Statement to the media from the Freedom Socialist Party
in Australia phone: 03-9388-0062, 03-9386-5065 or e-mail:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Decoding Bush's State of the Union address by Andrea Bauer January 31, 2003

In his January 28 State of the Union address, George W. Bush presented
Congress and the U.S. with a Through-the-Looking-Glass world: Tax cuts 
for the super-wealthy benefit ordinary people! A program to increase 
logging of national forests is a "Healthy Forests Initiative"! And the 
most heavily armed and interventionist military power in the history of 
the planet "fights reluctantly" and "will not permit the triumph of 
violence in the affairs of men."

Out of Bush's hypocritical and demagogic speech, however, one thing at 
least rang true. For the people of the U.S. and the world, decisive days 
lie ahead. Notwithstanding Bush's often repeated willingness to go it 
alone to commit the U.S. to all-out hostilities against Iraq, his 
Tuesday performance was designed to shore up lagging support for his 
policies, especially toward Iraq, at home and abroad. Whether the 
majority of U.S. working people can decipher and resist Bush's con games 
is crucial to what happens next.

So, for antiwar and global-justice activists, a "deconstruction" of 
Bush's promises and threats is in order.

Hitting the notes of "compassionate conservatism"

During his hour-long talk, Bush played first Benevolent Patriarch and 
then Menacing Patriarch. In the first role, he put forward a grab bag of
proposals and programs. These were carefully selected for mention with a
view to generating some favorable public sentiment for Bush's 2004 
budget before he lays out the whole thing on February 3. Notably missing 
was any talk of the inevitable cuts in the budget that will make life 
more difficult for working people and the poor, or of the cost of the 
enormous military buildup and looming war.

So what about the measures Bush means to take to "work for a prosperity 
that is broadly shared"?

* First and foremost, Bush promoted a second round of tax cuts, which 
will overwhelmingly benefit the wealthy, as the route to strengthening 
the economy and creating more jobs. We've been down this supply-side,
"trickle-down" road before. The theory is that lowering taxes will spur
investment. But after the Reagan tax cuts of the 1980s, net investment
declined.

And the trillion-dollar tax cut George W. pushed through during his 
first year in office did nothing for the economy but drag it back into 
the land of soaring deficits. As for stimulating employment? Something 
like 2.3 million private-sector jobs have disappeared on Bush's watch.

* Faced with a massive crisis of access to healthcare, Bush made the
decision to focus on two things in his speech: the need of seniors for
prescription-drug benefits -- and, ludicrously, the costs of malpractice
suits to the system.

As for the first, very real problem: Bush represented his new initiative 
as offering seniors the ability to choose a healthcare plan that 
provides prescription drugs. However, it seems that the "choice" that 
Bush would give the elderly is a terrible one. Seniors could stay on 
Medicare without prescription benefits, or they could opt for the 
insecurity of healthcare coverage through private HMOs. Bush neglected 
to mention that this proposal is just one feature of his overall drive 
to subject all of people's most basic needs to the untender mercies of 
the "free market" by privatizing healthcare, Social Security, pension 
funds, and everything in sight. He scornfully dismissed a nationalized 
healthcare system.

* Among the components of Bush's energy plan was the promise of $1.2 
billion in research funding so the U.S. can develop non-polluting cars 
powered by hydrogen fuel cells. Practically misty-eyed, he offered up 
the vision of a child born today taking his or her very first car out 
for a hydrogen-powered spin 16 years from now.

Let's ignore for the moment that environmental cleanliness is not the 
only problem with a transportation system based on private cars (whose 
numbers in the U.S. in the past few decades have grown six times faster 
than those of the human population). Until recently, Detroit has refused 
to investigate and implement alternative energy technologies for 
vehicles because research and development costs money and there's no 
guaranteed quick payoff. (So much for the value of capitalism as 
fostering risk-taking and innovation by forward-thinking entrepreneurs.) 
In Japan, however, automakers already have fuel-cell cars on the roads, 
and the U.S. industry cannot afford to once again fall badly behind. 
Thus George Jr. intends to ease their way by letting the government 
assume some of the financial pain of "taking these cars from laboratory 
to showroom" -- while continuing to manfully resist stricter 
anti-pollution standards in the here and now.

* Moving on from his evident compassion for the auto industry, Bush 
singled out three groups in U.S. society as in special need -- "the 
homeless, the fatherless, and the addicted"!

With cuts in federal spending for education and social services 
straining state and local budgets beyond the breaking point and welfare 
as we knew it demolished, the need for government to make a dramatic 
course reversal is desperate. Instead, Bush urged a transformation of 
America "one heart and one soul at a time" through such paltry and 
morally minded measures as his Faith-Based Initiative, which slams right 
through the supposed separation of church and state, leaving a huge, 
gaping hole. Direct government aid may be good enough for Ford and GM, 
but when it comes to "our most vulnerable citizens," it's time to seek 
the help of the agents of a Higher Power.

Commentators have criticized Bush's speech for being light on specifics 
and details, which in many ways is true. But the opposite is also true: 
in talking about issues such as prescription-drug benefits for the 
elderly and "partial-birth" abortions, he spectacularly neglected to 
include his big plans for massively overhauling Medicare and completely 
rolling back abortion rights. He declined to note that his opposition to 
late-term abortion is just one front in a war to turn back the clock to 
the back-alley era before Roe v. Wade.

