Focusing “blame” or attempting to affix responsibility for the outcomes or consequences of actions taken by the George W. Bush administration in my opinion have to be addressed in a larger context than that of any single phenomenon. A dynamic that is larger than just the several terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, and the Pentagon, and indeed larger even than the United States of America’s prosecuting a war in Iraq; prosecuted on the basis of intelligence of highly dubious integrity coupled with a galloping enthusiasm to reaffirm American military supremacy in the Middle East.
Larger even than a cartel of petroleum conglomerates wed at the hip to a cadre of ex-politico’s from several national governments pooling their resources under the title of the Carlyle Group and managing to rewrite the book on war-profiteering.
Disregard for all life, not just the lives of Iraqis, Afghanis and Rwandans, but for the very source of life upon which the entire planet depends was introduced by the Industrial Revolution and since been embraced by everyone.
The great strength of the Untied States is it’s forthright and staunch support for the principle of individual freedom. A freedom that allows the individual to hold beliefs contrary to those of the majority, freedom from fear that those with whom you are free to disagree-with may attempt to harm or even kill you for your beliefs, that you will be protected by the state.
That freedom, encapsulated in the First Amendment as “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”
This guarantees that the government of the United States cannot declare a state religion and will permit people of any religion or belief the freedom to practice those beliefs and religions as a fundamental right. This statement gives legal standing to the voices of free speech and a free press.
Responsibility for the actions of the Bush administration rest not within the limits of a two-term presidency or a two-decade-old brouhaha with Middle Eastern oil producing nations, but is the outcome of a systemic decay at the very foundation of our societies.
While this great gift of the American ethos has undoubtedly served many very well for a significant period, reality is that the size of this little life-boat whirling through space hasn’t changed, but the number of people looking for their slice of paradise has.
Is George Bush the symptom of a chronic and potentially critical disease working against mankind’s peaceful co-existence in the world? Indubitably.
“Progress” however you may define it doesn’t come either free or easy. The Industrial Revolution, technological revolution, and social evolution are intimately interrelated and the engine of progress is fuelled not by altruism and compassion but by capitalizing on resources and generating vehicles of wealth and prosperity. It’s no coincidence that the greatest engines of commerce are also those occupying centre stage in geopolitics. Whether it’s the British Monarchy practicing it’s form of imperialism from India to Africa, from Australia to Canada, or it’s the Spanish or the French or whichever imperialist power of whichever period in history, with great wealth comes great power.
When that great wealth is concentrated in the hands of a very few, the “interests” of a nation very quickly become focused through a lens being held by those few protecting their interests first.
This is how a “free press” ceases to be.
This is how a bill like H.R. 6166 comes into being.
This is how a nation becomes divided and how nations are divided from each other.
When the guiding principles of a nation are manipulated to render even greater wealth and power to those few, other principles are by necessity abandoned and buried. The strength of individual rights must and will yield to forces wielded by these people, not because these new principles are moral or just or valued by all citizens equally but because a fundamental inequity exists at the very foundations of democracy under the influence of these kinds of principles.
The principle that all other principles once held as ideals are by situational necessity expendable or have ceased to be relevant suggests that principles left unguided by sober reflection and left ill-informed will eventually be discarded.
Torture becomes an acceptable strategy. Ostracizing and “marking-out” individuals for alienation becomes “patriotism” and fear becomes the prime motivator in a climate of doubt.
Frameworks of human values and “worth” become line entries on a balance sheet and the necessity of surrendering even more of our humanity becomes more and more apparent.
Bush may have made some mistakes but Bush is in many ways, America’s “Man of Our Times” and we can only hope that American’s rid themselves of this plague while some hope still exists.