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War Criminal George W. Bush Should Be Given An Indictment Not a Library
Every nation on Earth has suffered through dark periods in their history and either learned from their mistakes, made changes, and progressed, or fell victim to their own incompetence and failed. America has had its share of trials and tribulations over its 236 year history, and yet it still prevailed to become the greatest nation on Earth until the eight year self-inflicted wound under the George W. Bush administration. Over the past few days, inordinate attention has been given to Bush and the opening of his presidential library, and it is beyond the pale that this nation, or any of its people, would give any attention to the man who presided over one of the nation’s darkest periods in its history.
The concept of giving any regard, especially kind regards, to a convicted war criminal whose only relationship to a library should be a weekly visit to a federal prison library reveals that many Americans have very short memories. Even President Obama’s memory is a little fuzzy because he did say that “the failed policies of George W. Bush wiped away a budget surplus and squandered the legacy of bipartisan foreign policy. Mr. Bush put two wars on a credit card, led the country away from our values and crashed the economy.’ There is a sense of irony that while President praised and dedicated a library to the man who tarnished the nation’s great name and sent the economy into deep recession, a week ago a report was released condemning America of unspeakable acts of torture with full knowledge of the highest levels in the Bush administration.
America will feel the effects of the Bush years for a generation at least, and it is a mystery how the man can show his face in public, but he was joined by the current and three former presidents and a bevy of supporters who are either are still deluded by Bush’s “mystique,” or erased the 8-year nightmare that was the his presidency. Worse, a new poll revealed that although a majority of Americans consider Bush’s 8-year tenure as president a failure, 80% of Republicans surveyed thought that George W. Bush’s presidency was a success.
Any American who considers Bush a success reveals themselves to be just as despicable as he was, and truly un-American for approving of some of the worst decisions in the nation’s history, and committing some of the most unspeakable inhumane acts known to mankind. When one reflects on the atrocities Bush presided over, condoned, and in most cases, ordered directly, and learn that 8 out of ten Republicans approve, it explains why they continue supporting GOP policies that have prevented America from recovering a semblance of its former greatness and why this nation is in decline. If Bush had been president 20 years ago, one might understand how memory-impaired Republicans would harken back fondly to two wars, crushing economic travails, and an out of control financial sector, but it has been less than five years since the worst administration in history destroyed America’s reputation around the world and wreaked havoc on the nation’s economy.
It is difficult to imagine if Bush’s supporters consider success the senseless slaughter of hundreds-of-thousands of Iraqi civilians and a million more fleeing as refugees, or elevating the Islamic Republic of Iran as the major power in the region. It is possible they celebrate the successful loss of thousands of brave American soldiers killed in pursuit of oil and no-bid contracts for Dick Cheney’s company Halliburton, or maybe it is the report last week that under the Bush administration America is guilty of violating the Geneva Convention and ordering Americans to torture alleged “enemy combatants.” Bush and his cronies are at least partly culpable for the terror attacks on 9/11 for ignoring clear warnings that Osama bin Laden intended to hijack commercial airliners and crash them into American buildings a month before the World Trade Towers and Pentagon were attacked and a hijacked passenger airliner crashed into a Pennsylvania field.
Despite the damage Bush wrought on Muslims in Iraq and Afghanistan, and economic suffering for most of the civilized world, it is the deliberate damage he brought on Americans that will haunt this nation for decades. The debt coming due for the two unfunded wars will reach $6 trillion over the next thirty years, and coupled with the gifts to the pharmaceutical industry and richest 1% of income earners, the nation’s economy will not fully recover for a decade; if ever. Unfortunately, although Bush is no longer in office, his GOP sycophants spent the past four years maintaining his fiscal agenda that restricted job growth during his presidency and continues unabated under the GOP’s Bush doctrine of deregulation and entitlements to corporations. The push to privatize Medicare and Social Security is a clear and present danger to retired and retiring Americans today, but they were on Bush’s wish list throughout his presidency. The nightmare just will not end.
