AUSTIN -- For terrific entertainment, watch the Washington press corps
swoon over
George W. Bush. The famous charm offensive (he's calling congressmen
by cute nicknames
like "Big George") has the chatting classes producing the most priceless
gushing heard
since Newt Gingrich bestrode the political world like a colossus.
The more alert among them have noticed that the policies don't seem
to quite
perfectly reflect the charm offensive. Welcome to Dubya's World's:
Bush is a
walking definition of cognitive dissonance -- what you see is not what
you get.
Frank Rich of `The New York Times' noted that in his relentless photo
ops,
Bush has "surely posed with more black Americans than voted for him."
As Texans know, the eternal Bush photo op of the man posing yet again
with
small children of minority persuasion is always stepped up just before
he
does something awful. Like trying to knock 200,000 poor kids
off a federal
medical insurance program. This is compassionate conservatism.
Several of the swifter students in D.C. have questioned Bush's executive
order reinstituting the Reagan gag rule on women's health clinics abroad,
pointing out that the only consequence of this policy is to increase
the
number of abortions as more women are unable to get contraceptives.
The question arises: Do we think Bush realizes this and did it anyway
to pay
off the religious right, or do we think he doesn't get it? And the
answer,
as always with Bush, is . . . it's hard to tell.
No one has ever been able to figure out if he understands the consequences
of his policies. Or, as is frequently the case, if he knows his policies
are
having contradictory results.
One of the funniest weekend thumb-suckers was by Richard Berke in `The
New
York Times,' announcing to an astonished world that there are some
Democrats
who are still angry about the election. Imagine! Berke reports with
a straight face:
"This fury can be hard to detect in Washington, where, Mr. Ashcroft
aside,
every day brings more images of cheery Democrats embracing Mr. Bush."
The non-cheery Democrats include Susan Albach of Dallas, who is in the
ranks
of those who are Not Handling This Well.
"Are you in anger or depression?" I inquired.
"I'm still in denial," she announced firmly.
The really smart folks in Washington are those keeping an eye on the
numbers
-- how big is this tax cut, already at $2 trillion, going to get once
the corporate
lobbyists start porking out on it, and what's left for anything else?
The profoundly dumb people in Washington are going around saying,
"Recessions are good for you."
I love this line of argument, especially from pundits who make more
than $1
million a year. Yes, they gravely opine, recessions are part of the
business cycle
(these are the same people who were saying until last month that we
were in a
New Economy and could look forward to perpetual growth), and furthermore,
they are morally good for us. They cure irrational exuberance and hubris.
No one can deny that irrational exuberance and hubris have abounded
in recent years,
but that's not who gets punished by recessions. Last hired, first fired.
The working people who never got ahead at all in the '90s are the very
ones who
will be losing their jobs now, and the fatuous complacency with which
the prospect is
being greeted is another example of a disconnect so enormous that it's
funny.
Sort of.
But then, to quote Berke again, "This fury can be hard to detect in
Washington."
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