That's it. A tired, ludicrous, irrelevant and meaningless analogy, from
the most unpopular president in American history – a despised, pathetic
wretch whose words sway no one beyond a fanatic minority of zealots –
and a cynical, profit-seeking elite — already committed to his
murderous vision. The speech will have no impact whatsoever on the
outcome of the presidential race. It tells us nothing that we don't
already know about the Bush gang's lust for war with Iran, a nation the
gang has long painted in the colors of Nazi Germany.
But because this pointless regurgitation contained a dig at the likely
Democratic nominee, Bunch calls it an act of "political treason." In
fact, in a truly remarkable – and to me genuinely shocking – outburst,
he says that Bush's tweaking of Obama in the speech was actually worse
than the Watergate scandal, the Iran-Contra scandal, and all of the
Bush Regime's own depredations in the past seven years, including the
"flagrant disregard for the Constitution, the launching of a
'pre-emptive' war on false pretenses, and discussions about torture and
other shocking abuses inside the White House inner sanctum." All of
this — crime, deceit, mass murder in a war of aggression — pales in
comparison to Bush's Knesset speech, which Bunch calls "a new low that
I never imagined was even possible."
I don't want to pick on Bunch. He seems like a nice guy, and he has
worked hard over the years in detailing some of the outrages of the
Bush Regime. But I must confess that I simply cannot comprehend the
mindset that would lead to such a statement. Bush goading Obama in an
overseas appearance is a "new low"? Worse than torture? Worse than
unrestricted spying on the American people? Worse than the subversion
of the electoral process in Watergate (not to mention the 2000 and 2004
campaigns)? Worse than running guns to the Iranian mullahs to help fund
a terrorist insurgency in Nicaragua? Worse than aggressive war launched
on false pretenses? Worse than a million people dead and more than four
million driven from their homes? What kind of moral algebra could lead
to such a conclusion? How could anything that Bush says at this point
be worse than what he has already done?
Part of it stems, I think, from the deeply ingrained and deeply
self-righteous "American exceptionalism" that characterizes most
"progressive" viewpoints. What we have here, first, is the temporary
insanity that afflicts almost all partisans during an election year, in
which the slightest perturbation on the American political scene far
outweighs any other event in moral importance. Second, there is the
upsurge of patriotic bunkum that arises during presidential campaigns,
where partisanship so often wraps itself in the robes of a violated
idealism. Witness the quivering sanctimony of Bunch's indignation (and
try not to let the humming chorus of "The Battle Hymn of the Republic"
– from, say, the soundtrack of "Doctor Strangelove" – drown out the
prose as you read):
As
a believer in free speech, I think Bush has a right to say what he
wants, but as a President of the United States who swore to uphold the
Constitution, his freedom also carries an awesome and solemn
responsibility, and what this president said today is a serious breach
of that high moral standard.
Of course, there are
differences of opinion on how America should handle Iran, and that's
why we're having an election here at home, to sort these issues out —
hopefully with respect and not with emotional and inaccurate
appeals….[Here Bunch accurately describes the hypocrisy of Bush's
remarks in respect to other American dealings with Libya and, indeed,
Iran. Then the bunkum kicks into overdrive.]
But what Bush did in Israel this morning goes well beyond the accepted
confines of American political debate. When the president speaks to a
foreign parliament on behalf of our country, his message needs to be
clear and unambiguous. Our democracy may look messy to outsiders, and
we may have our disagreements with some sharp elbows thrown around, but
at the end of the day we are not Republicans or Democrats or liberals
or conservatives.
We are Americans.
O, e pluribus unum! Let the mighty eagle soar! Yeah, we may mix it up a
little bit, but at the end of the day we are all one, we are
all….family.
One can only assume that Bunch has not been reading his own admirable
pieces for the past several years. Or anything else for that matter.
