A typical week

I’ve marveled, on more than one occasion, about the series of scandals tied the Bush administration. But we’ve reached an interesting point in Bush’s presidency in which serious controversies, some of which point to possible crimes, have become so common, they hardly cause any excitement at all. It’s become routine to see a half-dozen stories or more in any given week, each pointing to significant improprieties, that hardly raise an eyebrow anymore.

Following up on an observation TNR’s Franklin Foer raised earlier this week, consider these news items from the last seven days:

* The Justice Department overruled career civil rights attorneys who unanimously concluded that Tom DeLay’s re-redistricting scheme in Texas violated the Voting Rights Act.

* The Bush administration skewed the data of a pollution study to help advance the president’s “Clear Skies” initiative.

* The FBI has reopened an inquiry into how the Bush administration came to rely on forged documents linking Iraq to nuclear weapons materials as part of its justification for the invasion.

* The State Department has been using political litmus tests to screen private American citizens — creating a de fact blacklist of banned scholars — before they can be sent overseas to represent the United States, weeding out critics of the Bush administration’s Iraq policy

* More documents were released further revealing the administration’s failure to adequately respond to Hurricane Katrina.

* Congressional investigators found “serious lapses” in the way in which HUD responds (or in this case, doesn’t) to complaints about housing discrimination.

* And, of course, the White House is still up to its ears in the Plame scandal.

And yet, no one’s looking back at the last seven days and thinking, “Wow, Bush had a really rough week.” It’s just normal. Scandal, controversy, investigation, manipulation … it hardly generates a shoulder shrug.

Welcome a typical week in Bush’s America.

I have to give them credit for having their thievery down to a science– no one really notices because it’s their MO. But somehow they manage to stay afloat anyway, no talk of impeachment, etc.

  • I just read an article today where Chinese authorities surrounded a rural village and opened fire on the residents, killing several.

    Their crime? Protesting the government using their land for a wind energy farm without their consent.

    Compared to that, we have it pretty easy. But how often has the administration already wished it could do the same to the more annoying members of our society? Just wondering.

  • Yeah, well, maybe we should just give up and
    start hammering away at Bill Clinton. Folks
    out my way (Idaho) are still pretty riled up
    about that guy. Shoulda seen one of the
    letters to our major newspaper this week.
    The guy went apoplectic about his lying
    about an affair, after telling us to stop
    whining about Bush.

  • * The State Department has been using political litmus tests to screen private American citizens — creating a de fact blacklist of banned scholars — before they can be sent overseas to represent the United States, weeding out critics of the Bush administration’s Iraq policy

    I’m better informed than your average citizen, but I missed this one. I wonder the about the distribution of the percentage of people that have heard about each story. It’s hard to see a pattern if you are unaware of the dots.

  • Nice job with this list. Most of these did seem to slip through the MSM’s deserving glare. I think it would be very informative and helpful, if not downright depressing, if you would consider making this “The Week in Scandal” list a regular feature. I know a lot of my friends and family check out Democratic Underground’s Top 10 Conservative Idiots list every Sunday night. Perhaps you might do the same with a conservative scandal tracking feature every Friday or Saturday?

  • Nice work, as always, CB…once again you’ve distilled the big picture for your readers.

    What struck me about the list is that almost anyone of these outrages could have led the evening news back in the day…now, it’s just one of a number of countless outrages…it’s mind-numbing how the Bush crowd has debased government…

  • Well, it sounds like the Bush Administration has managed to silence Bill Clinton by preventing him from speaking at the Kyoto Protocols Conference in Montreal. One more citizen denied his or her rights. The people of Idaho, at least, will be happy.

  • Hey Rege,

    I got a way “to connect the dots.” Have Howard Dean direct the DNC to create a de facto litany of indictments of the abuses of the public trust by the Bush administration. It would take millions of dollars, a gaggle of lawyers, and a large tribe of googling monkeys–and in the end, produce a tome larger than the yearly federal budget document. But damn it, the Democrats would have database to club the daylights out of the Republicans in 2006 and 2008.

  • CB – I think this would be a good piece to do once a week; a quick summary of everything happening.

  • Comments are closed.