
George W. Bush. (Photo: Getty
Images)
Take me down little Susie, take me down
I know you think you're the queen of the underground
And you can send me dead flowers every morning
Send me dead flowers by the mail
Send me dead flowers to my wedding
And I won't forget to put roses on your grave ...
- The Rolling Stones
To: George W. Bush
From: Your biggest fan
Re: Your imminent unemployment
Greetings, Mr. Bush.
I was sorry to hear about the passing of your cat, India.
Eighteen years is a long time for a cat - my mother has one that's
20 and still going strong, if you can believe it - and I'm sure
India had a comfortable, caring life with your family.
I got to spend part of last weekend with an old friend of
mine. He's a bit older than 18, and he's also a troop who recently
rotated back from a tour in Falluja. He just had a baby daughter,
and he will be sent to Afghanistan before too much longer. He did
his duty in Iraq, dealt his share of death and saw his friends die
or be ripped to shreds right in front of him.
He was hollow in a lot of places that had been full before he
went to Iraq. He was not the same man we'd said farewell to. But he
was alive, and if he survives his upcoming Afghanistan tour, maybe
he will get the chance to have a long, comfortable, caring life with
his family, just like little India.
At present, my friend's life is the polar opposite of
comfortable, and he still has Kabul waiting for him just over the
horizon. His life is the way it is because of you, Mr. Bush. You
have been the single greatest influence upon his time in this world;
you put him over there and hollowed him out, and because of you,
it's about to happen again. You were the single biggest influence
upon the lives of every person he knew over there, every person he
saw over there, and every person he killed over there.
It's funny. I was thinking the other day about when I marched
in one of the first large-scale post-inauguration protests against
you in Washington, DC. It was May of 2001, it was The Voter's Rights
March to Restore Democracy, and it was a few thousand people
shouting down the unutterably ruinous Supreme Court decision which
unleashed, just as we then feared, everything that has since come to
pass. "Not my president!" we bellowed. "Not my president!"
It's funny because that memory seems so very quaint to me
now. A stolen election? Pfff. To paraphrase a different president,
Americans get scarier stuff than that free with their breakfast
cereal nowadays. Thanks to you, governor.
My All-Time-Grand-Prize-Bull-Goose-Gold-Medal-Winning Top
Five list of what you've done, in no particular order, and in my own
humble opinion:
1. You were warned by the outgoing administration when you
first took office. You were warned by the Russians. You were warned
by the Israelis. You were warned by the Germans. You were warned in
a memo given to you by your own National Security Adviser. You were
warned by men like Richard Clarke. You were warned all those times
that Osama bin Laden intended to strike the United States, and still
the Towers came down.
(All those people working on that Legacy Project of yours
should go back to bed, by the way; they are trying to salvage the
unsalvageable. You protected us, they claim? Ha. You're 0-1 on
terrorism and 0-2 on war)
2. Less than a month after those Towers came down, a reporter
asked what you thought we should do. "We need to counter the
shockwave of the evildoer," you replied, "by having individual rate
cuts accelerated and by thinking about tax rebates." I happened to
be watching television and heard you say that live into a camera.
The only reason I didn't throw up on myself is because my teeth were
clenched too tightly for the vomit to pass my lips. I swallowed
hard, grabbed a pen, and wrote down what you said and when you said
it. It was October 4, 2001, just after nine in the morning. You'd
like people to remember you standing on that pile of rubble in
Manhattan, you with the bullhorn and the heroic pose. I, however,
will always remember you pitching tax cuts to a devastated nation
while a pall of poison smoke still hung in the air over Ground Zero.
3. A few years later, you wanted hundreds of billions of
dollars diverted from other areas of the federal budget and into
your war in Iraq. You took more than $70 billion out of the budget
used by the Army Corps of Engineers in Louisiana to fund the repair
and maintenance of the New Orleans levee system. Katrina struck not
long after you took that money and poured it into the sand, and the
levees failed for lack of funded upkeep. Through this, along with
your disinterested disinclination to help your own countrymen in
their hour of darkest need, you played the very last note for that
old, sad, lost American city. Reflected in those actions are the
same budgetary priorities that motivated you to turn Walter Reed
Army Medical Center, the hospital where I was born, into an abattoir
of suffering and neglect for the wounded soldiers you tore apart for
a lie.
4. You let Dick "Crazy-Eyes" Cheney do whatever the hell he
wanted to whomever he wanted whenever and wherever he wanted, and be
damned to the damned old Constitution anyway. Cheney once said the
vice president's office was not part of the same branch of
government as the president's office, and he said it with his bare
face hanging out the whole time. Why? He didn't want to give any of
his official papers over to the National Archives, as mandated by at
least two federal laws. Nope, he said, my office is in Congress
today, sorry about that, but be sure to come on back after you drop
dead. Or words to that effect. That's about one zillionth of a
percent of what he did, because you let him pick himself to be your
boss.
