mirror, mirror, on the wall…

Posted on Sunday 4 January 2009

I’ve developed an odd aversion to Bush-bashing. I’m put off by people "piling on" who weren’t vocal back when it might have made a difference. Now, it’s easy. I needed to hear it back in 2002 or 2003 when it might have helped. But, I think I’m projecting my own guilt onto others. I’m ashamed that I wasn’t marching in the streets before the 2004 election. I didn’t love John Kerry, but that’s no excuse. I had allowed myself to be too busy with my life to realize what a lot of us didn’t realize – that the election in 2004 was our greatest failing as a people. Once Bush was re-elected, we had only one fate – this one. But that said, Frank Rich can bash Bush with impunity because he’s so damn good at it. Here’s a taste:
A President Forgotten but Not Gone
By FRANK RICH
January 3, 2009

We like our failed presidents to be Shakespearean, or at least large enough to inspire Oscar-worthy performances from magnificent tragedians like Frank Langella. So here, too, George W. Bush has let us down. Even the banality of evil is too grandiose a concept for 43. He is not a memorable villain so much as a sometimes affable second banana whom Josh Brolin and Will Ferrell can nail without breaking a sweat. He’s the reckless Yalie Tom Buchanan, not Gatsby. He is smaller than life.

The last NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll on Bush’s presidency found that 79 percent of Americans will not miss him after he leaves the White House. He is being forgotten already, even if he’s not yet gone. You start to pity him until you remember how vast the wreckage is. It stretches from the Middle East to Wall Street to Main Street and even into the heavens, which have been a safe haven for toxins under his passive stewardship. The discrepancy between the grandeur of the failure and the stature of the man is a puzzlement. We are still trying to compute it.

The one indisputable talent of his White House was its ability to create and sell propaganda both to the public and the press. Now that bag of tricks is empty as well. Bush’s first and last photo-ops in Iraq could serve as bookends to his entire tenure. On Thanksgiving weekend 2003, even as the Iraqi insurgency was spiraling, his secret trip to the war zone was a P.R. slam-dunk. The photo of the beaming commander in chief bearing a supersized decorative turkey for the troops was designed to make every front page and newscast in the country, and it did. Five years later, in what was intended as a farewell victory lap to show off Iraq’s improved post-surge security, Bush was reduced to ducking shoes…

The ruins of his administration’s top policy priority can be found not only in Gaza but in the new “democratic” Iraq, where the local journalist who tossed the shoes was jailed without formal charges and may have been tortured. Almost simultaneously, opponents of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki accused him of making politically motivated arrests of rival-party government officials in anticipation of this month’s much-postponed provincial elections…

The joke was on us. Iraq burned, New Orleans flooded, and Bush remained oblivious to each and every pratfall on his watch. Americans essentially stopped listening to him after Hurricane Katrina hit in 2005, but he still doesn’t grasp the finality of their defection…

The man who emerges is a narcissist with no self-awareness whatsoever. It’s that arrogance that allowed him to tune out even the most calamitous of realities, freeing him to compound them without missing a step. The president who famously couldn’t name a single mistake of his presidency at a press conference in 2004 still can’t. He can, however, blame everyone else. Asked (by Charles Gibson) if he feels any responsibility for the economic meltdown, Bush says, “People will realize a lot of the decisions that were made on Wall Street took place over a decade or so, before I arrived.” Asked if the 2008 election was a repudiation of his administration, he says “it was a repudiation of Republicans.”

“The attacks of September the 11th came out of nowhere,” he said in another interview, as if he hadn’t ignored frantic intelligence warnings that summer of a Qaeda attack. But it was an “intelligence failure,” not his relentless invocation of patently fictitious “mushroom clouds,” that sped us into Iraq. Did he take too long to change course in Iraq? “What seems like an eternity today,” he says, “may seem like a moment tomorrow.” Try telling that to the families of the thousands killed and maimed during that multiyear “moment” as Bush stubbornly stayed his disastrous course…
Narcissus 
It’s almost hard for me to feel enough venom towards Bush. I could feel it about Nixon [still can], but Bush should never have been there in the first place. In the literature about Narcissism, there’s a distinction between the "successful narcissist" and the "failed narcissist." A successful narcissist has all the self-aggrandizment, lack of empathy, sense of entitlement required for the diagnosis, but they can bring it off because they have the talent to go along with their personality disorder. The classical example would be the "Diva." Failed narcissists are plenty stuck on themselves, but end up looking like fools because they have no particular skills that would justify their self love. George Bush is such a person – uniquely unsuited to the Presidency or, for that matter, any position of leadership. His colleagues apparently like him, kind of like one likes the wise guy in the classroom.

This is the sentence in Frank Rich’s excoriation of Bush that caught my attention, "It’s that arrogance that allowed him to tune out even the most calamitous of realities, freeing him to compound them without missing a step." As if his policies [directed from the Vice President’s office] weren’t bad enough, his personality disorder lead him to compound them in absurd directions. The one that sticks in my throat is the "Surge." After following a dead-end course in Iraq for years beyond endurance, a prestigeous group, the Iraq Study Group, made solid recommendations about what to do [given that there was no right thing to do]. He did the opposite. He gave as his reason that he wanted the troops to come home feeling good about what they had done. That was absurd enough, but we all know that it was so Bush could leave office feeling good about his preposterous war. I don’t know how much Cheney was involved in that decision, but it doesn’t matter. They’re both sick as goats, and who ever said the Vice President had the final word on anything except tie-breaking in votes of the Senate.

I would agree that Bush had a lot of challenges in his eight years. But I can’t think of a one of them that he didn’t make worse than it was to start with. Not one. And as for Rich’s op-ed. That cartoon that accompanies it says it all. Bush has to have a smiling, adoring audience; he has to be the greatest; he has to be right; he has to matter. That’s all narcissism is. As a book title aptly describes it, "Trapped in the Mirror"…
  1.  
    January 4, 2009 | 8:44 PM
     

    For examples of you “successful narcissist” and “failed narcissist,” you need look no further than #42 and 43 — Clinton and Dubya.

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