* For sheer gall, little in Bush's address could rival his pledge to add
nearly $10 billion to the amount to be spent on providing relief for 
AIDS abroad over the next five years. Nearly 30 million people in Africa 
have AIDS, Bush said, yet only 50,000 receive the medicine they need. 
But why is this? Because U.S. pharmaceutical giants, supported by the 
government, refused for years either to sell anti-AIDS drugs to African 
countries at a low cost or waive their patent rights so that generic 
copycats could be produced on the continent. A large share of the 
devastation caused by AIDS in Africa has to be stamped Made in the USA.

Phony justification for a war for profits

In turning to the "war on terrorism," Bush cited a list of "key 
commanders" in Al Qaeda who have been arrested or, as he put it 
meaningfully, "are no longer a problem" -- a bloodthirsty statement that 
won a chilling roar of approval from Congress, whose members interrupted 
Bush's address 77 times with applause. Osama bin Laden's name did not 
come up during this self-congratulatory moment, nor during the rest of 
the speech.

On the domestic front, Bush advanced two new, futuristic-sounding 
security measures: Project Bioshield and the Terrorist Threat 
Integration Center. And he took credit for the 50,000 federal airport 
screeners recently put in place, even though he bitterly fought this 
development because these screeners are unionized.

What he did not talk about was how the people of the U.S. are paying for 
the supposed war on terrorism not only with their tax dollars but with 
their civil liberties. We got no report on the status of the 2,000-plus 
Arab, Arab American and Muslim men rounded up and hidden away in INS 
detention centers -- the obvious germs of the 21st century corollary to 
the internment camps for Japanese Americans during World War II. Nothing 
was said about the buildup of a police state and the steady erosion of 
due-process rights, attorney-client privilege, the right to freedom of 
belief and association, the right to privacy, the right to dissent. All 
of this was swept under the rhetoric.

In making his case against Saddam Hussein and for attacking Iraq, Bush 
made a fast, slippery connection between the war on terror and "outlaw 
regimes" that have nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons -- or want 
to have them! The possessors or potential possessors of these weapons 
could use them for terrorism, or they could pass them on to terrorists. 
Thus, these "outlaw regimes" -- no definition supplied -- have become 
"the gravest danger facing America and the world." Logic doesn't get any 
more tenuous than this.

To say that small, weak or war-ravaged countries like Iraq, North Korea, 
and Iran pose a threat to the U.S. superpower and its imperialist allies 
is to stand reality on its head. The U.S. remains the only country to 
have used nuclear weapons against another nation. Just in the past two 
decades it has launched military assaults against Grenada, Panama, Iraq, 
the Sudan, Somalia, Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, and more. In its "own 
backyard", the countries of Latin America are all too familiar with a 
combination of economic coercion, CIA sabotage, military intimidation 
and outright invasion. And Palestinians know that when Bush calls for 
"security for Israel" he means billions more U.S. dollars used to 
destroy or impoverish Arab villages.

With the U.S. Number One in world military spending, its expenditures in
2001 surpassed the total spending by the next eight countries -- nations
such as Russia, France, and Japan, and not Iraq, Iran, and North Korea. 
When interest payments on past military costs and veterans' benefits are 
figured in, military expenditures are three percent more than what is 
spent federally on the combination of health, education, nutrition, 
housing, and the environment.

In a drumbeat of accusations, carefully worded for maximum scare value 
while remaining vague, Bush claimed that Iraq possessed the "materials 
to produce" tons of deadly toxins, munitions "capable of" delivering 
chemical agents, etc., etc. UN inspectors have produced no definite 
evidence that Iraq has or is developing these sorts of weapons, so the 
rules have been changed so that Hussein is guilty until proven innocent 
-- and, as everybody knows, it's usually impossible to prove a negative.

The fear that the U.S. is at risk from 25,000 liters of nonexistent 
Iraqi anthrax is bogus. What's real is the desire of the U.S. ruling 
class to install a pliable, sympathetic regime in Iraq, one that will 
keep the oil flowing and cut Western corporations in on the profits.

What's also real is the certainty that Democratic politicians are 
incapable of offering any opposition with backbone to Bush's agenda, 
since they are just as answerable as he to corporate interests, and just 
as competent at double-speak. Governor Gary Locke of Washington, for 
example, who was charged with the official response to Bush's address, 
pointed proudly to his state's record on education. What he left out is 
that he himself is now angling to overrule voter initiatives to raise 
teachers' pay and decrease class sizes. And don't look to the Democrats 
for a stand against the war; the best they can do is urge Bush to act in 
consultation with Congress and in concert with U.S. allies, which is the 
same as doing nothing at all.

It's worthwhile for left critics of Bush to educate about the real 
meaning of his domestic proposals and justifications for war, but we can 
do more. We can advance an alternative program. How about:

* Create jobs by reducing the work week to 30 hours with no cut in pay. 
Full employment!

* End U.S. aggression against Iraq! Dismantle the Pentagon and free up 
funds for education, the restoration of welfare, universal healthcare, 
childcare, housing, the environment, and the arts.

* Raise taxes on big business and the wealthiest one percent and 
eliminate all regressive taxes that disproportionately affect those with 
the lowest incomes.

* No privatization of Medicare or Social Security!

* Restoration of government funding for abortions for poor women. Make
complete reproductive rights services accessible to all.

Support and build for massive antiwar marches on February 15.
For an end to the U.S. war on working people at home and abroad!

* * * * *

Andrea Bauer is managing editor of the Freedom Socialist newspaper.
Please circulate this statement freely, with credits.
For more news and opinion, visit the Freedom Socialist Party web site at
www.socialism.com <http://www.socialism.com/> and subscribe to the 
quarterly Freedom Socialist newspaper by sending $6.00 to FSP, PO Box 
266 West Brunswick Vic 3055 Australia.


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