<<http://daoureport.salon.com/synopsis.aspx?synopsisId=a6da2e05-c808-4f7
e-9ab2-3d2a01a82a15>>

The Dynamic of a Bush Scandal: How the Spying Story Will Unfold (and
Fade) - The third button on the Daou Report's navigation bar links to
the U.S. Constitution, a Constitution many Americans believe is on life
support - if not already dead. The cause of its demise is the corrosive
interplay between the Bush administration, a bevy of blind apologists,
a politically apathetic public, a well-oiled rightwing message machine,
lapdog reporters, and a disorganized opposition. The domestic spying
case perfectly illuminates the workings of that system. And the
unfolding of this story augurs poorly for those who expect it to yield
different results from other administration scandals.

Here's why: the dynamic of a typical Bush scandal follows familiar
contours... 

1. POTUS circumvents the law - an impeachable offense. 

2. The story breaks (in this case after having been concealed by a news
organization until well after Election 2004). 

3. The Bush crew floats a number of pushback strategies, settling on
one that becomes the mantra of virtually every Republican surrogate.
These Republicans face down poorly prepped Dem surrogates and shred
them on cable news shows. 

4. Rightwing attack dogs on talk radio, blogs, cable nets, and
conservative editorial pages maul Bush's critics as traitors for
questioning the CIC. 

5. The Republican leadership plays defense for Bush, no matter how
flagrant the Bush over-reach, no matter how damaging the
administration's actions to America's reputation and to the
Constitution. A few 'mavericks' like Hagel or Specter risk the
inevitable rightwing backlash and meekly suggest that the president
should obey the law. John McCain, always the Bush apologist when it
really comes down to it, minimizes the scandal. 

6. Left-leaning bloggers and online activists go ballistic, expressing
their all-too-familiar combination of outrage at Bush and frustration
that nothing ever seems to happen with these scandals. Several
newspaper editorials echo these sentiments but quickly move on to other
issues. 

7. A few reliable Dems, Conyers, Boxer, et al, take a stand on
principle, giving momentary hope to the progressive grassroots/netroots
community. The rest of the Dem leadership is temporarily outraged
(adding to that hope), but is chronically incapable of maintaining the
sense of high indignation and focus required to reach critical mass and
create a wholesale shift in public opinion. For example, just as this
mother of all scandals hits Washington, Democrats are still putting out
press releases on Iraq, ANWR and a range of other topics, diluting the
story and signaling that they have little intention of following
through. This allows Bush to use his three favorite weapons: time,
America's political apathy, and make-believe 'journalists' who yuck it
up with him and ask fluff questions at his frat-boy pressers. 

8. Reporters and media outlets obfuscate and equivocate, pretending to
ask tough questions but essentially pushing the same narratives they've
developed and perfected over the past five years, namely, some
variation of "Bush firm, Dems soft." A range of Bush-protecting tactics
are put into play, one being to ask ridiculously misleading questions
such as "Should Bush have the right to protect Americans or should he
cave in to Democratic political pressure?" All the while, the right
assaults the "liberal" media for daring to tell anything resembling the
truth. 

9. Polls will emerge with 'proof' that half the public agrees that Bush
should have the right to "protect Americans against terrorists." Again,
the issue will be framed to mask the true nature of the malfeasance.
The media will use these polls to create a self-fulfilling loop and
convince the public that it isn't that bad after all. The president
breaks the law. Life goes on. 

10. The story starts blending into a long string of administration
scandals, and through skillful use of scandal fatigue, Bush weathers
the storm and moves on, further demoralizing his opponents and
cementing the press narrative about his 'resolve' and toughness.
Congressional hearings might revive the issue momentarily, and bloggers
will hammer away at it, but the initial hype is all the Democrat
leadership and the media can muster, and anyway, it's never as juicy
the second time around... 

Rinse and repeat. 

It's a battle of attrition that Bush and his team have mastered. Short
of a major Dem initiative to alter the cycle, to throw a wrench into
the system, to go after the media institutionally, this cycle will
continue for the foreseeable future. 

------
"To live in this process is absolutely not to be able to notice it -
please 
try to believe me - unless one has a much greater degree of political
awareness, 
acuity, than most of us had ever had occasion to develop. Each step was
so small, 
so inconsequential, so well explained or, on occasion, "regretted,"
that, unless 
one were detached from the whole process from the beginning, unless one
understood 
what the whole thing was in principle, what all these "little measures"
that no 
"patriotic German" could resent must some day lead to, one no more saw
it 
developing from day to day than a farmer in his field sees the corn
growing. One 
day it is over his head."
--They Thought They Were Free: The Germans, 1933-45
--by Milton Mayer


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