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Doug Kanter
 
Posts: n/a
Default OT Bush is getting scary.

"getting" scary? You just noticed? :-)

Paragraph 6 is interesting indeed.

"F330 GT" wrote in message
...
I usually try to stay out of the poltical bashing that goes on here but
paragraphs 6 of this article blows my mind. Hard to believe this is about

our
president. Is he a freaking idiot or just stupid. This is a direct quote.

Why
would he admit to this?


FROM THE NEW YORK TIMES:

The Presidential Bubble

Published: September 25, 2003



Four progressive political groups sued the Bush administration this week,
charging that the Secret Service is systematically keeping protesters away

from
the president's public appearances. They make a serious point about free

speech
rights, but they also point out a disturbing aspect of the Bush White

House:
the country has a chief executive who seems to embrace the presidential

bubble.

Security concerns make it inevitable that a modern American president will

be
somewhat cut off from the country he leads. He cannot insert himself into

any
part of normal life without a phalanx of security guards.

Protesters cannot be permitted to get close enough to pose a threat, but

they
ought to be able to get close enough so the president can see that they

are
there. Sometimes seeing a glimpse of placard-wielding demonstrators is as

close
as the commander in chief can get to seeing the face of national

discontent.

At Mr. Bush's public appearances, his critics are routinely shunted into
"protest zones" as much as a half-mile away. At the Columbia, S.C.,

airport
last year, a protester with a "No War for Oil" sign was ordered to move a
half-mile from the area where Mr. Bush's supporters were allowed to stand.

When
the protester refused, he was arrested.

Mr. Bush and his aides also seem to go to great lengths to underline the

degree
to which the president closes himself off from the news media. In an

interview
with Fox News this week, the president said he learned most of what he

needs to
know from morning briefings by his national security adviser, Condoleezza

Rice,
and his chief of staff, Andrew Card.

As for newspapers, Mr. Bush said, "I glance at the headlines" but "rarely

read
the stories." The people who brief him on current events encounter many of

the
newsmakers personally, he said, and in any case "probably read the news
themselves."

Some of this may be a pose that is designed to tweak the media by making

the
news appear to be below the president's notice. During the Iraqi invasion,

when
the rest of the nation was glued to TV, Mr. Bush's spokesman claimed that

his
boss had barely glanced at the pictures of what was going on.

But it is worrisome when one of the most incurious men ever to occupy the

White
House takes pains to insist that he gets his information on what the world

is
saying only in predigested bits from his appointees.

Mr. Bush thinks of himself as a man of the people, but carefully staged
contacts with groups of supporters or small children does not constitute
getting in touch with the people. It is in Mr. Bush's interest, as well as

the
nation's, for him to burst the bubble he has been inhabiting, and take a

hard
look at the real world.



P.S. My last politcal post unless GWB shoots himself in the foot. (again)

Barry