http://www.salon.com/news/col/cona/2001/06/05/hypocrisy/index.html



Bush's double standard
The president demands severe punishment for drug and alcohol offenders --
unless they're members of the Bush clan.
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By Joe Conason

June 5, 2001 | Knocking the wind out of a self-righteous windbag is always
healthy fun, especially when the windbag happens to be an authority figure
like the president of the United States. Sometimes, however, the impulse to
deflate also injures innocent bystanders such as Jenna and Barbara Bush --
whose moralizing pappy must be mortified by their recent booze busts.

Unfortunately for the Bushes, their fellow citizens have a right to know that
the first family will be held to the same rules imposed on the rest of us.
The necessity for a single standard is greater still when those rules were
imposed by the president himself.

Yet conservative commentators, in a sudden display of tender concern for
victims of tabloid journalism, are urging reporters to stop picking on the
Bush twins. They point out that almost all American kids start drinking
before they reach legal age, that underage guzzling is usually a private
problem for families to resolve, and that neither of the girls has harmed
anyone else.

The pleas for mercy sound perfectly reasonable, even though several of the
same pundits couldn't resist attacking Chelsea Clinton in the most cruel and
boorish way. But except for a few lonely civil libertarians, almost nobody
made those permissive arguments when George W. Bush (and a bipartisan
majority of the Texas Legislature) enacted the "three strikes" penalties that
could lead to Jenna Bush's imprisonment if she is arrested with alcohol once
more.

In the situational ethics that now define conservatism, cracking down on kids
who drink was a great national imperative, until that policy meant political
trouble for a Republican in the White House.

No doubt the public humiliation of Jenna and Barbara Bush has been inevitable
since 1997, when their father approved a set of Draconian revisions to the
Texas laws governing consumption of alcohol by minors. Like most teenagers,
they eventually were bound to run afoul of those statutes, which he had
trumpeted as symbols of his own rectitude and his determination to crush
youthful vice and criminality. Due to their high visibility, they were likely
to be caught, too.

In fact, as reported in the Houston Chronicle, Jenna Bush's first alcohol
offense occurred within six months after the then-governor signed the harsh
new standards into law. (Were it not for a loophole that excludes her first
offense because she was only 16 at the time, she would now be facing up to
six months in jail as well as a $2,000 fine.) By the time he approved that
bill, Bush had already fashioned a political career out of his propensity for
cracking down, for "tough love" and for treating juvenile offenders with
"zero tolerance."

Those were the principal themes of his first campaign for governor, when much
more was said about his opponent's history of substance abuse than about his
own excessive drunkenness. During that 1994 race, he went so far as to cite
his daughters as evidence of his fitness to punish other kids. "I've raised
two children that respect discipline," he said proudly (and somewhat
optimistically).

Within weeks after he signed the laws that now haunt his family, Bush
triumphantly addressed a Midwestern GOP conference. "One of my main
responsibilities as governor -- and I believe one of the responsibilities as
Republicans -- is to set the tone for change," he remarked. "Whether that
change involves schools, or the juvenile justice system, or whether that
change involves solving the No. 1 problem facing America -- the culture of
our time -- a culture that says if it feels good, do it, and if you have a
problem, blame somebody else."

When he embarked on his campaign for the presidency, Bush continued to
emphasize the nation's supposed moral decline while proclaiming a "new era of
personal responsibility." As the long-concealed facts about his own past
finally emerged, however, it became difficult not to wonder whether he
assumed that his preachments are for ordinary citizens only, not members of
the Bush clan. With his insistent avoidance of honest discussion about his
own indulgences and indiscretions, including his drunk-driving arrest, he
made that contradiction all too obvious.

Lying behind Bush's personal double standard are issues not only of abusive
authority but of class and race. The imagery he exploited in his crusade
against juvenile offenders always focused on black, Latino and white
working-class youth, not the sons and daughters of the fancy Dallas and
Houston suburbs. That nasty habit hasn't changed with his elevation to the
White House. The latest penalty to be imposed on young people arrested for
possession of marijuana -- permanent ineligibility for federal student loans
-- is heavily class-biased. Young scholars with backgrounds similar to that
of Bush girls, each of whom is the beneficiary of a half-million-dollar trust
fund, don't need federal loans.

So for many Americans, the Bush booze bust represents a question of
elementary fairness as well as an opportunity for a few laughs. It isn't that
the president's daughters deserve to be mocked or humiliated. They don't. It
is simply that they must be accorded the same tough treatment mandated by him
toward other young people, whose chances and privileges are otherwise far
smaller than theirs. The only insurance of such equal justice (or injustice)
is appropriate media coverage of their illegal conduct and its consequences.

In short, on Father's Day they will have only one man to blame for their
present predicament.

And speaking of Daddy Dubya, perhaps his daughters' distress will encourage
him to reconsider his punitive attitude toward those who make the same
mistakes he once did. Had he been subjected to such a strict and unforgiving
code, after all, this paragon of sobriety would be in no position to inflict
his hypocrisies on the rest of us today.

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