-Caveat Lector-

Conservatives are waking up to the fact that Bush is a flaming Liberal.
---------------------

George W. - Master of Disguise
by Gary Benoit
http://www.thenewamerican.com/tna/2002/09-09-2002/vo18no18_disguise.htm

Spouting patriotic rhetoric and enjoying the support of fellow Republicans, George W. 
Bush has masqueraded as a conservative while actually advancing a liberal agenda.

When Bill Clinton boasted that "the era of big government is over," there were 
probably more belly laughs than nods. After all, Clinton was widely recognized as a 
big-spending liberal. He was seen by many as a dangerous demagogue with an insatiable 
appetite for power, an appetite that might have consumed our liberties if not for 
public and congressional resistance.

But with the election of supposed conservative George W. Bush, the public vigilance 
that helped keep Bill Clinton’s lust for power in check appears to have waned. Many 
Republicans and conservatives — who were quick to challenge President Clinton’s every 
power grab — fail to recognize the hypocrisy when President George W. Bush challenges 
Congress, as he did with a straight face during a radio address on August 17th, to 
"show spending restraint" lest the president "enforce spending restraint." Promising 
that his administration "will spend what is truly needed, and not a dollar more," Mr. 
Bush zeroed in on the Senate for "ignoring fiscal discipline": "I requested $2.4 
billion for public housing; the bill moving through the Senate includes $300 million 
more. I requested $2.2 billion for agricultural research; again, the Senate wants to 
spend $300 million more." But such statements beg the question: Why is George W. Bush 
requesting billions of dollars for unconstitutional welfare stat
e activities in the first place? How can an allegedly "conservative" president be so 
free with the taxpayers’ money?

Unfortunately, although Bush enjoys the reputation of a conservative, his own record 
shows that he is a liberal. In fact, his liberalism may be more dangerous than that of 
his immediate predecessor. Bill Clinton, a lifelong Democrat with a far-left pedigree, 
often provoked resistance from congressional Republicans and conservatives in general. 
Yet Republican congressmen who refused to support Clinton’s liberal policies have 
willingly supported similar policies when offered by fellow Republican George W. Bush. 
Consequently, Bush has been more effective than his predecessor, in many ways, in 
advancing Clintonian liberalism.

Bush’s Bloated Budget

A month after becoming president, Mr. Bush explained in a press conference (February 
22, 2001) that his budget would reduce the rate at which spending is increasing — but 
without cutting spending in the absolute sense. "We’re going to slow the rate of 
growth of the budget down," he said at the time. "It should come to [sic] no surprise 
to anybody that my budget is going to say loud and clear that the rate of growth of 
the budget, for example, from last year, was excessive. And so we’ll be slowing the 
rate of growth of the budget down."

Bush, in other words, didn’t promise to shrink the size of government, but merely to 
slow the rate of big-government expansion — to put the brakes on the car speeding 
towards the precipice, but not to stop it, much less change its direction. But in the 
end, Bush didn’t even put on the brakes, but hit the accelerator instead. In the 
budget he submitted in April 2001, Bush proposed spending $1,961 billion in fiscal 
2002 as compared to an estimated $1,856 billion in 2001 — a 5.7 percent increase. 
That, of course, was before September 11th. In a midterm budget summary released in 
July, the Bush administration estimated fiscal 2002 spending at a whopping $2,032 
billion as compared to actual fiscal 2001 spending of $1,864 — a nine percent 
increase. The July budget document also proposed spending $2,138 billion in fiscal 
2003, a 5.2 percent increase over 2002. During the Clinton presidency, the rate of 
increase in the federal budget from one year to the next never exceeded 5.1 percent (1
999 to 2000), and it was as low as 2.6 percent (1996 to 1997). The bottom line: 
Federal spending is increasing at a faster rate with George W. Bush in the White House 
than it did with Bill Clinton in the White House.

Presidential bookends: Publication of these two presidential portraits prompted very 
different reader reactions. While the January 18, 1999 cover shot of Bill Clinton 
didn’t raise a stir, some Republican readers expressed outrage over the nearly 
identical picture of President Bush featured on the August 13, 2001 issue. But the 
similarities between the Clinton and George W. Bush presidencies are much more than 
skin deep.

