Feeling warmth through the bubble

The president’s trip to Vietnam wrapped up a couple of days ago, but an alert reader sent me a heads-up on this report, from the International Herald Tribune, about the “connection” Bush made with the Vietnamese people.

On Saturday, Mr. Bush’s national security adviser, Stephen J. Hadley, conceded that the president had not come into direct contact with ordinary Vietnamese, but said that they connected anyway.

“If you’d been part of the president’s motorcade as we’ve shuttled back and forth,” he said, reporters would have seen that “the president has been doing a lot of waving and getting a lot of waving and smiles.”

He continued: “I think he’s gotten a real sense of the warmth of the Vietnamese people and their willingness to put a very difficult period for both the United States and Vietnam behind them.”

Hadley is one of the Bush team’s worst spinners and, frankly, I feel a little sorry for him trying to explain this one. I don’t know how he defines “connected,” but exchanging waves from a speeding car is hardly the ideal way to get “a real sense of warmth.”

I know conservatives hate Bush-Clinton comparisons, but in instances like these, they’re quite telling.

In 2000, tens of thousands of Hanoi’s residents poured into the streets to witness the visit of the first American head of state since the end of the Vietnam War. Mr. Clinton toured the thousand-year-old Temple of Literature, grabbed lunch at a noodle shop, argued with Communist Party leaders about American imperialism and sifted the earth for the remains of a missing airman.

Bush, meanwhile, “connected” with the Vietnamese people by looking at them wave at his speeding car.

Indeed, it marks a pattern for nearly all of this president’s foreign travel. When Clinton visited India in 2000, he spent a week touring the country, “famously visiting rural villages and wowing Indian politicians during a speech before the Parliament.” When Bush visited India this year, he visited no museums, no cultural or historical landmarks, had no meaningful interaction with the Indian people, and skipped the Taj Mahal.

Similarly, in November 2005, Bush took a week-long trip through East Asia. As he barnstormed through Japan, South Korea and China, the president “visited no museums, tried no restaurants, bought no souvenirs and made no effort to meet ordinary local people.”

And in Vietnam, Bush is content to “connect” with regular people through a moving car’s window. I find it impossible to relate on a personal level, but Bush apparently just doesn’t seem interested — in anything.

Why this man asked to be a world leader, despite having little to no interest in the world, is something I will never understand.

“Why this man asked to be a world leader, despite having little to no interest in the world, is something I will never understand.” – CB

Trying to outdo his Pappy.

The man is an embarrassment. I wish it was politically possible to send him to the Hague after we impeach his ass.

  • Isn’t it obvious? Bush saw what Clinton was doing, believed him to be a commie and a pussy, and decided that not only would he, Bush, *not* do any of that stuff, but that he’d make damn sure nobody would expect it from another American leader any time soon.

    He can’t be much of a leader, but he’s sure as hell preventing anyone else from being one either. And that’s okay with him.

  • And let’s not forget Bush’s classic “connection” with the people in New Orleans, while flying comfortably above the devastated city after Katrina hit, looking out a window on Air Force One :

    “It’s devastating, it’s got to be doubly devastating on the ground.”

    Yes, as catastrophic as it was sitting in Air Force One, it had to be twice as difficult on the ground…

    This man knows nothing about human suffering, nor how to alleviate it.

  • Well, I guess we can take cold comfort in the fact that it isn’t only American voters that he avoids. His disdain for ordinary people knows no borders.

  • I, like Bush, connected with regular people on my commute this morning. In fact I had the equivalent of a deep conversation with one person when I showed him that he was numba one with me when he cut me off.

    Sorry, but it’s hard to enjoy travelling abroad when one’s head is lodged so far up one’s ass as W’s is.

  • Hadley:“If you’d been part of the president’s motorcade as we’ve shuttled back and forth,” he said, reporters would have seen that “the president has been doing a lot of waving and getting a lot of waving and smiles.”

    Translation: They were giving Bush the finger.

  • I’m sorry, I missed the obvious analogy. Bush thinks he’s a beauty queen.

    Well, he certainly inherited his mother’s beautiful mind.

  • Vietnamese are poor, funny looking people who don’t speak his language. Why should he get out of his car? He might just as well go to the Washington Zoo and walk straight through the lions den naked right before feeding time. The lions would know better than to eat his tainted ass but Shruby wouldn’t know that.

