Another view on Bush, port sale

Here is Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen’s take on President Bush’s defense of the port sale:
“There are times when George Bush sorely disappoints. Just when you might expect him to issue a malapropian explanation, pander to his base or simply not have a clue about what he is talking about, he does something so right, so honest and, yes, so commendable, that — as Arthur Miller put it in ‘Death of a Salesman’ — ‘attention must be paid.’ Pay attention to how he has refused to indulge anti-Arab sentiment over the Dubai ports deal.”
Posted by Phillip Brownlee

6 Comments

  1. steve
    Posted February 28, 2006 at 1:37 pm | Permalink

    Bush will only use anti-arab sentiment when he wants to start a war.

  2. Posted February 28, 2006 at 2:55 pm | Permalink

    Amen, Steve.

    It’s not anti-Arab sentiment that BushCo is fighting against. It heavily invested cronies who stand to lose if he backs down.

    Bush’s actions have no internal consistency except for that one prime directive–protect the special-interest cronies.

    I wonder what Cohen is going to write after Bush cravenly backs off the Dubai deal.

  3. tellitasitis
    Posted February 28, 2006 at 4:55 pm | Permalink

    Here is a comment written in 2004. You Republicans deserve what you have and what is comming down the road.

    Article as follows: Any comments to refute?

    by John Rogers @ 8:18 amI wrote most of this in November 2004:

    Republicans may someday look on the re-election of George Bush as one of the biggest disasters that has ever befallen their Party

    Yes, of course I voted for him.

    I earnestly believe that his foreign policy approach is by far the nicest of all the options available to the United States. Assisting the cause of freedom around the world – and particularly in the Middle East – gives us the only chance we have of avoiding a larger and more catastrophic war.

    Unstable, nuclear-armed Arab countries pose a real threat to the existence of the West. Letting this threat ferment and strengthen was not much of option: It was suicide. This, admittedly, is arguable, but I think the weight of reason tips the scale in favor of intervening now rather than letting the Middle East develop newer and better-armed forms of tyranny. This is going to be messy, but it must be done.

    I enthusiastically voted for Bush mainly for this reason.

    Going into the booth, I was well aware of his faults – his protectionism, his indifference to an overbearingly large government, his comfort with the evangelicals, and his love of big ticket programs – but I, like most other voters, ignored them in favor of something that is vastly more important: national security.

    But it was more than that: I think the Democrats have lost credibility when they talk about most things. They criticize Bush and the Bible thumpers, but they are in bed with forces that are just as bad (and maybe worse): trial lawyers, unions and left wing academics who make careers of stoppering economic and political freedom. Their populist message can be reduced to “tax the rich to buy benefits for the middle class,” but its import is undercut by the basic unfairness of the tax code. Nearly all our federal revenue (96%) comes from the top 50% of taxpayers (the rich), but the super rich (like John Kerry and John Edwards) use clever manipulation of the code to avoid paying anywhere near their “fair share.”

    The Democratic Party has become increasingly protectionist (am I the only one who sees it as odd that a party so full of anti-business sentiment is eager to pass out trade perks to businesses?) and no one would ever accuse the Democrats of being the party of financial responsibility.

    Yes, Clinton did balance the budget – so I’ve been told by Democrat after Democrat – but in the ’90’s, doing that was simple: the economy was growing rapidly. With this growth, tax revenues exploded. The economy was growing because Clinton ignored his liberal impulses and practiced laissez-faire capitalism (I’m sorry to remind the Democrats who had blissfully forgotten this inconvenient fact): he decided that he wasn’t going to nationalize the doctors or destroy the health insurance industry. He signed NAFTA, and left business to do as it pleased. I salute him for it. The Democratic Party, though, has forgotten Clintonian policy while embracing him personally (watch his hands).

    But back to Bush. I think there are many reasons why Republicans may someday look on the re-election of George Bush as one of the biggest disasters that has ever befallen their Party. Another Nixon, at a time when the country can least afford it.