Other budget trends also make the Clinton era appear more fiscally conservative by 
comparison. When Clinton was president, the annual budget deficits as calculated by 
the federal government became successively smaller and were eventually replaced with 
surpluses as high as $236 billion (fiscal 2000).* Bush proposed a $231 billion surplus 
for fiscal 2002 in the budget he submitted in April 2001. But in the budget he 
submitted in February of this year, the $231 billion surplus for fiscal 2002 was 
refigured as a $106 billion deficit. In the July midterm budget summary submitted just 
five months later, the $106 billion deficit was refigured as a $165 billion deficit. 
Presumably the final figure will be relatively close to the latest estimate, since the 
fiscal year ends this September 30th. Nevertheless, even a $165 billion deficit is 
dwarfed by the $290 billion deficit in fiscal 1992 when George Bush the elder was 
president. Judging by current trends, Americans may someday view the Cli
nton presidency — shocking though it may seem — as an intermission of relative fiscal 
discipline between two big-spending presidents named Bush.

How could a surplus originally projected at $231 billion become instead a $165 billion 
deficit? Why the $396 billion difference? In a speech he gave in Milwaukee on August 
14th, President Bush explained, without citing specific numbers: "Right now, we’ve got 
some deficits because of the recession and because we’re funding the war on terror. 
But by restraining excessive spending, we can have our budget back in balance. But 
it’s going to require Congress to show some discipline." Congress, however, cannot 
restrain excessive spending without rejecting many of the president’s spending 
requests.

"Compassionate Conservatism"

Contrary to popular understanding, Bush’s proposals for increasing spending apply not 
just to national defense but to social programs as well. However, since he is not a 
Democrat, Bush has adopted a new term for the big-government liberalism he espouses: 
"compassionate conservatism." In an April 30th speech in San Jose, California, Bush 
explained his philosophy of "compassionate" big government: "It is compassionate to 
actively help our fellow citizens in need. It is conservative to insist on 
responsibility and on results." Unfortunately, many have forgotten that using 
government force to "actively help our fellow citizens in need" used to be called 
"welfare" (and mustn’t be confused with "charity," which is private, voluntary 
assistance). Moreover, "insist[ing] on responsibility and on results" used to be 
called "regulation," and "conservative" used to mean leaving money in the hands of 
those who earned it instead of funneling it through Washington with strings attached.

Bush’s "compassionate conservatism" speech makes clear that he is not against spending 
money so long as the spending produces "results." He denies advocating "big 
government," of course, but the overall thrust of his words betrays him:

[T]here is a role for government. America doesn’t need more big government, and we’ve 
learned that more money is not always the answer. If a program is failing to serve 
people, it makes little difference if we spend twice as much or half as much. The 
measure of true compassion is results.

Yet we cannot have an indifferent government either. We are a generous and caring 
people. We don’t believe in a sink-or-swim society. The policies of our government 
must heed the universal call of all faiths to love a neighbor as we would want to be 
loved ourselves. We need a different approach than either big government or 
indifferent government. We need a government that is focused, effective, and close to 
the people; a government that does a few things, and does them well.

Taken in isolation, the last 11 words in the above quote summarize very well the 
American Founders’ attitude towards the federal government. In The Federalist, No. 45, 
James Madison said that federal powers "will be exercised principally on external 
objects, as war, peace, negotiation, and foreign commerce." The "few things" that the 
federal government should do well are specifically enumerated in the Constitution. 
They are, as Madison pointed out, "few and defined," meaning that they are not subject 
to the whims of future presidents spouting feel-good slogans and moved by the popular 
issues of the moment. But George W. Bush, like the Clintonites, is no Madisonian. 
Judging from his actions, his notion of the "few things" that the federal government 
ought to be doing has little to do with the federal powers actually enumerated in the 
U.S. Constitution.

Another Education President?

Since the beginning of his presidency, nowhere has George W. Bush shown more of a yen 
for unconstitutional big government than in the area of education. In his 
"compassionate conservatism" speech, Bush touted his mammoth education bill signed 
into law earlier this year, saying that "the new education reforms we have passed in 
Washington give the federal government a new role in public education." The "new role" 
includes requiring states to test all third through eighth graders and holding states 
accountable for results — a move away from local control toward a national education 
system, despite Bush’s rhetoric to the contrary. In his "compassionate conservatism" 
speech, Bush sugarcoated the new federal oversight thusly: "Schools must meet new and 
high standards of performance in reading and math that will be proven on tests and 
posted on the Internet.... And we’re giving local schools and teachers unprecedented 
freedom and resources and training to meet these [federal] goals."

