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Dick Morris on GW Bush

post #1 of 20
Thread Starter 
http:www.frontpagemag.com
Quote:
Bush Bears the Burden of War
By Dick Morris
FrontPageMagazine.com | March 20, 2003

His tie hung low around his shrunken neck like a necklace. His ears seemed larger as his face looked gaunt. Hair graying, his eyes burned with intensity and purpose as he addressed his nation announcing the war. The burden of the presidency seemed etched in the lines of his face. George W. Bush looks like he has aged ten years in the last twenty-seven months…and matured twenty years. Elected president, he has become a leader.

After 9-11, he responded to events. Now he transcends them. As this president faces the tasks imposed by history, he rises from its pages. Its time for us all to thank the Lord that we have this decisive man in office at this crucial time.

One comes to respect his intelligence and political skill, but more his clarity, his understanding of what is important and his focus on the values he carries in his soul. His wisdom is not the product of complexity or subtlety. It stems, instead, from the simplicity of his profound understanding of good and evil.

In the State of the Union speech, he spoke of his daily task of facing new terrorist threats and the hourly burden of responding. Now we watch in awe at the dignity with which he bears our burden.

Like a gyroscope he keeps his bearing, always rising above the coming horizon. He intuitively knows where he must lead like the needle of a compass shows us the north.

I don't agree with very much of his domestic program. It is too limited and based on an assumption of governmental inactivity that I do not share. I think that Bill Clinton was the better president up to the water's edge. But, on the critical aspect of his presidency, the war on terror, he is right on and has always been. He keeps his political balance as he maintains his internal ballast. His clarity of vision rises above that of his predecessor and his grasp of the requirements of history is deeper and more thorough.

Clinton always lamented that he was not in office during a time of overwhelming national emergency. He once told me that you needed a war to rise to top rank among presidents. Yet it is the bitter irony of his presidency that he had a war to fight, he just never realized it and never fought it.

Bush would be wasted in another era. His skills would not have been as finely developed as they have been under this challenge. We would never have truly known him. He likely would not have even come to know himself as well as he now has.

Some say Bush's diplomacy has failed. That's not true. He succeeded in conducting negotiations without letting his purity be corrupted or his vision dimmed. This is the ultimate success, not failure, in diplomacy.

Others say he has squandered the sympathy the world had for us after 9-11. Again the criticism is wide of the mark. He demanded their tears give way to resolution, their empathy to action, their victimhood to victory. He didn't dissipate global support. He mobilized it and those whose camaraderie was phony fell away.

Bush has not abused democracy, he has mobilized it. Nor has he shattered checks and balances, he has carried them into action. He is not overreaching the powers of his office, he is using them.

Roosevelt, Lincoln, and Churchill all looked different to contemporaries than they do to historians. FDR seemed to emerge as a wartime leader only after Pearl Harbor rescued him from a time of vacillation and indecision during the late 1930s. Lincoln appeared to be weak and unable to harness the moral issue of slavery to the task of winning the war. Churchill seemed an imperialist and an empire builder pining for war in a time of peace.

But history has a different view of all three.

Bush lives amid the ambivalence of democracy, but we are watching a Roosevelt, a Lincoln, or a Churchill in the making.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dick Morris is a former adviser to President Clinton.
post #2 of 20
I like the Iraqi propaganda better.
post #3 of 20
Quote:
California Kronos:
Bush would be wasted in another era.
Well, he was often wasted just a few short years ago.

Quote:
Bush lives amid the ambivalence of democracy, but we are watching a Roosevelt, a Lincoln, or a Churchill in the making.
Does any sane person actually agree with this?
post #4 of 20
Classic post.
post #5 of 20
PS, interesting how Dick Morris is suddenly someone with something good to say when he is saying it about the other guys.
post #6 of 20
Some people should just masturbate instead of putting pen to paper, fingers to keyboard.
post #7 of 20
Hey, you turned that around on me. So cute and expected. Anyway, that article annoys because it's a fluff piece.
post #8 of 20
And what makes you think that I don't follow my own advice? Hence, my amazing clear-headed posts and super-dooper insight.
post #9 of 20
Anyway...back on the subject.

