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Why Bush Shed His GI Joe Gear
Has anyone noticed that our commander-in-chief no longer plays dress up? He hasn't done so for a while and that's no small thing. It's a phenomenon that came and went almost without comment in the media.
I don't remember the first time I noticed that George W. Bush liked to dress up. It could have been in May 2003 when he strutted across that carrier deck all togged out to announce that "major combat operations had ended" in Iraq, or when he started appearing before massed, hoo-ahing troops in military-style jackets with "George W. Bush, Commander in Chief" hand-stitched across the chest, or when he served that inedible turkey in Baghdad. I can't tell you either when it first registered that he was visibly enjoying himself "in uniform"; or when it occurred to me that this was not just play-acting, but actual play of a very young and un-presidential sort; or when I first noticed that, "in uniform," he looked strangely like a life-sized version of the original 12-inch GI Joe doll. ("Action figure" was the term first invented for it, because who wanted a boy to think he had a Barbie, even if it came with its own "beach assault fatigue shirt" and "bivouac pup-tent set"?)
Here's something I suspect goes with the above. With rare exceptions, the fiercest post-9/11 "warriors" of this administration were never in the military. They had, in the Vice President's words, "other priorities in the '60s." Hence that old (and not very useful) term "chickenhawks." On the other hand, a surprising number of Democrats in Congress had actually served in the military -- not that, from Senators Max Cleland and John Kerry to Jack Reed, it's done them much political good. Americans have preferred, it seems, to hear their war stories from the men who sat out the wars.
The reason, I suspect, is simple enough. I'm about George Bush's age. My father, like his, fought in Asia in World War II. In the 1950s, my childhood years, that generation of fathers -- the ones I knew, anyway -- were remarkably silent on their actual war experiences, but to us kids that made no difference. All we had to do was walk to the nearest neighborhood movie theater, catch Merrill's Marauders, or some other war flick, and it was obvious enough just what heroic things they had accomplished. George Bush and I both sat in the dark, enveloped in the same American mythic tradition -- already then a couple of hundred years old -- that I've called "victory culture"; we knew Americans deserved to, and would, triumph against savage enemies out on some distant frontier; we both thrilled to the sound of the bugle as the blue coats charged; we both felt the chills run up our spine as, with the Marine Hymn welling up, the Marines advanced victoriously while "The End" flashed on the screen.
Here's the difference: I left that movie theater in the Vietnam era. Much of the Bush administration seems to have remained in the dark. There, it seems, they sat out defeat and emerged strangely untouched, as I've written elsewhere, as the Peter Pans of American war play. While, in the 1980s, G.I. Joe shrunk to 3¾-inch size to squeeze into the Star-Wars universe and began fighting fantasy villains, while others absorbed the Vietnam lesson, they arrived in the post-9/11 moment with a still untarnished dream of American triumphalism. And that, as Ira Chernus makes clear in a recent essay, "Glued to Our Seats in the Theater of War," is what Americans wanted -- and many, against all odds, still want -- to hear.
The President and his top officials were the ones who could still embody the idea of a "Good War," both enjoying the performance themselves and making it seem thrilling; and, for some years, a remarkable number of Americans suspended Vietnam-style disbelief and went with the flow. Under the circumstances, a surprising number still do. It just turned out -- and who in the "reality-based" world can truly be surprised -- that they couldn't translate their all-American fantasy world, or the President's dress-up dreams, into reality. Fighting actual wars proved a painfully different matter. Tom Engelhardt, who runs the Nation Institute's Tomdispatch.com ("a regular antidote to the mainstream media"), is the co-founder of the American Empire Project and, most recently, the author of Mission Unaccomplished: Tomdispatch Interviews with American Iconoclasts and Dissenters (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch interviews. His book, The End of Victory Culture (University of Massachusetts Press), has just been thoroughly updated in a newly issued edition that deals with victory culture's crash-and-burn sequel in Iraq.
Copyright 2007 Tom Engelhardt

16 Comments so far
Show AllBush is doing a good job carrying out the orders of his Friedman free capitalist bosse who control our 1 party state.
Talk about terror !!!
The value of the dollar has gone South.
Now equal to Canadian $. When Bush took over Canadian $ was worth .65
Euro now $1.40 last year 1.26 2002 1.16
Saudi Arabia ready to unpeg US$ -
We are only dithering only long enough to allow rich to get their bucks out of our economy
Recession anyone? Followed by bombing Iran and expanding the Armageddon in the Middle East so the rich can get richer.
For game plan preview and acknowledgement of past successes,
check out Naomi Klein's "The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism".
I agree the term chickenhawk is inappropriate for the Bush, Cheney theater of absurd war. How about chicken/cowbird? The cowbird destroys the eggs of other birds and places it own in the nest to be fed by parents unaware they have lost their own offspring. That's what Bush has done to the Constitution.
