: He's leaving the same way he arrived eight years ago:
Clueless and somehow unable to discern up from down, right from left
and right from wrong. "Adios, Dubya. Vaya con Dios."
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/homepage/story/59890.html George W. Bush,
who famously styled himself as The Decider, said a formal farewell to
America in a nationally televised address from that bully pulpit, the
White House.

It was largely a paraphrasing of Frank Sinatra’s rendition of My Way:


"Mistakes there've been a few, but too few to mention . . . ."


The eminence gris of his administration, Dick Cheney, was front and
center.


The cowboy president from Crawford, Texas, ticked through his many
accomplishments and a few small failures, working diligently to write
a first draft of history his way.


He kept America safe somehow, even though he's leaving us with two
ongoing wars in Afghanistan and Iraq where American troops and
innocent civilians continue to die.


He kept us safe ever since 9/11, the President told us with pride.
But
what about 9/11 itself, when more than 3,000 people were murdered in
their offices or on four airliners?


On whose watch did that assault on Americans, on American soil, take
place? Who was it that ignored repeated and specific warnings of an
imminent attack on us?


Who was it that spent most of that fateful day getting to and hiding
in a subterranean bomb shelter in Omaha, Nebraska?


The departing president informed us that he created jobs and a
vibrant
economy for most of his time in office. But who is it who's leaving
us
an economy in dire straits, with more than 3 million home
foreclosures
in the past year and more than a million American jobs lost in the
same period?


He told his audience how proud he was of those who've borne the brunt
of service and sacrifice in his wars, the military and their
families,
and how proud he was to be their commander-in-chief.


But whose administration was it that pinched every penny when it came
to pay raises, increased benefits and medical care for those who're
serving today and those who sacrificed for us in the past?


He told us that the mission during his eight long years in power was
to spread the light of democracy and freedom to the benighted and
downtrodden around the globe.


But who was it that told him the best way to do that was with
soldiers, tanks, bombs and napalm? Who counseled this man that the
best way to spread freedom and democracy abroad was by trampling on
individual rights at home and shredding the U.S. Constitution and the
Bill of Rights?


He belligerently challenged any notion that his actions abroad have
damaged our reputation among the nations of the world. Not true, he
declared. America is still the shining city on the hill, still a
beacon of democracy and freedom. Where did he get that idea?


Never mind that stuff about torturing detainees in Afghanistan, at
Guantanamo, in secret foreign prisons operated by the Central
Intelligence Agency or in Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. Never mind that
in exit interviews, both our president and our vice president
confirmed that they'd personally approved extreme methods of
persuading someone to talk, like creating the illusion of drowning by
waterboarding them. Never mind that they virtually confessed that
they're guilty of war crimes, as defined by international treaties
that we've signed and adhered to for decades.


Those were hard decisions, President Bush told us, but he was always
ready to make a hard decision. Even a hard, wrong decision.


That was George W. Bush's story, and he's going to stick to it for
the
rest of his life. His spinmeister Karl Rove will publish his own
history of the Bush administration. Then Bush will write his own
version. And no doubt Vice President Dick Vader will gin up a book in
which everything he writes is a lie, including the a’s, and’s and
the’s.


Some historians are already prepared to judge the Bush presidency as
the worst in more than two centuries, to judge him worse than all 42
previous presidents. The rest will come to the same judgment in the
years ahead.


Folks say I shouldn't be so hard on our president. That surely I
could
find something nice to say about him and those who've aided and
abetted him, all those as-yet unindicted co-conspirators and
candidates for pre-emptive presidential pardons.


All right. It's nice to see you leaving the White House at long last,
Mr. President. It's nice to think of you hiding out in deserved
oblivion under some expensive rock in Texas.


Adios, Dubya. Vaya con Dios.



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