President Obama had a stellar opportunity to right America’s reputation on the world stage when he came into office, but instead of directing the Justice Department to go forward with indictments for torture, treason for outing an active CIA agent, and lying to the American people to take the nation to war, he said he did not want to look backwards and instead looked forward to put America on a path of recovery. However, he has spent four years looking forward into Bush’s mistakes and constantly fighting Republicans perpetuating Bush policies that still retard economic growth and keep Americans out of work.
Last year, Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, and five other high-level Bush officials were convicted of war crimes, and last week The Constitution Project reported that without a doubt, America was guilty of torture with full knowledge and approval of the Bush administration, and yet as the statute of limitations runs out, there is no investigation or action from the Justice Department to hold Bush and his cronies responsible for war crimes and acts of treason. The Obama Administration’s inaction is not looking forward, it is looking away as if nothing happened and informs the rest of the world that America not only condones torture, they protect the guilty parties from prosecution. It makes one wonder why 80% of Republicans who consider Bush a success hate President Obama when he protected their favorite son from the wheels of justice.
For many Americans, the Bush administration and Republican malfeasance he incited will forever be one of America’s darkest periods, and sadly, there is no respite as Republicans in Congress continue his corporate entitlement and deregulatory policies without pause. It is difficult to believe that 8 out of 10 Republicans still consider Bush a success, because 80% of Republicans are not in the 1% richest class and certainly most have suffered economic consequences of the nation’s worst recession since the Great Depression. Perhaps Americans just want to forget Bush and the monumental damage he caused America and the world, and it is possible that President Obama was right to look ahead and not backwards, but with Bush’s incompetent presidency still plaguing the American people, and his foreign policy inciting an American Muslim to bomb innocent civilians in Boston, it is impossible to look ahead without seeing the Bush nightmare.
Obviously there are Americans who have fond memories of the Bush presidency, but for most Americans, it was eight years of sheer torture with economic disaster, thousands of soldiers killed and maimed, and crushing debt that has yet to come due. Maybe Bush will revel in his library opening, and then fade back into the shadows, but for many, many Americans, just hearing his name and seeing his face reminds them who is responsible for the darkest period in their lifetimes.
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Shiva
Apr. 26th, 2013 at 9:56 am
I too think that George W. Bush should be in prison. But I think that any court would concentrate on why he went and not the results of the going. He would get off on the fact that he was going by the best intelligence that he had at the time and leave it to the prosecution to prove it was cherry picked. The 4000+ dead under his command would be ignored as with the hundred thousand Iraqis that died due to his actions
While I think he would’ve gotten off in The Same Way, Nixon did, it’s hard for me to not hold it against president Obama for not prosecuting the bastard.
Reynardine
Apr. 26th, 2013 at 10:05 am
Nixon would have been our last President to face that, but he appointed a successor who pardoned him *in advance* of even an indictment, though I still call Gerald Ford a decent man, and likely the last ever Republican President to be one. Warren Harding escaped prosecution through death.
I don’t think W is reachable, but his puppeteers are. Start with Cheney and proceed from there.
PSzymeczek
Apr. 27th, 2013 at 3:45 pm
Gerald Ford may well have been a decent man, but his administration is still the fruit of the poisoned tree that was Nixon’s treason to obtain the office. The last legitimately elected Republican President was Eisenhower. youtu.be/6UM-hAbfOkA
Charlie F
Apr. 26th, 2013 at 11:46 am
I believe President Obama is the right person for our times and the issues that face all Americans; but my biggest fault with him, is his policy of not looking back.
When you don’t look back on the evil things that Bush and Cheney have done and let it go unpunished then, it only sets a precedents for future Presidents to do the same thing.
MrsGunka
Apr. 26th, 2013 at 1:06 pm
Charlie, thru his whole presidency, the R’s have said he was not a Christian and has been called a Muslim, Nazi, Fascist and other derogatory names. A real Christian would turn the other cheek and go forward. In a true Christians’ mind, he will one day be judged by a higher authority and let the chips fall where they may. It takes more than the president’s say so to take all of the perpetrators down. There are 3 bodies in our government to make a law happen. He hasn’t had much help with the other two to get things done. It is the people who puts our Congress together. Can you imagine if he wasn’t in office where we might be now if McCain/Palin had been in office for 2 terms? We can thank our lucky stars he is in charge of the oval office. Money talks, but our votes make things happen. It’s just a stupid memorial to a living man who most of us don’t like. They are getting their 15 minutes of stupidity right now. No one is making you go visit his lie-berry. Every President gets…
Alex
Apr. 26th, 2013 at 4:05 pm
Had the Obama administration gone after Bush, Cheney, and Rumsfeld,I believe it would have derailed Obama’s, vision for his presidency. Our country was in such a state when he took office there were far more important issues for him to address for our nation.
