Another week in Bushville

Long time readers know that I sometimes find it helpful to take a moment, particularly on Fridays, to take stock of the week that was and consider what we’ve learned about the president and his administration over the last seven days. This week seemed particularly revealing.

* The White House was warned repeatedly two years ago about the growing insurgency in Iraq, but senior officials “simply weren’t ready to pay attention to analysis that didn’t conform to their own optimistic scenarios.”

* The president was warned repeatedly before Hurricane Katrina struck that the storm posed a catastrophic threat to New Orleans and the Gulf Coast, but Bush confidently assured soon-to-be-battered state officials, “We are fully prepared.” They weren’t.

* When Bush negotiates to let a country expand its nuclear arsenal, he’s willing to overlook the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and is willing to give away the store.

* There were far more concerns about Dubai Ports World and its management of U.S. ports than the administration let on, and the “face-saving deal” for the contract isn’t quite what it seems.

* Bush is really unpopular with the country.

* Bush is increasingly unpopular with congressional Republicans.

* U.S. troops in Iraq have little use for the White House’s vision and/or rhetoric about the war.

* Halliburton can win no-bid contracts, make excessive and/or unjustified charges, but get paid anyway.

* Governors from both parties and across the country believe Bush is weakening the National Guard.

* The White House opposes independent scrutiny of its warrantless-search program, though its reasoning doesn’t make much sense.

* If you’re an oil company, the administration will let you do more drilling on public land and won’t check to see if you’re paying required royalties.

* If you’re a mining company, the administration doesn’t much care about your safety violations and, most of the time, won’t even collect fines that are imposed.

* The administration can’t quite figure out how to make its Medicare expansion program work, but in the meantime, its cracking down on seniors who import prescription medication from Canada.

It’s just a typical week in Bushville.

The levies are breaching but 38% don’t want to know it.
yet the administration is in ongoing implode mode.
What will it take to bring back common sense to government?

  • Take the last train from Bushville
    And I’ll meet you at the station
    You must be there by 4:30
    Cause the’ve sold off our great nation
    For the dough, oh, no no no
    Iraq does blow!!

    Yes they’re stealin’ in the morning
    Then they steal much more at night
    Yes we tried to give a warnin’
    Now we’ve lost our civil rights
    All for the dough, oh no no no
    Cheney’s a hoooooo!

    do do do do do do do do
    do do do do do do do do
    hope you can sleep tight

    Take the last train from Bushville
    Now I must hang up the phone
    Cause the NSA is listenin’
    And if I’m caught I will be boned
    Tortured fo’ sho’, oh no no no
    George Bush does blow!

    Take the last train from Bushville
    Take the last train from Bushville
    Take the last train from Bushville

  • Missed one. Bush defends “outsourcing’ in India. He also avoids visting the Taj Mahal, (blaming the skip on underlings) and is off like a prom dress.

    There’s something every week now, but this week has been a variety show.

  • I love this one:

    Asked about outsourcing, he replied: “People do lose jobs as a result of globalization, and it’s painful for those who lose jobs. But the fundamental question is, how does a government or society react to that.”

    God, he is such a @#$%$#@!!inG MORON!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • Great round-up, CB. Don’t forget all the conservatives who are jumping off the bandwagon of love. Isn’t Derbyshire the latest?

    And, of course, this has been a good week for Michael Brown.

    Good times, good times.

  • I’ve got to echo what Brian said – it really is something when you put them all together. Good stuff.

  • Whoa, you need to yell fore or geronimo or incoming or timber or something before you let loose with one of these Mr. CB. Man, there’s like rubble and dust all over the place. What a mess. It’s going to take forever to clean the place up.

    Great song bubba. How ’bout some verses to Ozzy’s “Crazy Train”? No rails, no worries. More coal.

  • I have received word that one of my very best students just got black-listed by the Bush Crime Family.

    First, some bragging, so you know who I’m talking about — Doug Massey got his B.A. degree at Western Washington University (majors in Sociology, Psyhology, Spanish; 4 yrs; all As except for two first-year Bs) and went on for a PhD at Princeton. He’s published 7 books and over 100 articles and is considered an expert in Demography, especially in international migration (primarily from Mexico to the US). He’s testified before numerous Congressional committees, has written for the New York Times, etc. He’s been President of the American Sociological Assocation and of the Population Association of America, is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and chairman of the Sociology Department at Princeton.

    In 2003 Doug was asked to contribute a chapter on international migration to a book to be published by the United Nations Educational, Social and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).

    Doug never received a formal letter of rejection; he was just informed through a sheepish email that the Bush-appointed representatives to the U.N. found him unacceptable. What Bush’s people objected to was not his science, but rather a series of articles critical of US immigration policies. The irony is that these took issue mainly with policies implemented during the Clinton presidency. The Bush officials were probably too stupid to realize this.

    The world would hardly have been moved by an obscure chapter in a book read by a very narrow, technical audience. Nevertheless, the Bush Crime Family brooks no independent thought or peer-refereed science. Party line or silence.

    Sounds like McCarthyism to me. Or worse, actually. Shades of Stalinism and Nazism.

