================= FIGHT THE RIGHT!
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Note the dynamics with Pres. Clinton and Bush. Also note Karl Rove's quotes. 
Very interesting and frightening.--Peggy
The boldface type is mine.

Comment 

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One gulp, and Bush was gone 
Behind the scenes at the Clinton library, we saw America's future

Sidney Blumenthal
Thursday November 25, 2004

The Guardian

At the dedication of the Clinton library last week in Little Rock, Karl Rove 
and President Bush received separate tours of the dramatic building, a 
glistening silver, suspended boxcar filled with light and with a panoramic view 
of the Arkansas river. Flung across the river stands an old railroad bridge - 
and to Clinton watchers, bridges represent "the bridge to the 21st century", 
the former president's re-election slogan in 1996. 
The opening ceremony was biblical in its spectacle, length and rain. For more 
than four hours we huddled in thin ponchos under the downpour, awaiting four 
presidents. For the Democrats among us - former advisers and cabinet 
secretaries, celebrity supporters and high school friends of Bill - this was an 
unofficial convention, a kind of counter-inaugural, with rueful discussions of 
the recent defeat. 

John Kerry arrived to defiant cheering from the crowd. Then, when the 
presidents were announced, Bush tried to push his way past Clinton at the 
library door to be first in line, against the already accepted protocol for the 
event, as though the walk to the platform was a contest for alpha male. In his 
speech, Clinton sought to clarify the present by his broad analysis of 
globalisation - "an age of interdependence with new possibilities and new 
dangers" - and the offer of conciliation: "America has two great dominant 
strands of political thought; we're represented up here on this stage: 
conservatism, which at its very best draws lines that should not be crossed; 
and progressivism, which at its very best breaks down barriers that are no 
longer needed or should never have been erected in the first place." 

In his effort to transcend the division of America into two nations, red and 
blue, Clinton was attempting to demonstrate his tradition - the absence of 
dogma, the belief that good ideas can come from anywhere, and that solutions 
cannot be imposed but must be worked out in democratic politics, involving the 
arts of building coalitions, compromises and experimentation, of which he was 
the leading practitioner and survivor. 

Offstage, beforehand, Rove and Bush had had their library tours. According to 
two eyewitnesses, Rove had shown keen interest in everything he saw, and asked 
questions, including about costs, obviously thinking about a future George W 
Bush library and legacy. "You're not such a scary guy," joked his guide. "Yes, 
I am," Rove replied. Walking away, he muttered deliberately and loudly: "I 
change constitutions, I put churches in schools ..." Thus he identified himself 
as more than the ruthless campaign tactician; he was also the invisible hand of 
power, pervasive and expansive, designing to alter the fundamental American 
compact. 

Bush appeared distracted, and glanced repeatedly at his watch. When he stopped 
to gaze at the river, where secret service agents were stationed in boats, the 
guide said: "Usually, you might see some bass fishermen out there." Bush 
replied: "A submarine could take this place out." 

Was the president warning of an al-Qaida submarine, sneaking undetected up the 
Mississippi, through the locks and dams of the Arkansas river, surfacing under 
the bridge to the 21st century to dispatch the Clinton library? Is that where 
Osama bin Laden is hiding? 

Or was this a wishful paranoid fantasy of ubiquitous terrorism destroying 
Clinton's legacy with one blow? Or a projection of menace and messianism, with 
only Bush grasping the true danger, standing between submerged threat and 
civilisation? Perhaps it was simply his way of saying he wouldn't build his 
library near water. 

Clinton concluded his remarks with a challenge to Bush couched in terms of his 
own failure - "where we fell short ... the biggest disappointment in the world 
to me ... peace in the Middle East ... I did all I could." He then faced Bush: 
"But when we had seven years of progress toward peace, there was one whole year 
when, for the first time in the history of the state of Israel, not one person 
died of a terrorist attack, when the Palestinians began to believe they could 
have a shared future. And so, Mr President, again, I say: I hope you get to 
cross over into the promised land of Middle East peace. We have a good 
opportunity, and we are all praying for you." 

At the private luncheon afterwards, in a heated tent pitched behind the 
library, Shimon Peres delivered a heartfelt toast to Clinton's perseverance in 
pursuing the Middle East peace process. Upon entering the tent, Bush, according 
to an eyewitness, told an aide: "One gulp and we're out of here." He had 
informed the Clintons he would stay through the lunch, but by the time Peres 
arose with wine glass in hand the president was gone. 

�Sidney Blumenthal, a former senior adviser to President Clinton, is Washington 
bureau chief of salon.com 

sidney_blumenthal @yahoo.com 

Guardian Unlimited � Guardian Newspapers Limited 2004

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