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http://snipurl.com/cgyi
Gore Vidal on Bush's Inaugural Address:
"The Most Un-American Speech I've Ever Heard"

Read Matthew Rothschild's article mentioned below at: http://snipurl.com/ceta

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http://snipurl.com/cet8

The Hidden Passages in Bush's Inaugural Address
Tuesday, January 25th, 2005

from Democracy Now!

AMY GOODMAN: Today, we're going to look closely at President Bush's
inaugural address.

GEORGE W. BUSH: Today, I also speak anew to my fellow citizens. From all
of you I have asked patience in the hard task of securing America, which
you have granted in good measure.

AMY GOODMAN: In a moment, we'll go to Gore Vidal, respected American
thinker and writer, but first to the editor of The Progressive magazine,
Matt Rothschild. Welcome to Democracy Now!, Matt. You wrote a piece
called, "The Hidden Passages in Bush's Inaugural Address." Can you talk
about them?

MATT ROTHSCHILD: Sure. What struck me about the speech first off, as in
many of Bush's speeches, were the explicit references to God, which I find
offensive but I also know that he embeds in his speeches very hidden
messages to his evangelical base, and so I wanted to go hunt those down,
and I did so. You know, this speech was just coated with messages to his
base, and also suggested he believes them, that he is somehow deluded in
thinking that God put him in the Oval Office and he is God's agent. The
clip that you just played with the words, "good measure," Bush was
thanking the American people, really, for giving him time, ridiculous
amounts of time for that matter, to go after Osama bin Laden, but he was
echoing Luke 6:38, �Give and it shall be given unto you, good measure.�
And then there are a whole range of other ones. I mean, he talked and you
played a passage there about -- at the beginning � �Freedom is the
permanent hope of mankind, the hunger in dark places, the longing of the
soul.� Well, that's almost straight out of Psalm 107. �He satisfieth the
longing soul and filleth the hungry soul with goodness. Such as sit in
darkness.� If you look at these passages carefully and compare the text of
Bush's speeches with the Biblical references, what Bush is doing is he is
cloaking the best parts of American civic values or civic values of
freedom and liberty and justice, he is cloaking those in distinctly
Christian garb, and he's making all sorts associations. I mean, if freedom
is the hope of mankind and Jesus is the hope of mankind freedom and Jesus
are one and the same. That's not what we should have here in this
so-called secular democracy.

AMY GOODMAN: What other examples did you see of these -- what you call --
hidden passages in the speech?

MATT ROTHSCHILD: Well, there are a lot. Here is one. Bush talked about the
-- this was probably the creepiest section in the whole speech -- the
untamed fire of freedom, where Bush was almost rubbing his hands together
when he said, �This untamed fire will burn those who fight its progress.�
That's pretty lurid, isn't it? Anyway, he talked about the untamed fire of
freedom in a passage that included the phrase, "hope kindles hope." And
this echoes a couple passages in Jeremiah. �I will kindle an unquenchable
fire in the gates of Jerusalem.� Or, �I will kindle a fire in her towns
that will consume all who are around her.� This is just all over the
place. I mean, Bush talked about the day when the captives are set free.
In Ephesians, it says, "He led the captives free.� The closer you look at
it, the more you can see these parallels, and they are very disturbing to
me.

AMY GOODMAN: We are talking to Matt Rothschild, editor of The Progressive
magazine. The response of the White House, they had to issue a
clarification, saying that this is not new, that these are the policies
that President Bush is pursuing in Iraq, in Afghanistan, in the Middle
East and elsewhere.

MATT ROTHSCHILD: Well, it's certainly true. It's not new, the Bush policy
of messianic militarism, nor is it new the way that he phrases it. I mean,
he has said in speech after speech, Amy, that we are delivering the gift
of freedom to the people of Iraq, but it's not our gift to deliver; it's
the gift of God almighty. And so he sees himself as God's efficient little
delivery boy, God's UPS man, replete with brown shirt. He talked about God
as the author of liberty in his inauguration address, and if God is the
author of liberty, Bush thinks he's that author's agent, because he talks
about America as the one that is going to bring liberty to the people all
over the world.

AMY GOODMAN: On Friday, the national prayer service that President Bush
and Mrs. Bush attended, Reverend Billy Graham said that God is behind
President Bush's re-election. Graham said, quote, �Our father, we
acknowledge your divine help in the selection of our nation's leaders
throughout history, and we believe in your providence, you have granted a
second term of office to our president, George W. Bush, and our vice
president, Richard Cheney.�

MATT ROTHSCHILD: And that's nothing new. Bush himself thinks that God put
him in the Oval Office. After 9/11, he gave a speech by the same
speechwriter, Michael Gerson who wrote this inaugural address, and after
the speech Gerson called up Bush and said, �Oh, you gave a great speech,
Mr. President. I knew right then that God wanted you to be in the Oval
Office.� And Bush responded to Gerson, �God wants us all to be where we
are.� And during the campaign just past, he told, Bush did, some people in
Pennsylvania, some Amish people that �God speaks through me.� This is a
man who is so deluded, it goes back to almost divine rites of kings.
That's how far back this delusion goes. And at the prayer breakfast that
you mentioned, Amy, Bush also said, "We have a calling from beyond the
stars to stand for freedom." I mean, he really does believe that he is on
a crusade. Finally, the White House has got him not to use that word, but
that's what he's talking about.

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