may not mean her freedom, and may only result in other actions such as making improvements to her living conditions.
In the event that she does get her freedom, there is an extensive retirement plan in place for her new life in the Pacific. Some argue that she may suffer a similar fate to Keiko, but unlike Keiko, Lolita still has family in the wild. There are believed to be at least six Southern Residents still alive who were at the Penn Cove roundup, one of whom may be her mother.
At the very least, Lolita’s advocates hope she will be returned to a sea-pen on San Juan Island, where she will at least be able to hear the calls of her pod and communicate with them. Her advocates hope she can be reintegrated into the wild, but if she is unwilling or unable to go back, they will provide care for her indefinitely.
Any decisions about Lolita’s future are still a long way off. The NMFS has until the end of next January to decide if the petition is warranted, and if they do their decision will be followed by a public comment period.
However, there is a conflicting petition that seeks to remove all ESA protection from the Southern Residents, which will be decided in August.
TAKE ACTION!
Please sign the petition supporting Lolita’s freedom.