Is it enough to believe your own public political platitudes about
making the Middle East safe for democracy? Is the unstated rich peoples platitude
about making the same region safe for Halliburton et al. enough to calm your troubled
presidential mind?
Over the years of this national (international) tragedy weve heardand
picked apartenough of Bushs speeches to conclude that both those rationales
are at work.
His 2008 Memorial Day radio address gave away the game in one sentence that, strangely,
no one seems to have noticed. Partly, I suppose, because we are by now so inured to his
inanities that nobody except talking heads and columnists hard up for analytical fodder is
paying much attention to what he says.
I couldnt get this one sentence out of my mind after it flashed through whatever
media I was tuned in to.
Right at the end of a few minutes of the usual patriotic vacuities, he asks all
Americans to remember the soldiers who paid the ultimate price, who were "delivered
out of the agony of war to meet their Creator."
My first reaction of jaw-dropping surprise was followed, the more I thought about it,
by incredulity and then embarrassment, which finally morphed into a kind of nightmarish
despair, the kind you feel when Slim Pickens at the end of Dr. Strangelove reveals
his true cowboy colors and happily rides one of the bombs to earth shouting
"Hee-haw" with a big grin on his face.
I was stunned that a president could and would say such a thing in public on the radio
1) without shame and 2) apparently without awareness that there might be any cause at all
for shame in making such a statement.
A statement which basically says, "4,000 soldiers have died, but thats OK
because however awful their deaths were, theyre now a lot better off than they were
before (and than we are who are still struggling along on Earth) because, well,
theyre face-to-face with the Big Guy Himself. So, not to worry."
Weve known that Bush some good while ago delivered himself into the hands of
evangelical Christians. Weve had a number of hints that Biblical prophecy concerning
Israel, End Times, and all that, may have played a part in shaping White House policy in
the Middle East.
But here, in this one sentence, he revealed in total clarity, the extent to which he
has bought into the most simplistic, bedrock faux reality of the right-wing religionists.
Clearly the mountains of the dead weigh on him. Just as clearly, hes found a way
to sleep under that crushing weight, a way to think himself beyond the horrors that he has
caused into a happier world: "As your president, I say to all you loved ones and
friends of our dead soldiers, never mind your sadness and feelings of loss, because the
simple truth is that they are much better off now than we are and certainly much better
off than they were before they died."
Some call it faith. What do you call it when the leader of an ostensibly secular nation
uses his position of power to spin an unverifiable tale to justify and celebrate the
deaths for which he is responsible? I call it obscene.