Bush, stop crying those crocodile tears!
I originally planned on writing about Pavarotti
and his passing and how his music represented
all that is beautiful about this world, but I
unfortunately found myself unable to ignore
front page declarations made by George Bush
about how “he does a lot of crying”. With the
sixth anniversary of 9/11 looming in the background,
I needed to comment on this inane
president’s inane statements.
“I do a lot of crying in this job. I’ll bet I’ve
shed more tears than you can count as president.
I’ll shed some tomorrow,” he reveals in
Dead Certain: The Presidency of George W.
Bush, which was just released.
If you’re looking for pity from me, George,
I’m afraid you’re going to be waiting for an
eternity. I don’t care about the tears that you’ve
shed while in the midst of making decisions
that have cost others more tears than you can
possibly ever imagine.
Yes, the cowardly attack of 9/11 left 3,000
innocent people dead and their families and
loved ones in mourning, but what have you
done since to honour their memory and bring
about change in the world? Six years later and
over 100,000 innocent Iraqi civilians have died
and an additional 3,800 Americans have met
their death far away from home. Bin Laden
should send you a thank-you card for doing his
dirty work.
The war in Iraq has left more than 27,000
coalition soldiers wounded. For the first time
in history, according to U.S. military figures, 90
percent of people injured in combat
survive their injuries, thanks to advances in
surgical techniques. Missing limbs and their
spirit, they come home feeling that they’ve
accomplished what exactly? They may not be
dead, but what kind of life awaits them now?
Saddam, who incidentally had nothing to
do with 9/11, has been executed, while bin
Laden is still alive; holed up somewhere
between Pakistan and Afghanistan, taunting
Bush with videotaped messages and sending
chills up the Western world’s spine as he threatens
more of the same. Nothing has changed…
Thanks to Bush, his aggressive foreign policy
and his way of “forcing” democracy on countries
who view Americans as conquerors and
not liberators, he has created a brand new generation
of jihadists and suicide bombers. It’s
enough to keep anyone up at night.
“This is a job where you can have a lot of
self-pity,”Bush confides to author John Draper.
I feel for you, George. The actions you’ve taken
must have been hard ones. Almost as hard as
sending your child off to war to fight for reasons
as yet unclear. But what would you know
about that? You’re too busy implementing
Milton Friedman’s “shock therapy” (I urge you
to read Naomi Klein’s The Shock Doctrine:
The Rise of Disaster Capitalism), seizing upon
the fear generated to launch the “war on terror”
and ensuring that it’s a completely for-profit
venture.
Don’t want to talk politics? Let me borrow
the words of my favourite poet Leonard
Cohen. The words were written a long time
ago, but they are as pertinent now as ever.
“ Everybody knows that the dice are loaded.
Everybody rolls with their fingers crossed.
Everybody knows that the war is over.
Everybody knows the good guys lost.
Everybody knows the fight was fixed: the poor
stay poor and the rich stay rich. That’s how it
goes. Everybody knows.
Everybody knows that the boat is leaking.
Everybody knows the captain lied. Everybody
got this broken feeling like their father or their
dog just died. Everybody talking to their
pockets. Everybody wants a box of chocolates
and a long-stemmed rose. Everybody knows”.
You’ve been crying, George? Everybody
knows they’re crocodile tears…