Bush signed the new education bill into law on January 8th at a public school in 
Hamilton, Ohio. On that occasion, Bush boasted that "we’re going to spend more money, 
more resources [for education], but they’ll be directed at methods that work. Not 
feel-good methods, not sound-good methods, but methods that actually work.... We’re 
going to spend more on our schools, and were going to spend it more wisely." In the 
budget he submitted a month later, Bush asked for $56.5 billion for the Education 
Department, a huge 41 percent increase over the Department’s budget authority just two 
years earlier.

Had Clinton attempted to get the same legislation passed, he undoubtedly would have 
faced tough resistance from conservative Republicans. (Not many years ago, recall, the 
GOP wanted to abolish the federal Department of Education!) But Bush not only 
benefited from Democratic liberal support, he happily acknowledged the bipartisanship. 
With him at the bill’s signing was ultra-liberal Senator Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.). "I 
actually like the fellow," Bush said to laughter and applause. "He is a fabulous 
United States senator." Later in the day, in Kennedy’s home state, Bush actually 
credited Kennedy for making the bill possible: "[A]s a result of his hard work, we put 
together a good piece of legislation that has put Republicans and Democrats on the 
side of the schoolchildren in America."

Foreign Follies

In his "compassionate conservatism" talk, Bush claimed: "The same principles of 
compassion and responsibility apply when America offers assistance to other nations. 
Nearly half of the world’s people still live on less than $2 a day. When we help them, 
we show our values, our belief in universal human dignity. We serve our interests and 
gain economic partners." But how does America benefit from gaining "economic partners" 
when those "partners" are subsidized with our own tax dollars?

Of course, like education spending, foreign aid under Bush is supposed to produce 
better results than foreign aid under his predecessors. And not surprisingly, like 
education, Bush proposes spending more, not less, despite foreign aid being 
unconstitutional: "[T]he old way of pouring vast amounts of money into development aid 
without any concern for results has failed, often leaving behind misery and poverty 
and corruption. America’s offering a new compact for global development. Greater aid 
contributions from America must be and will be linked to greater responsibility from 
developing nations."

Bush continued:

I have proposed a 50-percent increase in our core development assistance over the next 
three budget years.... At the end of this three-year period, the level of our annual 
development assistance will be $5 billion higher than current levels.

This is a record amount of spending. And in return for these funds, we expect nations 
to rout out corruption, to open their markets, to respect human rights, and to adhere 
to the rule of law. [Emphasis added.]

One of the beneficiaries of U.S. foreign aid is Russia. This "partner" in our war 
against terrorism provides nuclear technology to Iran and has just confirmed its 
intent to sign a $40 billion economic deal with Iraq. Both Iran and Iraq are part of 
what Bush has called (correctly, in our view) the "axis of evil." So much for the quid 
pro quo Bush expects.

Even more appalling was the Bush administration’s aid to the Taliban of Afghanistan — 
the folks who harbored Osama bin Laden and his terrorist training camps. In May of 
2001, for instance, the Bush administration announced a $43 million dollar aid package 
to Afghanistan, which was intended in part, according to Secretary of State Colin 
Powell, to alleviate the "impact of the [Taliban-imposed] ban on poppy cultivation." 
After September 11th, the Bush administration turned on the Taliban — but the money 
spigots to Afghanistan remained open. On October 4th, just three weeks after September 
11th, President Bush announced a $320 million aid package to Afghanistan and Afghan 
refugees in neighboring Central Asian republics. The money that had been going to the 
"bad guys" was now being diverted to the rival warlords and factions with whom we’ve 
aligned ourselves in the war on terrorism. Such is the perverse calculus of foreign 
aid, whether administered by a Republican or a Democrat admini
stration.

But what of Bush’s war on terrorism and the "axis of evil"? Isn’t the president doing 
a good job ridding the world of al-Qaeda and their terrorist sponsors and associates?

The war against terrorism will never be won so long as we accommodate state sponsors 
of terrorism such as Russia and China. It will never end so long as we conduct it 
under the auspices of the terrorist-infested United Nations, where Syria — another 
state sponsor of terrorism — currently sits on the Security Council (and even chaired 
it during June of this year). It certainly won’t be won by replacing one 
terrorist-friendly regime with another — as has just occurred in Afghanistan.

Of course, Bush puts a different face on the matter. In his January 29th "State of the 
Union" address, he observed:

In four short months, our nation has comforted the victims, begun to rebuild New York 
and the Pentagon, rallied a great coalition, captured, arrested, and rid the world of 
thousands of terrorists, destroyed Afghanistan’s terrorist training camps, saved a 
people from starvation, and freed a country from brutal oppression....

