The principles we can betray, when we are scared.
Thursday, January 15, 2009
History `last refuge of the failed president’
By Leonard Pitts, Jr.
lpitts@miamiherald.com
History. We don’t know. We’ll all be dead.” - George W. Bush
Dear President Bush:
I am glad you are, at 62, still a relatively young man. I am glad you are in robust health. This means there is a good likelihood of your being with us for decades yet to come, and I dearly want that. You see, history’s verdict is on the way, and I want you to see it for yourself.
We’ve been hearing the “h” word a lot from your surrogates, your supporters and you as you make your final rounds before handing over the keys to the new team. History, we are told, will render the truest verdict on your time in office. History, it is implied, will say you were a far better president than we ever gave you credit for.
You said it again Monday in your farewell press conference. History will have the final say.
It is a curious position for someone who has been, as the quote above suggests, rather dismissive of history’s judgment. It occurs to me that, as patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel, so history is the last refuge of the failed president.
But you and yours keep returning to it, reminding us how Harry Truman left office not much more beloved than you are now, but history took another look and decided he was a better president than anyone thought at the time. Frankly, the very fact that you and your team repeatedly invoke the 33rd president in defending your legacy is rather telling.
That’s not a defense, it’s a Hail Mary pass. It’s hoping against hope. Truman enjoyed an extreme makeover, yes. Most presidents do not.
Yes, history does refine our initial assessments of a given president. But those refinements usually move in increments.
You would need more than increments of movement, sir. You would need a football field. I don’t see it happening.
Credit where it’s due: you were the best U.S. president Africa ever had. Your work to reduce AIDS rates on the mother continent never got as much attention – and praise – as it deserved.
But there the list ends: I find it impossible to think of another praiseworthy achievement. The failures, though, rush readily to mind: Katrina, Abu Ghraib, Justice Department scandal, torture, Iraq War, Social Security, immigration . . . You leave a legacy of regression and division, and a nation worse off by multiple measures than before you took office.
But you know what, sir? That’s not even the worst of it. No, the worst is the way you turned our government into a wholly owned subsidiary of the Republican Party, the way you disdained objective truth in favor of ideological fiction, the way you treated dissent as disloyalty, the way you repeatedly poured sewage on our heads and swore it was water from a mountain spring.
So yes, I’m happy you’ll likely be around 20 years from now. Because, contrary to what you seem to think, it doesn’t take centuries to get some initial sense of history’s verdict. That takes about a generation. Meaning that when history weighs in on your presidency, you’ll probably be here to see it. And I don’t think you’re going to like it.
Yes, I’m stepping out on a limb here. The future is, by definition, unknowable. But it is simply inconceivable to me that history will judge you anything but harshly. Frankly, I think it will judge us all that way, will marvel at the things we let you get away with, the principles Americans can betray, when they are scared.
As with the internment of the Japanese during World War II, and the McCarthy excesses of the 1950s, I think fear will be the defining statement of this era. Fear, and the terrible things we did, condoned and became as a result.
Godspeed, then, Mr. Bush. Good health and long life. I hope you live to hear history itself tell you what an awful president you were [and what terrible citizens we were].
*****
I’ve had two great teachers, each highly controversial. One was Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, the Indian teacher known for Rolls Royces and the mischief of his followers on their ranch commune in Oregon.
The story that has never been told relates to Rajneesh’s brinkmanship with his followers. He operated from his own definition of compassion: such a depth of love that one is willing to do whatever it takes to bring awareness to a situation.
I watched from afar [I was kicked out of the prior commune in India] as Rajneesh brought awareness to the principles his followers would betray in the face of threats of ostracism. Fascism indeed took root and the commune collapsed from the weight of it. Many got the lesson. Most have not.
Because I did get the lesson, I am now leading a national change management process by addressing the fear that allows Kenyans to betray what they know and results in behavior that holds poverty in place.