    Unfortunately for the Democrats, they may not be in much of a position to take advantage of it.

    The problem is the dollar. The American economy is an amazing beast. It has rushed onward and upward through wars, terrorist attacks, protectionism, tax hikes, tax cuts, currency crises and stock market crashes.

    But this beast needs the food of a healthy, stable currency. And Washington seems intent to starve of it of the one thing it needs to keep going.

    It is not all George Bush’s fault: the Bush people are eager to blame others – they say that sluggish growth in Europe and Japan is helping to create a current account deficit (a trade deficit) that threatens the dollar’s value, and there is some truth in this. Indeed, in real terms, both Japan and Europe are poorer relative to the US than they were a decade ago. That is their problem and they seem loathe to do the things necessary to correct that (freeing up their labor markets, reducing government spending and liberalizing trade).

    But the Europeans are also right to point the finger back at the Americans: the real problem is the explosion of federal spending that has occurred under Bush’s watch. This spending has cheapened the value of the dollar, and many foreigners are beginning to question why they are holding so much of a depreciating currency.

    Sometime in the future, a sell-off is going to happen.

    Currency fluctuations tend to be self-correcting: when a currency goes down in value, that country’s exports are cheaper in foreign nations and more are purchased. Cheap currency often causes export-driven growth, which eventually drives up the value of the currency in the home nation.

    Usually.

    The problem is that the US is the world’s largest debtor nation, and the dollar underpins the word economy.

    Is that about to change? If the dollar can no longer be relied upon to underpin the world economy, what can be? Gold? No one knows the answer to that question.

    But if the dollar does tank at some point, the result for the US economy will be very painful. Bush –and the Republican Party – will be blamed.

    What is to be done?

    The good news – for fiscal conservatives – is that Bush (or someone) now MUST reduce federal spending.

    The bad news – for everyone – is that he probably can’t.

    The sad truth is that Washington’s spending is out of control. Literally. Only about one third of government spending is discretionary. The rest of that spending is Social Security, Medicare, debt payments and other assorted benefit programs that Bush could not cut even if he wanted to.

    It is going to be difficult to cut the remaining third enough to make a big difference.

    Not while fighting a necessary war. And beginning the important – and expensive – task of reforming Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.

    To make matters worse, the new Medicare drug benefit – which the stupid chimp himself signed into law in 2003 – will start taking effect in 2006. It will mandate hundreds of billions of dollars of new spending in that year, and the price of that new program will only go up.

    Who ever takes power in 2008 will have their hands tied even more tightly than Bush does, and it will only get worse. We are on course for a disastrous train wreck that every politician would rather ignore.

    For fiscal conservatives, the Armageddon that we have been warning about is here. I will take no satisfaction in having predicted it.

    Bush is in for a rough four years. And the country is in several very rough decades.

    Now back to your regularly-scheduled, big media arguments over bullshit….

    Posted in Politics, Economics

    Leave a response »

  4. J M Walker
    Posted February 28, 2006 at 6:55 pm | Permalink

    Another view BY Bush: http://www.hereinreality.com/more_funny_pics/displayimage.php?album=14&pos=26

  5. TrueBlue
    Posted February 28, 2006 at 7:06 pm | Permalink

    Tell–

    Some interesting speculation but I think you’re wrong about the dollar tanking. It should tank.

    But it won’t hurt us nearly as much as it’s going to hurt the countries who hold our debt.

    Our debt is in dollars. If the dollar tanks against major currencies, the Euro and the Chinese yuan, they will get the same dollars but much less in local currency.

    Meanwhile our manufactured goods, such as they are, will be a lot cheaper to overseas markets.

    Not that big of a downside to us unless foreign gov’ts stop buying our bonds.

    That could cause a problem.

  6. CrusaderX
    Posted March 1, 2006 at 4:12 am | Permalink

    Hey, I didn’t post here yet…..

    Ok now I did. :)