djchefron(Moderator)
Apr. 26th, 2013 at 4:22 pm
A More Realistic Bush Museum:
rudepundit.blogspot.com/2...
jay
Apr. 26th, 2013 at 6:07 pm
bush single handedly crippled us economy and that wasnt easy 2 do at the time.. obama got dealt a tough tough hand when he got put into office he would guarntee have a bunch of unhappy people in the mist of rebuilding. we will prevail!
Sherlock
Apr. 27th, 2013 at 10:15 am
So who are the terrorists?
Republicans.
bill viggiani
Apr. 27th, 2013 at 10:36 am
I hate to bust up this love fest with Obama but I am going to anyway. But let me start by saying ALL politicians are by nature self-centered and will say and do whatever it takes to push their own agendas. The difference we have today is this President has an agenda to change this country from the United States of America to the Divided states of a new world order. He believes the constitution is no longer valid and that only he has the power to alter our course. He is a traitor to all those who have fought and died for our country. His “followers” were conned into thinking his “change” would be for the good of all when in fact his “change” is to pull down our flag and replace it with just his name on it. But not to worry, in the end freedom and justice will prevail and in time America will be returned to it’s rightful place. God bless America.
Shiva
Apr. 27th, 2013 at 10:43 am
I have to wonder who you listen to, to come up with something as ridiculous as “believes the constitution is no longer valid “. How weak minded does a person have to be to actually think this could be true? Your post is simply the cry of a person who sucks up whatever he is told no matter how stupid it is.
How far in your schooling did you get?
Doris~
Apr. 27th, 2013 at 6:30 pm
bill,now you belong in the Bush Lieberry..go tell your chit to fake news.
Doris~
Apr. 27th, 2013 at 6:32 pm
And bill when you leave the bush lieberry go to the bush liebury.
Gary
Apr. 27th, 2013 at 6:35 pm
The sad thing about it is he rewrote his regime like Reagan did with his Lie-Bury. Reagan left out the 185 of his administration that were indicted or put in jail, only to have H.W. give them amnesty. He also hides the fact that he ran the deficit and debt into the stratosphere. Sad because kids in the future will go there and think these were great men. I blame society for not calling them on the bullshit and making them take the lies out.
warren currier
Apr. 27th, 2013 at 8:40 pm
I kind of thought that it would be common knowledge among you folks that both George W. Bush and Barack Husein Obama are being indicted on war crimes.
I guess the terrible events in Boston distracted everyone from this fact.
How come the New York Times did not cover this story?
djchefron(Moderator)
Apr. 27th, 2013 at 9:30 pm
What story? Please proceed to link to the story where President Obama has been indicted for war crimes
brett paatsch
Apr. 27th, 2013 at 10:03 pm
Bush the man is no longer of consequence. What is of consequence is that it is simply not logically possible to maintain international peace and security whilst the leaders of the highest offices are seen to have avoided accountability for the most eggregious violations of public trust.
What matters is that confidence in the rule of law is impossible, confidence in social contracts and treaties between nations is impossible, a global economy based on merit is impossible whilst aggressive invaders (mass murderers), torturers, and kidnappers (renditioners) continue to be given political immunity.
What matters about Bush is the enduring demonstration of bad faith by the citizens and office holders that remain citizens and office holders and who continue to allow conspicuous lawless and anti-social, anti-human behavior that was also unlawful go unrepudiated.
What matters is that in not repudiating Bush empowered humanity is accepting its own social and civil regress.
Janet Androsac
Apr. 28th, 2013 at 9:33 am
They all get a Library. Why? I don’t know. Total waste of money.I think the Presidency goes to their heads if they think they are that important after they leave office that they get a Library monument to themselves.What egos!