  • burro–crazy train may be applicable just as it is written [comments in brackets are mine, not Ozzy’s]:

    Crazy, but that’s how it goes
    Millions of people living as foes
    Maybe it’s not to late
    To learn how to love
    And forget how to hate

    Mental wounds not healing
    Life’s a bitter shame
    I’m going off the rails on a crazy train

    I’ve listened to preachers [Pat Robertson??]
    I’ve listened to fools [George Bush or most in GOP??]
    I’ve watched all the dropouts [ W or Brownie??]
    Who make their own rules
    One person conditioned to rule and control [Cheney]
    The media sells it and you have the role [CNN/Fox/MSNBC/Howie the Ho/WaPo/Wash times/NYTimes and half the folks there??]

    Mental wounds still screaming
    Driving me insane
    I’m going off the rails on a crazy train

    I know that things are going wrong for me
    You gotta listen to my words
    Yeh-h

    Heirs of a cold war
    That’s what we’ve become
    Inheriting troubles I’m mentally numb
    Crazy, I just cannot bear
    I’m living with something that just isn’t fair

    Mental wounds not healing
    Who and what’s to blame [that’s easy to answer now]
    I’m going off the rails on a crazy train

  • Worst president ever? Could there be any doubt?

    His presidency is in a shambles by any rational
    measure, yet the media, the press, the Republicans
    and even most of the Democrats continue to delude
    themselves that it’s just politics as usual, just another
    administration not doing so well in the second term,
    dum dee dum dee dum and oh hum and who’s going
    to win the Oscars, or is it the car races or American
    Idol or that dance thing this weekend?

  • Bush’s message to the Iraq and the Republican Partry is the same.
    ” You have a the choice of Unity or Chaos.”
    Except to either case to unify under Bush’s blundering will lead to more chaos.
    Chaos brings fear which requires special measures to insure our security. The more he screws up, the more he grabs power.

  • Boy, doesn’t the Cheney hunting accident seem like ancient history?

    At the start of Bush’s second term I promised myself I would keep a diary, and record at least one BushCo outrage per day. I never got going on that project, but CB, your weekly list comes close. Any chance of putting your lists in book (or at least .pdf) form at the end of Bush’s term — so we can keep track of how much of his wreckage gets cleaned up (or made worse) by his successor?

    bubba…keep those songs coming! Good stuff.

  • this is the first time i have happened on this friday review.

    it’s a really nice idea

    i hope you’ll make it a regular feature.

    radio/televion programming has trained us to look froward to certain prgrams at certain times. i would think that the web log world would benefit from exploiting that response.

    in any event, as fast as things are moving now in the american political world,

    a wide-angled review like this helps us keep the forest in view, as well as the trees.

  • I think that Americans should be allowed to purchase prescriptions from any country. It’s their money, and they should be allowed to spend it as they see fit. Given that many other countries lack the FDA-type regulation which governs the industry here, I’m sure that over time people will learn which suppliers are safe, and the individuals who insist upon purchasing substandard merchandise will darwinate themselves. I am puzzled, however, at the number of Americans which are allowed by Canadian taxpayers to purchase medication at their state-subsidized prices. I’m also alarmed by the Canadian policy of trampling on patent rights – If a Big drug company refuses to sell them a drug at _their_ price, they declare it a generic, and allow their manufacturers to produce it. With all the research that goes into these things, if the development is curtailed we’re going to have a lot of unemployed scientists wondering why George Bush won’t give them a job..

  • The FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION has effectively nationalized the chemical component of medical therapy and morbidity prevention. But the FDA has shown it is amenable to progressive political pressure. AIDS mix-and-match cocktails of serums and laboratory chemicals have obtained a special dispensation (something like the spiritual indulgences marketed in the Holy Roman Empire during the Fifteenth Century) allowing AIDS Patients to receive certain medications without the normal double-blind testing for safety and efficacy. The problem (if problem it is) of retail reverse exporting of ethical drugs from Canada into these United States can be solved by imposing a tariff on these drugs that makes their prices equal to those prices charged in the USA.. Of course, it will not happen, because everyone knows that therapeutic chemicals are a basic human right and therefore should be given away by the wicked drug companies to anyone clutching a valid prescription from a licensed physician. And what Revenue Officer is going to incur the wrath of incensed Old Folds by enforcing this tariff at the border re-entry points? Now, my friends, the REAL medical problem in these United States consists of elderly gray-haired people livinmg far too long, taking up room and engrossing resources that could be rationally allocated to Young People, according to a Congressional Master Plan. I offer this tariff concept free of charge, for I am one of a rare Breed: I think only of Others, bless their hearts.

  • Hark asks “Worst president ever?” There’s no doubt about it.

    Plus, he’s downright dangerous. It’s all well and good for us to cite Bush’s political gaffs and general incompetence, but from an entirely non-partisan perspective, the man has CREATED more disasters than this country has seen in a long time, maybe ever.

    Jimmy Carter was condemned for his handling of the Iran hostage crisis and for high energy prices, neither of which were *created* by him. Bush has practically destroyed the military, exploded the national debt, alienated allies and much more. These are not partisan issues. They are roundly American issues.

    He is more than a clown and a loose cannon. The guy is effectively the nation’s worst enemy.

  • All 50 governors signed a letter to the president stating their opposition to any reduction in the National Guard.

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