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America
Bushs state of delusion: speech to Congress ignores
crises at home and abroad
By the Editorial Board
3 February 2005
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The State of the Union speech is a ritual of American politics,
but it has been increasingly characterized by an air of unreality.
Given the enormous social distance between the politicians
of the Democratic and Republican parties and the masses of working
people, it is difficult to sustain the pretense that the president
is fulfilling a constitutional responsibility to report to the
populace, through Congress, on the state of the country. The annual
address has become, instead, a combination of media eventwhose
audience has steadily declinedand backslapping get-together
for the Washington political elite.
Even in that context, the speech delivered by George W. Bush
on Wednesday night set a new standard for platitudes, generalities
and a refusal to address concretely any significant social or
economic problem. Neither on domestic issues nor foreign affairs
would Bush spell out specific policies for the coming year. For
all his religion-tinged homilies about the glories of freedom
and democracy, his administration increasingly acts as a power
unto itself, rejecting even the slightest political accountability
for its actions.
Accordingly, Bush refused to set any limits to the US occupation
of Iraq, and failed to provide any details of his plan to radically
alter Social Security by introducing private investment accounts.
Only from the standpoint of its dishonest and delusional character
did the speech provide an indication of the real state of American
society. It revealed a government indifferent to the economic
crisis at home and the hatred its policies have provoked around
the world, and preoccupied with one thing: enriching the financial
elite whom both the Democrats and Republicans serve.
Bush did not in the slightest acknowledge the mounting economic
problems and contradictions that underlie the real state of the
union. There was not even a token allusion to the decline in the
global position of American capitalism, expressed in the erosion
of the US dollar on world currency markets, the $650 billion balance
of payments deficit last year, and the $427 billion projected
federal budget deficit for the coming fiscal year. Nor did Bush
address the social consequences of this deterioration: falling
living standards, crumbling social infrastructure, persistent
stagnation in the job market, increasingly unaffordable health
care.
Here are some salient facts that were prominently reported
in the American media in the weeks leading up to the State of
the Union address:
* The dollar ended 2004 having fallen over 40 percent in two
years against the European currency, the euro, with major declines
against other currencies such as the British pound and Japanese
yen.
* Central bank managers worldwide are shifting reserve holdings
from dollars to euros, undermining the dollars role as the
principal world reserve currency.
* US household debt now stands at $10 trillion, 15 percent
more than total personal income. Record numbers of Americans are
filing for bankruptcy, more than half of them, according to a
recent study, because of medical bills they cannot pay.
* One quarter of full-time workers have no health care coverage,
and those who do face dramatically higher costs: the average employee
contribution for family coverage shot up 49 percent from 2001
to 2004.
Bush discussed none of these issues. Instead, he declared the
US economy to be sound and prosperous, hailed the creation of
2.3 million new jobs last yearafter three years in which
2.5 million jobs were wiped outand ran through a laundry
list of proposed handouts and favors to big corporations, from
blocking liability lawsuits against companies that poison the
environment or maim consumers, to boondoggles for the oil and
coal companies, to further tax cuts for the wealthy.
The presentation of his domestic agenda was perfunctory until
he came to the centerpiece, the onslaught on Social Security.
While providing few details (See: Facts
and myths about Bushs plan for Social Security privatization),
Bush gave the signal for a campaign typical of the parasitic and
criminal operations of modern-day American capitalism: looting
the Social Security Trust Fund to provide a new source of profit
for Wall Street.
The reactionary content of Bushs agenda is disguised
by an Orwellian perversion of language. Blocking victims of medical
malfeasance from filing malpractice suits becomes medical
liability reform that will make health care more affordable.
Locking the courthouse to victims of asbestos poisoning is a measure
to promote small business. An energy bill that authorizes
drilling in the Alaskan wilderness is proposed in the name of
environmental responsibility. Gutting Social Security
to funnel trillions into Wall Street investment houses is called
strengthening and saving the program.
