"Mistakes were made"...says it all. What it does NOT say tells us even more. How about: "I made a mistake". A Bush Administration official actually admitting weakness? Uh...no. There's a common thread that Frank Rich hits on the head: The Bush Administration hurt this country badly by giving away legitimate government administrative positions to people who don’t know a Goddamned thing about running an administration, or are actually ideologically in opposition to the administrative position.
What’s being lost in the Beltway uproar is the extent to which the lying, cronyism and arrogance showcased by the current scandals are of a piece with the lying, cronyism and arrogance that led to all the military funerals that Mr. Bush dares not attend. Having slept through the fraudulent selling of the war, Washington is still having trouble confronting the big picture of the Bush White House. Its dense web of deceit is the deliberate product of its amoral culture, not a haphazard potpourri of individual blunders.
We are in a perfect storm of an incredibly corrupt administration caught with its pants down and a pretty much worthless press. Did anyone notice today how the Blue Angel pilot crash became the only news story for about 10 hours? Why not three days? Because they probably focused grouped it and people don’t really want to hear CNN announcer read the airspeed of an F-18 off of Wikipedia while watching stock footage. That said, the sort of random event channel that cable news media has become is now a total fraking irrelevant bore. Listening to them prattle on today about " the high performance F-18 Hornet and the extreme discipline of our finest aerobatic pilots" sounded like it was being read off of a Leni Riefenstahl script. This, the Gonzales Affair and what it reveals to us about our so called government was totally missing.
Mr. Gonzales’s politicizing of the Justice Department is a mere bagatelle next to his role as White House counsel in 2002, when he helped shape the administration’s legal argument to justify torture. That paved the way for Abu Ghraib, the episode that destroyed America’s image and gave terrorists a moral victory. But his efforts to sabotage national security didn’t end there. In a front-page exposé lost in the Imus avalanche two Sundays ago, The Washington Post uncovered Mr. Gonzales’s reckless role in vetting the nomination of Bernard Kerik as secretary of homeland security in December 2004.
Mr. Kerik, you may recall, withdrew from consideration for that cabinet post after a week of embarrassing headlines. Back then, the White House ducked any culpability for the mess by attributing it to a single legal issue, a supposedly undocumented nanny, and by pinning it on a single, nonadministration scapegoat, Mr. Kerik’s longtime patron, Rudy Giuliani.
This was a junta. A coup d’etat. A scam. We were taken over by a vast right wing conspiracy to roll back the Bill of Rights and criminalize abortion, and open permanent bases in Iraq. They had to put political operatives in place to effect this massive change that now has America detaining and torturing people. But the cronyism stinks. It’s so obvious and the friends of the Bushes are so obvious in over their heads. It permeates every cabinet position, every EPA, FDA, every department, every part of the Pentagon, every advisor, every official record and damn near every public media outlet.
This is the damage that will have to be repaired ASAP. But it will have to wait for a Democratic administration. And even that may take years.
Had Iraqi reconstruction, like the training of Iraqi police, not been betrayed by politics and cronyism, the Iraq story might have a different ending. But maybe not all that different. The cancer on the Bush White House connects and contaminates all its organs. It’s no surprise that one United States attorney fired without plausible cause by the Gonzales Justice Department, Carol Lam, was in hot pursuit of defense contractors with administration connections. Or that another crony brought by Mr. Wolfowitz to the World Bank was caught asking the Air Force secretary to secure a job for her brother at a defense contractor while she was overseeing aspects of the Air Force budget at the White House. A government with values this sleazy couldn’t possibly win a war... As the cover-up unravels and Congress steps up its confrontation over the war’s endgame, our desperate president is reverting to his old fear-mongering habit of invoking 9/11 incessantly in every speech. The more we learn, the more it’s clear that he’s the one with reason to be afraid.
Frank Rich talks about the funerals Bush attends: Virginia Tech, and funerals he misses: Iraq veterans. It’s shameful and embarrassing, and worrisome that it isn’t more obvious to everyone. This cronyism is a cancer. Metastasizing in front of us.
Link here: http://select.nytimes.com/...