America and Afghanistan are now allies against terror. We’ll be partners in rebuilding 
that country. And this evening we welcome the distinguished interim leader of a 
liberated Afghanistan: Chairman Hamid Karzai.

Less than a month after attending Bush’s speech, where he heard the president denounce 
Iran — as well as North Korea and Iraq — as a member of the "axis of evil," 
Afghanistan’s Chairman Karzai went to Iran, where he met Iranian President Mohammad 
Khatami and told a news conference: "Our presence here is like going to your brother’s 
house, because Iran is our brother country. Iran is not only a neighbor, but also a 
friend." Then in August, Khatami visited Karzai in Afghanistan.

"Across the world, governments have heard this message: You’re either with us, or 
you’re with the terrorists," Bush said to applause in his "compassionate conservatism" 
speech. Hamid Karzai obviously did not get that message.

Still, doesn’t the need to protect the homeland justify the war on terrorism? 
Government must protect the homeland, which sometimes requires waging war. But when 
war is waged, the decision should not reside with a single individual. At least, that 
was the thinking of the Founding Fathers, who assigned to Congress alone the power to 
"declare war." But that’s not Bush’s thinking. In his June 1st speech to West Point’s 
graduating class, the president outlined a doctrine of "preemptive action when 
necessary" in the "war on terror." This would involve military strikes, without 
warning or congressional approval. The likely first target of that doctrine is Saddam 
Hussein’s regime in Iraq.

Furthermore, Mr. Bush doesn’t recognize the congressional role in committing the 
United States to another war in the Persian Gulf. "I’ll continue to consult," he told 
reporters on August 16th. "Listen, it’s a healthy debate for people to express their 
opinion.... But America needs to know, I’ll be making up my mind based upon the latest 
intelligence and how best to protect our own country plus our friends and allies."

But constitutionally, that decision is not Bush’s to make. As James Madison wrote in 
1798: "The constitution supposes, what the History of all governments demonstrates, 
that the Executive is the branch of power most interested in war, and most prone to 
it. It has, accordingly, with studied care, vested the question of war in the 
Legislature." And as Abraham Lincoln observed in 1848: "Kings had always been 
involving and impoverishing their people in wars, pretending generally, if not always, 
that the good of the people was the object. This our [constitutional] Convention 
understood to be the most oppressive of all Kingly oppressions; and they resolved that 
no one man should hold the power of bringing this oppression upon us." Bush began 
behaving like a king less than a month after taking office, when he launched his first 
air strike against Iraq without seeking congressional approval. Of course, Clinton 
also usurped congressional war powers, but he had to contend with more protest
from GOP congressmen than Bush has.

Another dangerous Bush policy justified by the war against terrorism is the gradual 
consolidation of police powers in Washington. Under our system of government, homeland 
security is supposed to be multilayered — entailing not just the U.S. military but 
independent local police departments and even our constitutionally protected right to 
"keep and bear arms." The Bush administration supported federalizing airport baggage 
and passenger screeners as a means to enhance security (but has so far opposed arming 
pilots). It supported the U.S.A. Patriot Act, which expanded the list of crimes deemed 
terrorist acts and expanded federal wiretapping and surveillance authority. It has 
proposed more federal money for police and fire departments, which will lead to more 
control. And it has proposed, and is lobbying strongly for, a new Department of 
Homeland Security.

One legitimate way to protect the homeland is to secure the borders. But Bush is 
moving in exactly the opposite direction by calling for a Free Trade Area of the 
Americas (FTAA), which, like the EU in Europe, is intended to become a regional 
government, allowing for unrestricted movement of North, Central, and South Americans 
across any national boundary in the New World — including our own. Bush is also 
undermining the very concept of borders or nationhood by keeping our country entangled 
in the United Nations.

"Safety Nets"

"Were we directed from Washington when to sow and when to reap," observed Thomas 
Jefferson, "we should soon want bread." Jefferson, an authentic farmer and legitimate 
advocate of limited government, understood that the central government has no 
constitutional role in agriculture. George W. Bush, a dilettante rancher and phony 
conservative, violated Jefferson’s wise council when he signed an obese new farm bill 
on May 13th.