Throughout this entire decade, the public "debate" has been packed to
the rafters with fierce excommunications of Bush regime critics as
"un-American," not "real Americans," not "one of us," "traitors,"
"enemies" and so on and so forth. (My own in-box has groaned with such
messages for years. Indeed, if I had a dollar for every time I've been
told by a fellow American that I am not their fellow American, I could
probably run for president myself. At least for a week or two. I
imagine that Bunch, writing for a much larger public platform, has
gotten even more of this kind of hysterical shunning.) Yet still the
bunkum goes on:
And
you, Mr. Bush, are the leader of us all. To use a diplomatic setting on
foreign soil to score a cheap political point at home is way beneath
your office, way beneath your country, and way beneath the people you
serve. You have been handed an office once uplifted to great heights by
fellow countrymen from Washington to Lincoln to Roosevelt to
Eisenhower, and have plunged it so deeply into the Karl-Rove-
and-Rush-Limbaugh-fueled world of political destruction and survival of
all costs that [you] have lost all perspective — and all sense of
decency. To travel to Israel and to associate a sitting American
senator and your possible successor in the Oval Office with those who
at one time gave comfort to an enemy of the United States is, in and of
itself, an act of political treason.
"You, Mr. Bush, are the leader of us all." I can't say for sure, of
course, but I would bet good money that not once in the last five years
(if not longer) has Will Bunch ever felt in his heart, even for a
nano-second, that Bush is "the leader of us all." I would imagine that
Bunch, like any sentient being, has long considered Bush to be a
willfully ignorant preppy thug who cheated his way into office, where
he has gleefully spit and shat upon the Constitution, the rule of law
and all human decency. And I know for a fact – from the very post
examined here – that Bunch considers Bush a war criminal who launched
an act of aggression on false pretenses. So why does Bunch – and the
other progressives shocked at Bush's speech – engage in false pretenses
of their own? Why pretend that this bloodstained husk is some kind of
legitimate figure, and be outraged when he fails to respect the
niceties of some idealized vision of American politics, or lowers the
"dignity of his office"?
And why engage in the same kind of historical ignorance that Bush's
statement reeks of? Bunch says that Bush compared Obama to "those who
at one time gave comfort to an enemy of the United States." Presumably,
he is referring to Neville Chamberlain and others who negotiated with
Hitler before the war. But Hitler was not "an enemy of the United
States" until he declared war on America in December 1941, in
fulfillment of his military pact with Japan. Thus anyone who held talks
with Hitler prior to December 1941 was not "giving comfort to an enemy
of the United States." Yes, I know Bunch is trying to turn Bush's own
words against him, to say, "you call Obama an appeaser, but you are
committing treason yourself!" But "appeasement," though it might be
foolish or ineffectual in particular circumstances, is not treason. Nor
did Bush claim it was. And for God's sake, criticizing a political
opponent – even in the hallowed precincts of a foreign legislature – is
not treason in any sense, not even metaphorically.
And speaking of historical ignorance, should we now take up the vast
field of crime, folly, and "political destruction and survival at all
costs" that has historically characterized the "dignity of the office"
of president, which Bush has supposedly lowered? No; life is too short.
Let's leave that fascinating topic aside for now and move on.
II.
As we said, at the core of the mindset represented by Bunch's post is a
fierce partisanship disguised as idealism. To test this, let's perform
a brief thought experiment. Imagine that Barack Obama, not George Bush,
is president of the United States. Imagine that President Obama went to
Israel and spoke to the Knesset on the 60th anniversary of the nation's
founding. Imagine that upon that solemn occasion, President Obama spoke
on this wise:
"Some
seem to believe that violence, or the ever-present threat of violence,
should always be at the forefront of our dealings with those nations
with whom we have serious disagreements — as if pointing a gun at
someone's head is the best way to win hearts and minds," said Obama, in
what White House aides privately acknowledged was a reference to calls
by presidential candidate John McCain and other Republicans for
military action against Iran.
"But I believe we should
follow the insights of that great statesman and military leader,
Winston Churchill, who said: 'Jaw-jaw is always better than war-war.'
We have an obligation to pursue every possible avenue for peaceful
resolution – and pursue them in good faith, with genuine commitment and
unstinting effort – before we ever consider drawing the terrible sword
of war. History teaches us the monstrous consequences of making
violence a key instrument of national policy. We need only look at the
unspeakable evils unleashed by Nazi Germany, or the agony today in
Iraq, to see the cruel folly of opposing Churchill's abiding wisdom on
this point."
