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So far the Republican convention has been all about courage, compassion
and lauding our War President for possessing ample quantities of
both, including the theater-in-the-round stage designed to highlight
the president's strength and authority, and the Deco-inspired presidential
lectern meant to invoke the skyscrapers of New York (and oh, by
the way, those two skyscrapers that are no longer there).
But now it's time for the nitty-gritty: the War President's big
acceptance speech.
The word is that after a summer of substance-free campaign stumping,
the president is ready to tangle with "the vision thing"
and roll out his second-term plans for America.
Sounds promising - until you discover that his vision for the future
is little more than a reworked blast from the past.
The 2000 campaign's "reformer with results" is planning
to go back to that poisoned well and trot out a domestic agenda
that promises to reform everything from Social Security to health
care to the tax code.
Of course, the last three and a half years have proven that when
Bush starts talking about reform, it's time to be very afraid.
His idea of education reform turned out to be the fraudulent No
Child Left Behind Act, a massively underfunded federal mandate that
truth-in-labeling laws should have required be rechristened the
Millions of Children But Mercifully Not Your Own Left Behind Act.
And his idea of Medicare reform was a multibillion dollar gift to
drug companies and HMOs disguised as a prescription drug bill.
Now he wants to do the same to Social Security and health insurance,
all in the name of "empowering individuals" and creating
"an ownership society" - or, in plain English, privatizing
as much of the social welfare system as possible.
But we are told that Bush has decided to run not only on future
reforms but on past accomplishments.
"We've got a great record, when you think about it," he
proclaimed, as if the idea had just dawned on him.
Now, I'm not sure what record he's been looking at - maybe Andy
Card replaced the dismal numbers from last week's Census Bureau
report on income and poverty with Michael Phelps' Olympic stats
in his latest morning briefing - but if the president truly intends
to run on his record, I can only say: Bring it on!
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I realize that facts mean next to nothing to the fanatics in the
Bush White House, but they mean a hell of a lot to the people whose
lives they depict.
Here then, for your voting-booth convenience, is a quick overview
of President Bush's "great record":
- Since he took office, 1.2 million people in America have lost
their jobs, bringing the total to 8.2 million.
- The number of Americans living below the poverty line has increased
by 4.3 million to 35.9 million - 12.9 million of them children.
- The number of Americans with no health insurance has increased
by 5.8 million - with 1.4 million losing their insurance in 2003.
The total now stands at 45 million.
- Forty percent of the 3.5 million people who were homeless at
some point last year were families with children, as were 40 percent
of those seeking emergency food assistance.
- Median household income has fallen more than $1,500 in inflation-adjusted
terms in the last three years, and the wages of most workers are
now falling behind inflation.
- Average tuition for college has risen by 34 percent, while 37
percent of fourth graders read at a level considered "below
basic."
- One third of the president's $1.7 trillion in tax cuts benefits
only the top 1 percent of wealthiest Americans.
President Bush also failed to fulfill his pledge to get Osama Bin
Laden "dead or alive," traded the moral high ground for
preemptive war and the horrors of Abu Ghraib, never attended a funeral
or memorial service for any of the 975 soldiers killed in Iraq,
pulled out of the Kyoto agreement on global warming, gutted the
Clean Air Act, initiated the rollback of more than 200 environmental
regulations, backed a constitutional amendment to outlaw gay marriages,
and refused to follow through on his promise to extend the assault
weapons ban.
So let's get one thing straight: Anyone who is lauding George Bush
at the Republican Convention - and, yes, that includes you Rudy,
Arnold, Governor George and Mayor Mike - is endorsing his disastrous
and wholly immoderate record. Thus, by definition, all these Bush
strokers have surrendered their moderate credentials - no matter
how warm and fuzzy their positions on social issues. The president's
record betrays both courage and compassion, and no amount of lofty
rhetoric will change that.
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