President Bush views the Jeffersonian concept of limited government as harmful to 
agriculture. In his August 15th speech at Mount Rushmore, Bush noted that "some of us 
in this audience … took a little heat" for supporting the bill. But why? Could it be 
because, in Bush’s words, "there’s $180 billion in that bill of taxpayers’ money to 
help our farm and ranch community"? Or because the bill moves agriculture policy away 
from a 1996 law intended to wean farmers off the federal money spigot? Or because it 
increases direct farm program spending by $73.5 billion over 10 years? Or because it 
also contains $243 billion for food stamps? Actually, none of the above. "We took heat 
over it," Bush claimed at Mount Rushmore, where the visage of Jefferson and three 
other revered Americans towered above him, "because I guess some people didn’t 
understand how important the farm economy is" — by which he meant the federally 
subsidized farm economy. At the signing ceremony, President Bush described
 the subsidy-larded farm bill as "generous" in providing "a safety net for farmers," 
and "compassionate" in making legal immigrants residing in the country for five years 
eligible for food stamps.

No big-government issue aroused more controversy during the Clinton era than health 
care. Hillary Clinton in particular became almost synonymous with comprehensive 
federal controls on health care — what used to be called, in more enlightened times, 
"socialized medicine." Yet it wasn’t a tax-engorged left-wing liberal, but 
"conservative" George W. Bush, who said, in his January 29th State of the Union 
Address, "Americans who have lost their jobs need our help and I support extending 
unemployment benefits and direct assistance for health care coverage.... I ask 
Congress to join me this year to enact a patients’ bill of rights, to give uninsured 
workers credits to help buy health coverage, to approve an historic increase in the 
spending for veterans’ health, and to give seniors a sound and modern Medicare system 
that includes coverage for prescription drugs."

How It All Adds Up

At the rate George Bush is going, by the time the next president takes the oath of 
office, there may be little left in our health care system to socialize. Or in 
education, agriculture, or any other sector in which the federal government chooses to 
meddle. In his "compassionate conservatism" speech in San Jose, Bush inverted the 
meaning of the word "self-government" as capably as Clinton could have: "All of these 
policies and all of these areas serve the same vision. We are using an active 
government to promote self-government.... The aim of these policies is not to spend 
more money or spend less money; it is to spend on what works. The measure of 
compassion is more than good intentions, it is good results."

Prior to World War II, many sincere people, who undoubtedly also viewed themselves as 
"compassionate," tried to find good in the Fascist policies of Italian premier Benito 
Mussolini by convincing themselves that "he at least made the trains run on time." Did 
he have "good intentions"; did he achieve "good results"? Many thought he did, but 
subsequent events proved them wrong. The dictatorial powers Mussolini accumulated and 
exercised worked to the detriment of the Italian people, not to their advantage.

Bush is not Il Duce. But the nature of power is the same regardless of who is 
entrusted to exercise it. Regardless of circumstances or intent, Lord Acton’s famous 
dictum still applies: "Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely."

Even if he is totally immune from the corrupting influence of power, his 
"compassionate conservatism" will fail to produce "good results" for the simple reason 
that more costly and intrusive government will sap the nation of more of its economic 
strength and further discourage entrepreneurship. And even if he scrupulously avoids 
using the centralized powers he seeks for wrong ends, there is no guarantee that his 
successors will be as scrupulous. Yet there are several good reasons to believe that 
Bush is fully capable of abusing power. For one thing, he already has, as in the case 
of war powers. Moreover, he is beholden to the same Insider Establishment that has 
shaped U.S. policy for decades (see the article on page 19). Finally, Bush has every 
incentive to abuse his powers under the camouflage his pseudo-conservatism gives him. 
No matter how far Bush moves to the left, the liberals in Congress and the media can 
be counted on to propose even more outrageously liberal policies, mak
ing Bush look conservative by comparison.

Most Americans who love their country, and who oppose corruption in government, 
apparently had little difficulty in detecting Clinton’s usurpations. By being more 
vigilant then, and by pressuring Congress to do the right thing, they managed to limit 
the damage Clinton was able to do. The continuation of the Clinton legacy under George 
W. Bush can be limited as well — if we’re willing to look beyond the Bush image and 
respond accordingly.

* Due to the way the federal government "balances" its books, the national debt 
continued to climb even during the period of surpluses.
© Copyright 2002 American Opinion Publishing Incorporated
-end article-
--------------------
-iNFoWaRZ
"Here's to the new boss,
same as the old boss...."
-The Who, rock band, from the song, "We won't get fooled again."

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to