and made me cringe in deep sorrow and blind rage. THIS today, this event, the statement made by these men standing next to the worst president ever, broke my heart and drove home for me for perhaps the last time that this is NOT what the framers had in mind for our country. I'm deeply seriously apologetic to the rest of the world for allowing this travesty of justice and all that is right and true in this world, this place. As they honored him at the hugest oxymoron ever, The Bush Library, active warrants are drawn up in other countries for the crimes against humanity that are and will forever be his hallmark.
ASHAMED.
DEEPLY, HONESTLY, NAUSEATINGLY, PERSONALLY ASHAMED.
13 Reasons To Be Glad George W. Bush Is No Longer President
With
the opening of the George W. Bush presidential library in Dallas, Texas
today, there has been some creative re-telling of history and the Bush
legacy — an legacy full of terrible consequences, intended and
otherwise, that we’re still having to deal with to this very day.
- Authorized the use of torture
Though the US Code bans torture, Bush
personally issued
a memorandum six days after the September 11th attacks instructing the
CIA that it could use “enhanced interrogation techniques” against
suspected terrorists. The methods included waterboarding, sleep
deprivation, and “stress positions.” A recently-released bipartisan
committee concluded it was “
indisputable”
that these techniques constituted torture, and that the highest
authorities in the country bore responsibility for the creation of a
torture programs at Guantanamo Bay and CIA “black sites” around the
world
- Politicized climate science
Bush’s
“do-nothing” approach to climate change
prevented the U.S. from pursuing meaningful action. Though he claimed that global warming was a serious problem that was
either a natural phenomenon or caused by humans, the administration routinely
edited scientific reports to downplay the threat of climate change,
censored
CDC testimony that climate change was a public health threat, and
promoted climate denying studies financed by ExxonMobil. At the end of
the Bush presidency, a top intelligence adviser
warned the incoming president
that climate change was a massive destabilizing national security
threat that would lead to “Dust Bowl” conditions in the Southwest.
- Ignored Afghanistan to launch a war in Iraq
Rather than
consolidating gains
after the overthrow of the Taliban in Afghanistan, Bush and his
neoconservative allies pushed for removing Saddam Hussein from power,
kicking off a war that led to
one mistake after another. Ten years later, the war is estimated to have cost cost up to
$6 trillion and
resulted in the death of more than
100,000 Iraqis, 4,000 Americans and another 31,000 wounded. Meanwhile, Afghanistan saw a
resurgence of the Taliban after Bush shifted resources to Iraq.
- Botched the response to Hurricane Katrina
- Defunded stem cell research
At the turn of the century there was perhaps
no greater hope
for finding cures to illnesses ranging from Alzheimer’s to diabetes
than ongoing stem cell research. But months after taking office, Bush
eliminated
all federal funding for any new research involving stem cells, citing a
religious objection to the use of embryos — even though the embryos in
question were byproducts from couples undergoing in vitro fertilization
and would have been destroyed by IVF clinics regardless.
Twice more during his presidency, Bush vetoed legislation that would have restored funding.
- Required Muslim men to register with the government
Following
the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, Bush’s Attorney General,
John Ashcroft, instituted an anti-terrorism program to register all male
immigrants between 18 and 40 years old from 20 Arab and South Asian
countries. Thousands of innocent men came forward to register, only to
be
rounded up for minor visa violations. Roughly 1,000 men and boys in the process of applying for permanent residence were
arrested and confined in standing-room-only centers, enduring invasive strip searches and beatings by guards. Many were deported, while others were
held for months after their immigration cases were resolved, without a shred of evidence they had any links to terrorism.
- Reinstated the global gag rule
On Bush’s
first day in office
he reinstated a rule that prevented any non-profit doing work overseas
from using any of their own, private money to fund family planning
services. This so-called “Global Gag Rule”
posed a serious threat to international maternal health, but it also
cut off funding for HIV/AIDS initiatives, child health programs, and water and sanitation efforts.
- Supported anti-gay discrimination
In 2004,
President Bush endorsed
the Federal Marriage Amendment (FMA), which would have banned same-sex
couples from marrying in the U.S. Constitution. The Massachusetts
Supreme Court had just ruled in favor of marriage equality, and Bush
hoped to block the ruling from taking effect because “a few judges and
local authorities are presuming to change the most fundamental
institution of civilization.” Though the FMA failed numerous times in
Congress during Bush’s tenure, he exploited the issue of same-sex
marriage to
turn out conservative voters for the 2004 election. That year, 11 states added constitutional amendments outlawing same-sex marriage.
- Further deregulated Wall Street
Under Bush, federal agencies
eliminated regulations
on predatory lending, capital requirements, and other Wall Street
practices, allowing banks to engage in riskier and more destructive
practices that contributed to the financial crisis that started on his
watch. Bush’s Treasury Department also pushed for
even further deregulation that would have given Wall Street more oversight over its own practices even after the housing collapse had begun.
- Widened income inequality
The
per-person benefits of Bush’s tax cuts accrued to the top one percent of Americans,
as therate for capital gains dropped to 15 percent.
The CBO found that federal income taxes dropped far more as a percentage of the one percent’s income than for any other group after 2000.
- Undermined worker protections
Under Bush, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, whose mission is to protect safe working conditions, issued
86 percent fewer rules or regulations
and pulled 22 items from its agenda of proposed safety and health
rules. The office’s funding and staff were also consistently reduced.
Meanwhile, funding for the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the
agency charged with helping workers who claim discrimination against
their employers, was similarly low and staffing fell even as the number
of complaints increased,
leading to a rising backlog of cases.
- Ideological court appointments
- Presided over a dysfunctional executive branch
A 2008
analysis by the Center for Public Integrity documented
more than 125 executive branch failures
over Bush’s two terms. These included government breakdowns on
“education, energy, the environment, justice and security, the military
and veterans affairs, health care, transportation, financial management,
consumer and worker safety,” and others. “I think we’ll look back on
this period as one of the most destructive periods in American public
life . . . both in terms of policy and process,” Thomas E. Mann, senior
fellow at the nonpartisan Brookings Institution observed, noting
“genuine distortion in the constitutional system, an exaggerated sense
of presidential power and prerogative and acquiescence by a Republican
Congress in the face of the first unified Republican government since
Dwight Eisenhower.”
Sorry guys. This is just a reminder. Of those hellish years and of the other primary purpose served up to you by this blog.
He is and was and will remain dangerously stupid, and uncaring and unmindful of that fact.
I'd have been so much prouder of Obama had he chosen to sit this one out!