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BernieBear Donating Member (350 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-05-04 01:13 PM
Original message
The Weekly Standard's View of Bush......
It's hard to believe we're talking about the same person.. I don't see him like this at all:

They Still Haven't Figured Him Out
From the December 13, 2004 issue: Bush's unexpected qualities.
by Fred Barnes
12/13/2004, Volume 010, Issue 13

snip....

My impression, as Bush begins his second term in the White House, is that many in the political community, including the press, still haven't figured him out. One reason is the Bush presidency has emerged quite differently from what was expected. So here are five things about the president that help explain why he does what he does. They aren't the only five aspects of his presidency, but they're five important ones.

* ACTIVIST. The label is usually applied to liberal politicians, rarely conservatives. In Bush's case, it means he has a lengthy agenda and is impatient about enacting it. And it's an agenda--Social Security reform, altering the balance on the Supreme Court, tax reform, reversing cultural trends, a crusade for democracy around the globe--for change. Bush didn't get his activist streak from his father. George H.W. Bush was a caretaker president, dealing with items as they arrived in his in-basket. He lost his bid for reelection in 1992 partly because he didn't have much on his mind for a second term. Bush has a lot, and it's not trivial. One of his most stinging criticisms is to label a proposal "smallball"--in other words, not big or bold enough for serious presidential attention.

* OUTSIDER. Bush is an alien inside the Beltway. His election was the equivalent of getting a green card to work in Washington. He's not part of the social whirl. Nor has he made many close friends on Capitol Hill or around town. What separates him from the Washington crowd? More than anything else, it's religion. Bush is the first president who's a product of the modern evangelical movement, which means his Christian faith is personal, intense, and all-encompassing. It's not a part-time, Sunday-only thing. Leave Washington and you frequently encounter people who say of the president, "He's one of us." You don't hear that in Washington. A Texas friend recently sent the president a copy of Natan Sharansky's book, The Case for Democracy. Bush read most of it and asked Sharansky to meet with him at the White House. Bush praised Sharansky for his years as a dissident in the Soviet Union. To which Sharansky replied, "Now you are the chief dissident of the world."

* PRESS-BASHER. Bush has not made peace with the press, far from it. He views most reporters as political opponents eager to pepper him with gotcha questions. In Colombia last month, he appeared before reporters with President Alvaro Uribe. Bush didn't like the first question about a scuffle two days earlier involving the Secret Service. "This is a question?" he said, and gave a curt answer. Uribe said, "Do you want to get in one more ?" Bush said, "That's plenty. No. Thank you," ending the press conference prematurely.

Bush believes, correctly, that the Washington press corps favored John Kerry in the election. "Ninety percent for Kerry" is what White House aides say. Coverage of Bush reflected this. The Center for Media and Public Affairs found that coverage of Kerry was the most favorable for any presidential candidate since it began examining campaigns in 1988, while Bush's was mostly negative. Reporters complain they get little information from the White House. Chances are they'll get even less in the second term. Bush's calculation is that spending more time with the press would be time poorly spent.

* SURPRISER. Bush likes to defy the conventional wisdom. He often does it without even trying. I recently asked a leading supporter of Israel if he had known Bush would become the most pro-Israel president ever. He hadn't. Bush was expected to govern as a moderate conservative, but on most issues he's become hard core. He was expected to relax after November 2. Instead, he's plotting for next year. Presidents, indeed most politicians, are disinclined to give aides credit for their success. But Bush surprised Washington on the day after his reelection by calling Karl Rove "the architect" of his victory. The conventional wisdom is that Bush endorsed a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage to help win reelection but won't actually push it. The surprise of his second term may be that he pushes it aggressively.

* VISIONARY. Really. True, the word just doesn't seem to go with the Bush persona, or at least with the popular notion of Bush, the swaggering Texan. But in speech after speech, Bush has laid out a vision of democratizing the Middle East, then the world. In Halifax, Nova Scotia, last week, he pretended Canada shares his "great commitment . . . to enhance our own security by promoting freedom and hope and democracy in the broader Middle East." Most of Europe and Bush's own State Department disagree with this effort. But Bush is adamant. "It is cultural condescension to claim that some peoples or some cultures or some religions are destined to despotism and unsuited for self-government," he said in Halifax. With little fanfare, Bush also changed America's national security strategy from containment to preemption.

So where does all this leave us in understanding Bush? The first step is to abandon the original preconception of President Bush. He's different. The second step is to accept that he's attempting big things. And the third, as a result, is to get ready for a second presidential term like few we've seen.

Fred Barnes is executive editor of The Weekly Standard. (and a conservative christian)

http://weeklystandard.com/Utilities/printer_preview.asp?idArticle=4995&R=A0F3367F9

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illflem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-05-04 01:15 PM
Response to Original message
1. The Weekly Standard's logo
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Straight Shooter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-05-04 01:17 PM
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2. I just started to say, must be awful dark in there for the W.S.
Pablum for the peons, served Republican style, by the shovelful.
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coloradodem2005 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-05-04 01:22 PM
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3. Yeah.
He is a product of the modern evangelical movement. Though he takes on the more hypocritical aspects of it. But the rest of that is just a bunch of bullshit.
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cliss Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-05-04 01:24 PM
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4. Like Jackie Kennedy used to say,
"Consider the source". The Weekly Standard is the source of everything that's gone wrong with this country. Look to them for the failed policies in the Middle East. Look in their direction for the out of control military spending, the outsourcing, the torture, the loss of our freedoms here in the US.

Look and you will find the PNAC.
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louis-t Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-05-04 01:36 PM
Response to Original message
5. The neocons are trying to make shrub a
complicated man. He really isn't.
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BarbaRosa Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-05-04 01:49 PM
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6. Weaker Standards
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hatrack Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-05-04 02:18 PM
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7. This is utter bullshit on so many levels I don't know where to start
Yeah, a Beltway "outsider" who just spent the last four years in the White House and who is there because he and his father share the same last name.

No, Freddie, Jimmy Carter was the first president who was a product of the modern evangelical movement, not this Pharasiacal son of a bitch.

And of course, as a whore in full glorious flower, Barnes couldn't POSSIBLY see that the relentless, negative and biased coverage of Kerry throughout the campaign on the part of all cable news networks and the constant worshipful broadcasts of Bush's catatonia-inducing goo-goo gah-gah Freedom Phrase stump speeches are as far as one could ever theoretically get from "liberal media bias".

You are a fool and a tool, Barnes, and I hope you die hard.
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coloradodem2005 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-05-04 02:27 PM
Response to Reply #7
8. Well. In a way Carter was of that movement.
Though, from what I have seen, it changed a lot since the late 70's. I see Bush as more a product of these evangelical megachurches today. They talk big, they say one thing and do another. Carter was nothing like the evangelicals today.
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Kurovski Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-05-04 02:44 PM
Response to Reply #7
9. "a whore in full glorious flower"
a phrase worthy of Keats!

Or Rimbaud.
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