I find the reasoning of this piece to be a little suspect. Apparently, "camraderie" means following our lead like a lapdog, and if you dissent, your "camraderie" is phony? Does not compute.

Not to mention I don't know who could argue that creating schisms in world governing bodies and alienating allies is somehow a TRIUMPH of diplomacy. Hey, Dick....Hussein ALSO was "conducting negotiations without letting his 'purity' be corrupted or his vision dimmed." You think what's happening to Iraq right now is a measure of the "success" of diplomacy?
post #10 of 20
I just think that fluff pieces like this, about anybody, need not to be written into existence (not suggesting censorship, just think that they are silly). To carve Bush into some kind of heroic figure, especially when people are so divided over the man's decisions, seems utterly trite. I mean, do Bush supporters really need to believe that the man is an angel decended from heaven in order to get behind him and his decisions. I say, nah. So why does this article need to exist? It does not. It's silly. Maybe if Morris had gotten his energy out another way, is all I'm saying.
post #11 of 20
Quote:
FDR seemed to emerge as a wartime leader only after Pearl Harbor rescued him from a time of vacillation and indecision during the late 1930s.
Yeah, that whole "New Deal" thing had no purpose or meaningful effect on anything.

FDR was the guy who replaced the "vacillating and indecisive" Herbert Hoover and got this country out of the Great Depression by overhauling the federal government. Pearl Harbor, and the subsequent mobilization of American industry definitely put the last nail in the coffin, but we were well out of the depths of the Depression by then.
post #12 of 20
Quote:
Bush lives amid the ambivalence of democracy, but we are watching a Roosevelt, a Lincoln, or a Churchill in the making.
I can imagine the mummified corpses of those three rising from the grave and looking for Dick Morris' address.
post #13 of 20
Damn, I have a great idea. If only I could Photoshop like voltes or Whitehead.
post #14 of 20
How is my post masturbation? I have a strong feeling you have no idea who the guy who wrote this piece is, or why conservatives would have had nothing but bad things to say about him a year ago.
post #15 of 20
Sorry, who is David Morris????
post #16 of 20
Dick Morris he worked for the Clinton administration. I forgot what exactly his job was but he was an advisor of sorts.
post #17 of 20
Quote:
Bomb (Daywalker):
Dick Morris he worked for the Clinton administration. I forgot what exactly his job was but he was an advisor of sorts.
I think his official title was "Presidential Procurer". Or was it "Knife-in-the-Back Twister"? I forget.
post #18 of 20
Quote:
Kevin Matchstick:
Some people should just masturbate instead of putting pen to paper, fingers to keyboard.
I'd like to, but I'm sure Dan would fire me.
post #19 of 20
Quote:
Gio Angles:
Yeah, that whole "New Deal" thing had no purpose or meaningful effect on anything.

FDR was the guy who replaced the "vacillating and indecisive" Herbert Hoover and got this country out of the Great Depression by overhauling the federal government. Pearl Harbor, and the subsequent mobilization of American industry definitely put the last nail in the coffin, but we were well out of the depths of the Depression by then.
Actually, WWII was what got us out of the Great Depression, not the New Deal. Look at the economic data - unemployment was between 10 and 30% between 1929 and 1942. I'm not saying the New Deal was worthless, but he did not become the heroic figure he is now until WWII. He had big problems with the Supreme Court and Congress during his first 2 terms.
post #20 of 20
Quote:
Devin hates Saddam, hates the war:
How is my post masturbation? I have a strong feeling you have no idea who the guy who wrote this piece is, or why conservatives would have had nothing but bad things to say about him a year ago.
Devin, jamiepool was sticking up for you - I think he thought I was ripping you when, in fact, I was targeting Mr. Morris. Sorry for the confusion.
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