Moving Ahead With
Courage and What?
On the State of the Union: Once again,
Bush lies, integrity dies
February 8 2005
Counterbias.com
Steve Horowitz
Did George Bush just say honesty? In a State of the Union speech
so loaded with lies that flies are buzzing around my TV?
And I'm not sure because I was in the bathroom vomiting, but did he
just announce the invasion of Iraq?
I liked how he took a moment, just a brief moment -- almost an
aside, really -- to extend a hearty and compassionate "screw you" to
homosexuals by reaffirming his support for a gay marriage amendment.
He also bragged that the economy has added 2.3 million new jobs,
bringing us almost to where we were when he took office. Hey, no
harm, no foul.
But the nadir of a 54-minute low point was when Bush used the
parents of a dead Marine to try to convince us that the 1,440-plus
Americans who've died in Iraq were "defending our freedom." That guy
didn't die defending
me from anything. He died so a pampered rich kid -- a deserter, no
less -- could feel less inadequate as a son and as a man.
Pointing out those grieving parents was the kind of cynical
manipulation that we should be used to from Bush by now, but it
still shocks.
Then he came to Social Security. And the cynicism blew through the
House like a tsunami, wiping away all vestiges of principle and
responsibility.
Here's an actual line from the speech, intended to alert us to the
dire consequences if we don't drastically alter a system that's
worked superbly for seven decades: "In the year 2027, the government
will
somehow have to come up with an extra $200 billion to keep the
system
afloat."
Left unsaid: That's what we're paying to invade and occupy Iraq.
So somebody tell me -- is $200 billion a lot or a little? Bush tells
us it's a small price to pay so Iraqis can vote without knowing the
candidates. And he says $400 billion deficits, year after year, is
nothing to get worked up about. But it's a crisis -- Social Security
will "collapse" (his term) -- if we have to dig up $200 billion in
22 years? What idiot would believe that?
Oh -- American idiots. A CBS News poll taken right after the speech
shows that 80 percent of their sample approved of what Bush said.
This after Dan Rather introduced a report just three hours earlier
about how the United Kingdom's 20-year pension privatization effort
-- similar to what Bush is suggesting -- has been a failure, with
beneficiaries receiving about half what they would had Maggie
Thatcher not tampered with the system.
But here's the funny part: The Brits are looking hard at fixing
their mistake and re-reforming their system. And they're using our
Social Security as a model.
"We have to move ahead with courage and honesty, because our
children's retirement security is more important than partisan
politics," Bush said last night. He's moving with courage, all
right. It does take a type of courage to lie so brazenly to so many
about so much.