Bush touched on the right-wing social agenda of the Christian
fundamentalist wing of the Republican Party, promising to support
a constitutional amendment prohibiting gay marriage, to block
further stem cell research, and to nominate only judges virulently
hostile to abortion rights.
In the second half of the speech, devoted to foreign policy,
Bush reprised the themes of his inaugural address, with its claims
of a US mission to spread freedom around the world
by force of arms. Even more grotesquely than in his domestic policy
remarks, he presented an upside-down picture of reality, in which
Iraq is free and sovereign, although occupied by 150,000
US troops, and the United Statesmore hated throughout the
world than ever beforeis a beacon of freedom.
In the name of peace, Bush issued new threats against Syria
and Iran, and flatly rejected any suggestion that the United States
set a timetable for withdrawal from Iraq. He declared that any
such deadline would only embolden the terrorists to wait
us out.
This argument is riddled with contradictions. If the January
30 election in Iraq means that millions of Iraqis have taken
control of their country, as Bush claims, and the only opposition
is from small bands of terrorists, why are 150,000 American troops
required to prop up the government in Baghdad? Why cant
a government that supposedly represents the democratic will of
the Iraqi people prevail over isolated Islamic fundamentalists
and Saddam Hussein loyalists?
The truth, of course, is that the resistance to American occupation
in Iraq is a rebellion against colonial-style oppression. The
American troops are necessary because, as officials like Ayad
Allawi and Ghazi Yawar well know, their regime would collapse
in five minutes without the armed backing of Washington.
Bush represents an administration that is morally, economically
and intellectually bankrupt. He is able to posture as a strong
and popular presidentthree months after the narrowest reelection
victory of any incumbent president in a centuryonly because
of the prostration of the Democratic Party opposition.
It was noticeable, as Bush entered the House of Representatives
to deliver his speech, that many Democrats crowded to shake his
hand and be photographed, including such purported representatives
of the left as Dennis Kucinich, the erstwhile peace
candidate in the campaign for the presidential nomination, and
Cynthia McKinney, who once suggestedwith good reasonthat
Bush administration had advance knowledge of the September 11
terrorist attacks.
The official Democratic response to Bushs speech, presented
by Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid and House Minority Leader
Nancy Pelosi, exemplified the political vacuum in America and
the absence of any credible opposition to Bush from the corpse
of liberalism.
Reid sought to drag in references to God, religion, family
and values in nearly every sentence, while avoiding any criticism
of Bush for pandering to the social agenda of the fundamentalist
right (Reid himself is an opponent of abortion rights). Delivering
the domestic portion of the Democratic rebuttal, Reid concentrated
on appeals to economic nationalism, denouncing India and China
for taking good-paying jobs that should be ours. His
only clear disagreement with Bush was over Social Security, where
he opposed privatization, but even this was couched in terms of
returning to old-fashioned moral values liking taking
care of ones parents and grandparents.
Pelosi, whose comments were devoted to foreign policy and security,
began with the obligatory praise of American troops in Iraq and
Afghanistan, declaring they not only defend us, they inspire
us. Her three-part plan for Iraq amounted to accelerating
the policies currently being pursued by Bush: training Iraqi stooge
forces, rebuilding the basic infrastructure of power, water and
sewer systems, and obtaining regional support so that the enterprise
is not so exclusively American.
Her major criticism of the Bush administration was that it
had not spent enough on homeland security. She made no mention
of Abu Ghraib, the role of White House officials in promoting
and condoning torture, or the attacks on civil liberties carried
out in the name of the war on terror.
See Also:
The logic of the irrational:
Bush's inaugural address and the global strategy of American imperialism
[22 January 2005]
Bush's second inauguration
America's day of shame
[21 January 2005]
Inauguration Day 2005: imperial
delusions and political reality
[20 January 2005]
Marxism, the International
Committee, and the science of perspective: an historical analysis
of the crisis of American imperialism
Part one
[11 January 2005]
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