What would Will Bunch and the progressosphere have said to such a
speech? Would they have condemned Obama for "political treason," for
lowering the dignity of his office by launching a "cheap" partisan dig
at a domestic political opponent during a speech abroad? Would they
shuddered with revulsion at his invocation of Nazi Germany for
political purposes – in the Israeli parliament, of all places?
No, of course not. They would have praised his bold stance against the
warmongers back home – and the warmongers in Israel. They would have
hailed his subtle dig at McCain: "another brilliant example of the
artful blending of political pragmatism and genuine idealism that has
been a hallmark of Obama's presidency." They would have applauded his
reference to World War II: "I doubt if a single member of the Knesset
was left unmoved when Obama evoked the 'unspeakable evils' of Nazi
Germany. I know there were tears in my eyes as I watched that portion
of the speech on YouTube. That's precisely the kind of deep, learned
historical perspective – tempered always with the human touch, the
empathy toward others – that has made this president so unique." In
short, they would have lauded such a speech, if the content and speaker
had been different. It is certainly not the non-existent principle of
non-partisan presidential decorum in foreign appearances that has so
vexed them in this case.
Every time a president speaks on foreign soil – every single time, in
every administration – there is a domestic political angle somewhere in
the mix. Every time a president goes abroad and praises his own
policies or viewpoints, he is attacking his domestic critics, either
directly or by implication. There is nothing unusual or heinous about
the practice; it is inevitable, and unavoidable, if a president says
anything more than "Happy to be here" on a foreign visit. Even in the
most idealized world of ever-dignified presidents representing a
unified people who always put aside their sharp elbows and come
together in the end, Bush's flaccid rhetoric at the Knesset would not
represent a scandal or outrage of any kind.
III.
But the progressive hissy fit over Bush's speech has provided a massive
distraction from the real scandal of his appearance before the Knesset,
and his reference to Nazi Germany: the fact that this mass-murdering
wager of aggressive war would not have been standing before the Knesset
at all – if not for his own family’s extensive, and profitable,
role in the rise of the Nazi war machine.
A role which continued not only after “Nazi tanks crossed into Poland”
(where Bush family investments helped finance the concentration camp at
Auschwitz) but even after Nazi forces were killing American troops in
North Africa.
As Toby Rogers noted in
his landmark 2002 piece for Clamor magazine,
“Heir to the Holocaust,” which pulled together the vast amount of
documentary evidence of the Bush-Walker clan’s intimate and
instrumental connection to the Nazis:
According to
classified documents from Dutch intelligence and US government
archives, President George W. Bush's grandfather, Prescott Bush made
considerable profits off Auschwitz slave labor. In fact, President Bush
himself is an heir to these profits from the holocaust which were
placed in a blind trust in 1980 by his father, former president George
Herbert Walker Bush.
Throughout the Bush family's decades
of public life, the American press has gone out of its way to overlook
one historical fact – that through Union Banking Corporation (UBC),
Prescott Bush, and his father-in-law, George Herbert Walker, along with
[their business partner] German industrialist Fritz Thyssen, financed
Adolf Hitler before and during World War II.
Rogers’ article – and other pieces such as
the stories published in 2003 by John Buchanan
in the New Hampshire Gazette — provide the devastating details of this
sorry history, including the seizure of some of the Bush family’s Nazi
assets under the Trading With the Enemy Act in 1942 – and their
subsequent pulling of elitist strings to keep these genuinely
treasonous dealings out of the public eye….and even profit from them
after the war, when the family and its partners were allowed to
liquidate their share of the seized foreign assets:
Prescott
Bush received $1.5 million for his share in UBC. That money enabled
Bush to help his son, George Herbert Walker Bush, to set up his first
royalty firm, Overby Development Company, that same year. It was also
helpful when Prescott Bush left the business world to enter the public
arena in 1952 with a successful senatorial campaign in Connecticut. On
October 8th, 1972, Prescott Bush died of cancer and his will was
enacted soon after.