    For Shruby, it’s a jungle out there.

  • Bush really is a sad, sad little boy. You go to India (a country he has never been) and don’t see the Taj Mahal? WTF? I mean to him the rest of the world is a toy or tool. The only important things are American, in America, pay tribute to America, help America. He is intelectually incurious, so all those things that Clinton did because he actually like people and learning, are things Bush would never really do.

    And he likely does feel he connected with the people of VietNam by being in a car and having them wave at him. He only likes to shake hands and be personally friendly with those that like him, or are like him, or can give/get him something – everyone else “connects” by waving.

  • Bush did not travel as a civilian – why would anyone expect him to travel and explore as president? Like so many alcoholics, he doesn’t like change, new situations.

  • He has a black person on his cabinet because he has to, he mixes with people in America because he has to, he shakes hands with the Saudi royalty when he meets them because he has to.

    As soon as it’s something that people won’t notice, he stays well out of the way.

    When he nominated people to the Supreme Court, a lifelong position on the most powerful court, he nominated two white guys, although for some reason there was a lot of speculation that he would nominate his Mexican-American attorney-general- but it didn’t happen.

  • The man is an absolute wreck – he has put the reputation of the U.S. back decades. What come to my mind is the1958 book “The Ugly American”. The Ugly American was a description of arrogance, incompetence, and corruption. Bush has brought us back to the past. May he rot in hell.

  • “…he shakes hands with the Saudi royalty when he meets them because he has to.” – Swan

    Actually I think he enjoys the company of the members of the House of Saud. His kind of people. Ultra rich royalty.

  • Why this man asked to be a world leader, despite having little to no interest in the world, is something I will never understand.

    Uhh…money? Ensuring that he and his “friends”, you know the “have-mores”, get richer and richer?

    I think his desire to show up his Dad plays a distant second to his sheer avarice.

  • Bush IS a “sad, sad little boy.” He also is a fearful one. I think the stink of fear is really on him these days, and if his own personal torment was all that was involved, I would say it is just desserts. However, his fear is on display to the rest of the world as he supposedly represents this country. He is damaged and a disaster. Having a weak, fearful, damaged president is a big problem. I saw him “pardoning” the TG turkey this morning. He even looked fearful at that event. I think if W were to encounter my Jack Russell Terrier, the Jack, sensing Bush’s fear, would move swiftly to try to dominate him. He’s only a dog; I can just imagine the smacking of lips among world leaders…

  • Considering what “real people” said to Poppy the other day, it’s no wonder Junior won’t take that risk. He won’t even let ordinary Americans be in his presence unless they’re carefully pre-screened sycophants. Whatever happened to the Denver Four, anyway?

    And did anyone notice how rumpled Junior was in his televised meetings with the Vietnamese premier? He looked like he was just getting up from an all-night bender. Would it have killed him to at least put on a fresh tie and button his coat? Sheesh…….

  • … and even that “waving connection” was no connection, I’d stake my day’s food on 🙂

    This is a country where people show respect to elders (and that includes leaders) whether they feel it or not. It is also a communist country, where the government has more power than it does here.

    When I was growing up in communist Poland, whenever a head of a foreign state came to town, we’d get a day off school and were herded to line up along the motorcade route. There, we got things to vave with (usually little flags of our country and of the visitor’s country) and told to wave them with enthusiasm.

    All bogus. But I wouldn’t be surprised if Bush thinks he got a really warm reception from the “little people”.

  • This is pathetic. I’ve seen a couple of presidential motorcades in DC and it’s not that easy to see into the cars. And those were just moving the president (or first lady) from point A to point B in DC, pre-Sept 11th. I was once lucky enough to catch a wave from Clinton because at that time they didn’t clear the streets for miles around. But my point is I assume that in a foreign country post-Sept 11th, with a big chicken in the back seat, the limo’s very dark, very thick windows were sealed tight and the people watching were quite some distance from the cars.

    So, unless the windows to his limo were down (ha!) and/or he stuck his head out of the window (ha! squared) this means the “connection” was people waving at a long line of obviously very important cars and Bush waving back, thinking they could see him.

    That sounds about right.

    This man knows nothing about human suffering
    [Harry]

    Au contraire, he is an expert at causing it.

  • I bet Uncles Ho is spinning in the hereafter laughing his ass off at some of the pictures taken our dear president in Vietnam.

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