Journalists and some others who didn't serve may not think so, but I think "chickenhawks" suits them to a tee.
Since we're all choosing our favorite perjoratives for the neocons, I'll plump for Black Sabbaths's 'War Pigs.'
(It's a pity all of this juvenile namecalling achieves nothing but the denegration of various fauna.)
His latest dress up attire is a suit and tie...Did you ever see those pictures of Abraham Lincoln before the Civil War and after the Civil War. It's unbelievable how much he seemed to age. On the contrary, Bush just keeps looking better. War becomes him.
This country is going to be feeling the biggest hangover after Bush leaves office, unless Hillary is elected. She'll keep feeding us the Kool-Aid.
I'd like to see Rudy Guiliani elected President. Yes, he has a lot of warts, but they are out there for all to see.
His latest dress up gear is a suit and tie...Did you ever see those pictures of Abraham Lincoln before the Civil War and after the Civil War. It's unbelievable how much he seemed to age. On the contrary, Bush just keeps looking better. War becomes him.
This country is going to be feeling the biggest hangover after Bush leaves office, unless Hillary is elected. She'll keep feeding us the Kool-Aid.
I'd like to see Rudy Guiliani elected President. He has a LOT of negatives, but, unlike the other candidates, he does have at least one good bone in his body. He rubs a lot of people the wrong way, including me, but even though he can't run his own family, he did a lot of good things for New York City. He does have at least one good bone in his body whereas the other candidates don't have any bones. :)
Good article about the generations. I was born in 1955 and raised on a steady diet of WW2 feel-good pro-war propaganda. My father and his brother ran from the war before the shooting started; they were Poles and would likely have been shot for being intelligent military-age males. Many of my father's friends were fellow immigrants from central or eastern Europe. I can remember repeating the propaganda about the "highly accurate" Norden bombsite, when when of them gently corrected me. In WW2, the US usually bombed the city it intended to, was accurate to within several miles at best. Many times their target was the civilian population itself, in a futile effort to break the will of the people. That doesn't work.
In the years immediately following WW2, studies were conducted and lessons learned reports written. These days, they are ignored.
Bush has been playing dress-up ever since his cheerleading days at Andover. For him, it's always been more superficial - hoping to fit in, to be accepted, to be "liked," by donning the mask of the moment. The moronic, conscienceless bully underneath, however, could never be contained, and could never be accepted by Daddy, whom the world considered a wimp anyway. Even the "happy alcoholic" was a costume, which he was able to shuck with hardly a hiccup. Hell, explain the accent - Andover, Yale, Harvard and, still, he talks like Cleatis in spite of the fact that not a single member of his family has a Southern accent.
No, Bush shed his GI Joe gear for one reason only: because Rove said it was time to put on a new costume - the "somber leader" who did everything he could to avoid bombing Iran, but then God whispered in his ear and, well, you know...
shhould be chickenshit, not chickenhawk...its a disservice to hawks, who only eat carion, they dont make carrion
I got this quote from a friend, who apparently got it from AP. Way too late, but apropos. Too bad it didn't become public about 1998 or earlier.
-----------------------
"A moment I've been dreading. George (Bush Sr.) brought his ne're-do-well son around this morning and asked me to find the kid a job. Not the political one who lives in Florida. The one who hangs around here all the time looking shiftless. This so-called kid is already almost 40 and has never had a real job. Maybe I'll call Kinsley over at The New Republic and see if they'll hire him as a contributing editor or something. That looks like easy work."
-- Ronald Reagan in his recently published diaries, written May 17, 1986
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So much could have been avoided, maybe.
libertas fugit:
The Reagan quote is a joke. It was obtained from a satirical site.
The basic strategy of the war on terror is that if we kill their kids, they will obey us. That is not a joke, but it is a tragedy.
i agree with this article and i heartily recommend the other article cited: Ira Chernus's: "Glued to Our Seats in the Theater of War,"
"Glued to Our Seats in the Theater of War," is the best piece i have ever read on common dreams and it should be required reading for every american.
its that good.
CANNUCKCHUCK___Glad to see you are back in good form again. I agree totally with your improved handle for Bush and Company.
libertas fugit___ the Reagan quote, whether ligitimate or not , certainly applies perfectly. Actually, the weak character of Bush was probably just what the power brokers were looking for as he would not even realize he was being used for their evil purposes. Someone with a fully developed intellect would have seen through the plan to control the nation and leave him holding the sack for his pitiful legacy.
And from the looks of things, nothing has changed with Dubya in twenty-one years: he is still a f@#$up!
MAD Magazine was out front years ago with the GI Joe comparison - far any who missed it:
http://www.spectrumz.com/z/gi_joke.html
kernel, you said exactly what I have spoken about all along.you are absolutely correct.