5. On July 19, 2006, you vetoed H.R. 810. On June 20, 2007,
you vetoed S. 5. Both vetoes killed legislation aimed at funding and
vastly enhancing the reach and scope of stem cell research in
America. The father of someone I know died of bone marrow cancer
just after that first veto; he was adopted, no family could be
located, so no donor match for a bone marrow transplant could be
found. With stem cell therapy, doctors could have taken his own
marrow and grown enough healthy, matching marrow to save his life.
Two other people I know have diabetes, like millions of Americans.
Stem cell research could offer them a cure. Someone else I know has
multiple sclerosis, and stem cell research could very well help her,
too. She'd write you a thank-you note for those vetoes, but her
right hand doesn't work so well anymore. She's getting better with
her left hand, so maybe that note can get written next year.
Also, you defied lawfully issued subpoenas and potentially
set a precedent that could shatter the separation of powers. You
told the American people Iraq was in possession of 26,000 liters of
anthrax, 38,000 liters of botulinum toxin, 500 tons - which is one
million pounds - of sarin, mustard and VX nerve agent, 30,000
missiles to deliver the stuff, mobile biological weapons labs,
al-Qaeda connections and uranium from Niger for use in a robust
nuclear weapons program, even though all of that was a lie. You made
a joking video about not being able to find any of it. You outed a
deep-cover CIA agent who was running a network designed to keep
weapons of mass destruction out of the hands of terrorists, and you
did so because her ambassador husband told the truth about you in
the public prints.
You gave away our right to privacy by sending the NSA to spy
on us. You turned us all into torturers and butchers in the eyes of
the world with your decision to use Abu Ghraib prison the same way
Saddam Hussein once did. You tried to appoint Henry Kissinger to
lead the investigation into 9/11. You turned the entire Justice
Department into a carnival of political hackery. You championed the
economic policies and deregulation fantasies that have left the
financial stability of millions in ashes. You used the threat of
terrorism against your own people in order to give yourself
political cover. You killed hundreds of thousands, if not millions,
of people who did you nor us no harm.
You did all this, and so much more.
From a certain perspective, one could argue that you have
been the most successful president the country has ever seen. Think
about it, because according to your definition of "success," it's
true. You came into office looking to make your friends richer, and
to fulfill as best you could your most overriding personal belief:
that government is the problem, so government must be damaged and
denuded to the point of impotence. Through your tax cuts and your
two vastly expensive boondoggle wars, you made your friends rich. By
unleashing Mr. Cheney and your other minions, you tore the
Constitution to shreds and tatters. You have achieved both goals in
smashing style, so from that certain perspective, you have
triumphed.
Could you also, from the proper perspective, be considered
our greatest president?
Perhaps, someday, if we make it so.
It will be in the best interests of many powerful people if
we as a nation simply dismiss you and forget you ever happened. A
lot of news media people want us to forget you, because in
forgetting you, we would forget the media's vast complicity in your
actions and misdeeds. A lot of rich people making new fortunes from
war profiteering and defense contracts want us to forget they and
you even exist, as it would make it possible for them to do it all
again someday. A lot of politicians who stapled themselves to you
would simply adore it if we forgot about you. The Republican Party
would be forever in our debt if we forgot about you.
No. We will not forget you. We will remember.
We the people are going to save you from ignominious
oblivion. We will remember. You could be the president who doomed
America, the worst president of all time, but we must not, will not
let that happen. You will be remembered differently, because we will
hold the memory of you high, and behold you, and say, "Never, never,
never again." We have tasted the soot and smelled the blood on the
wind; we have seen how fragile our way of government is when placed
in the hands of low men such as you, and because of that, you will
be remembered for all time.
Your greatness will be defined by how we rise to overcome and
undo what you have done. Your greatness will stand forever if we
never, ever forget the hard, bitter lessons you taught us. We are
responsible for this republic, for our Constitution, and for each
other. We are our brother's keeper. You taught us that by becoming
our Cain. You nearly slew us, but here we stand, and we defy the
place in history you would relegate us to. We defy you, and by doing
so, we rise.
Something like you must never again be allowed to happen to
this country, and if we save ourselves by preventing you from ever
happening again, your greatness is assured. You are the tallest of
all possible warnings, and a promise all of us must solemnly and
stalwartly keep. If we can damn you to the past, we will save our
own future.
May you live forever, you son of a bitch.