the “what bush and cheney did” museum…

Posted on Sunday 11 January 2009

Thanks to Joy for pointing me to Frank Rich’s op-ed. As she says, "he’s on fire."
Eight Years of Madoffs
By FRANK RICH
January 10, 2009

Three days after the world learned that $50 billion may have disappeared in Bernie Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, The Times led its front page of Dec. 14 with the revelation of another $50 billion rip-off. This time the vanished loot belonged to American taxpayers. That was our collective contribution to the $117 billion spent (as of mid-2008) on Iraq reconstruction — a sinkhole of corruption, cronyism, incompetence and outright theft that epitomized Bush management at home and abroad…

The tentative and amorphous $800 billion stimulus proposed by Obama last week sounds like a lot, but it’s a drop in the bucket when set against the damage it must help counteract: more than $10 trillion in new debt and new obligations piled up by the Bush administration in eight years, as calculated by the economists Linda J. Bilmes and Joseph E. Stiglitz in the current Harper’s Magazine.

If Bernie Madoff, at least, can still revive what remains of our deadened capacity for outrage, so can those who pulled off Washington’s Ponzi schemes. The more we learn about where all the bodies and billions were buried on our path to ruin, the easier it may be for our new president to make the case for a bold, whatever-it-takes New Deal…
One cannot ever summarize Frank Rich. It’s like writing Cliff Notes for Faulkner’s The Sound and the Fury – impossible. But the trajectory of his piece is clear. With only nine days to go before we get into the "clean up the wreckage" mode, most of us who have been awake and breathing through these nightmare years are finally able to begin to feel how dreadfully wrong things have been. It’s worse than we could tolerate knowing while it was going on. Besides being dishonest and incompetent, the Bush Administration has thrown away a fortune leaving us strapped to deal with the financial crisis that matured under their very noses. If that weren’t enough, they’ve macerated our institutions and Constitution while shredding the evidence like Fawn Hall and Ollie North. Their destructiveness left no stone unturned. All that’s left are broken dreams and $493,000 worth of new Magnolia China for the White House.

The Democrats are reticent to go after them for fear of charges of partisanship. Many, including Obama, fear that we’ve got so much to do that we can’t spare the time or manpower to document and/or prosecute their carnage. I’m not so worried about either one of those things. I think we need to let the dust settle a bit. Once they’re gone, there’s no immediate hurry. But I think Frank Rich actually ends with some good advice. "The more we learn about where all the bodies and billions were buried on our path to ruin, the easier it may be for our new president to make the case for a bold, whatever-it-takes New Deal…" The operative word here is "learn." We don’t even know what happened during this Administration – not really. Bloggers have written about it day after day, night after night, but the real evidence has been hard to come by. John Conyers, Henry Waxman, and Patrick Leahy have been great in the last two years with hearings that exposed a lot of the edges of it to the light of day, but they’ve barely scratched the surface.
The last is not a rhetorical question. While our new president indeed must move on and address the urgent crises that cannot wait, Bush administration malfeasance can’t be merely forgotten or finessed. A new Justice Department must enforce the law; Congress must press outstanding subpoenas to smoke out potential criminal activity; every legal effort must be made to stop what seems like a wholesale effort by the outgoing White House to withhold, hide and possibly destroy huge chunks of its electronic and paper trail. As Johnsen wrote last March, we must also “resist Bush administration efforts to hide evidence of its wrongdoing through demands for retroactive immunity, assertions of state privilege, and implausible claims that openness will empower terrorists.”

As if to anticipate the current debate, she added that “we must avoid any temptation simply to move on,” because the national honor cannot be restored “without full disclosure.” She was talking about America regaining its international reputation in the aftermath of our government’s descent into the dark side of torture and “extraordinary rendition.” But I would add that we need full disclosure of the more prosaic governmental corruption of the Bush years, too, for pragmatic domestic reasons. To make the policy decisions ahead of us in the economic meltdown, we must know what went wrong along the way in the executive and legislative branches alike.
Here, Rich is quoting Dawn Johnsen, the law professor who Obama has appointed to take over the Office of Legal Counsel – John Yoo’s old shop and ground zero for all of his memos. It bodes well for our knowing what went on there. The sad downside to all of this is that Obama wanted to start his Presidency on an upbeat note – ‘hope’, ‘change’, ‘yes we can’. That’s a near impossibility now with the country reeling from the Recession and filled with emotion about where we’ve been [it’s easy to understand how the French felt after their revolution, or the Russians]. Finding the balance that lets us pick up the pieces and get back on track is going to be a lot more complicated than simply moving on to a new President. Frank Rich and Dawn Johnsen seem to think we need something – something like "full disclosure" or to "learn about where all the bodies and billions were buried on our path to ruin." I’m not sure that will be quite enough. I had a odd fantasy about that the other day.

After an adolescence and young adulthood living through the Civil Rights Movement in the South, as an older guy I’ve been to the Civil Rights museum in Memphis, and  to that great one in Birmingham. We made a point of going to the Rosa Parks museum in Montgomery. We lived in Atlanta, and so the King Center was a frequent reminder. I’ve watched the documentary, Eyes on the Prize, over and over. There’s something about these concrete representations of that part of my life, our life, that gives me comfort. It must be like Viet Nam Veterans visiting The Wall, or the World War II Veterans going back to Normandy. Maybe it’s like losing weight and going to a 40th high school reunion. My fantasy was a "What Bush and Cheney did" museum. I know that’s absurd, but it feels like there ought to be something that marks these last eight years that endures – something that gives the period a concrete representation.

It could start with a documentary of the 2000 election, display the memos they ignored,  footage of 9/11, Bush’s speech at West Point announcing the Bush Doctrine, originals of Yoo’s memos, a mock-up of Gitmo, a t.v. set with waterboarding, the 2003 SOTUS, film of the Iraq Invasion, Joseph Wilson’s op-ed with Cheney’s notes, the Libby Trial, a piece of that Magnolia China, etc. etc. Just something to help it stay real…

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.