In 1980, when George H.W. Bush was
elected vice president, he placed his father's family inherence in a
blind trust. The trust was managed by his old friend and quail hunting
partner, William "Stamps" Farish III. Bush's choice of Farish to manage
the family wealth is quite revealing in that it demonstrates that the
former president might know exactly where some of his inheritance
originated. Farish's grandfather, William Farish Jr., on March 25th,
1942, pleaded "no contest" to conspiring with Nazi Germany while
president of Standard Oil in New Jersey. He was described by Senator
Harry Truman in public of approaching "treason" for profiting off the
Nazi war machine. Standard Oil, invested millions in IG Farben, who
opened a gasoline factory within Auschwitz in 1940.
Farish had signed a deal with the Nazis on secret patents for
synthesizing rubber. Hitler couldn't have gone to war without it. Even
after America entered the war, Farish stood by his Nazi partners and
refused to share these precious trade secrets with the U.S. government,
despite the American military's dire need for rubber.
None of this means that Bush’s grandfather was a Nazi. This is simply the way
the American elite have always functioned.
Ideology, morality, patriotism, law – all must give way to the
relentless and ruthless pursuit of wealth, and the power and privilege
and dominance wealth brings.
Prescott Bush traded with the Nazis,
even when they were killing Americans, because there was money in it.
For the same reason, his son, Prescott Jr., has long been a leading
figure in trading with the repressive communist regime in China (as
have
Dubya's brother Neil — and
Don Rumsfeld too,
for that matter.). For the same reason, Prescott Senior's other son,
George Herbert Walker Bush, and his son, George Walker Bush, have long
had extensive and intimate business ties with the violent religious
extremists in Saudi Arabia, and with a number of other tyrants
throughout the Middle East and around the world.
It seems astonishing that in a media culture in which the slightest
youthful peccadillo and most remote family history of a presidential
candidate or office-holder are exhumed and examined in microscopic
detail, the Bush family’s documented and indisputable involvement in
the rise of Hitler and his machine of aggressive war has never come to
the attention of the general public. But because such truths expose the
reality of the elites who control the commanding heights of American
society – and give the bitter lie to bubbly effusions of American
exceptionalism, to pious, comforting fantasies about unifying leaders
of us all carrying out their awesome and solemn responsibilities with
unshakeable dignity – they remain forever outside the purview of
“serious” discourse. Anything that genuinely challenges the prevailing
pieties that mask the murderous operations of empire and oligarchy must
be ignored, or mocked, scorned and marginalized (as we have seen in
the controversy over Obama’s pastor,
Jeremiah Wright). If in those very rare instances when the challenge is
too powerful to be ignored or trivialized, then it must be physically
destroyed, as in the case of Martin Luther King Jr. — or even George
Wallace, who presented a dangerous challenge to elite rule from the
right (threatening the race-based “Southern strategy” of the Nixon
campaign) and was eliminated from the national scene by the
assassination attempt in 1972 which left him crippled.
The only scandal attendant on Bush’s speech last week was the fact that
this unrepentant beneficiary of Nazi blood money – who has himself aped
the Nazis in his own policies of aggressive war, state terror and
lawless authoritarianism — was allowed to stand before a foreign
legislature and prate about freedom and liberty and “fighting evil.”
And this is just part of a larger scandal: that he has been allowed to
walk free among decent people without facing the slightest threat of
justice for his crime, enjoying what is perhaps the chief privilege of
his class – the immunity from all consequences of his malevolent
actions.
But to the progressosphere, Bush’s little indirect dig at Obama was far
more scandalous than any of this; indeed, it was a “new low” in our
national life. Of such tunnel-visioned self-delusion is our
“progressive movement” made. Afraid to speak the truth, or unable to
see it when it is in front of their eyes: no wonder the “progressives”
have been unable to stop the Regime’s monstrous crimes, or rally public
support for impeachment, or turn the tide of national policy away from
empire, dominion and injustice – a destructive tide that Obama, Clinton
and McCain are happy to keep riding to their own positions of power,
wealth and privilege.