Editors
note: Last month, workingforchange
ran a piece by comedian Will Durst entitled Stupid people love Bush. Unlike that
piece -- which was satirical -- this piece is factual.
Oh, you sweet, innocent,
carefree citizens in non-swing states. You have no idea how much fun and slime
you are missing.
In the swingers, wolves stalk us mercilessly (as the pro-wolf
lobby points out indignantly, no one has ever been killed by wolves on U.S. soil,
but try arguing that in the face of the relentless new TV ad campaign). Breaking
news everywhere -- 380 tons of high explosives in Iraq left unattended, stock
market down to year's low, leading economic indicators down, more tragedy in Iraq,
the Swift Boat Liars are back, more Halliburton scandal, George Tenet says the
war in Iraq is "wrong" -- it feels like you're dodging meteorites here in the
Final Days.
Actually, the best evidence suggests we need to slow way down and
go way back, because far from being able to take in anything new, it turns out
many of our fellow citizens, especially Bush supporters, are stuck like bugs in
amber in some early misperceptions that have never been cleared up.
It seems
the majority of Bush supporters, according to recent polls, still believe Saddam
Hussein had ties to Al Qaeda and even to 9-11, and that the United States found
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Many of you are asking how that could possibly
be, since everybody knows...
But everybody doesn't know. There it is. And if
you are wondering why everybody doesn't know, you can either blame it on the media,
always a shrewd move, or take notice that the administration is STILL spreading
this same misinformation.
Both Donald Rumsfeld and Bush have publicly acknowledged
there is no evidence of any links between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda. However,
as Dick Cheney campaigns, a standard part of his stump speech is the accusation
that Saddam Hussein "had a relationship" with Al Qaeda or "has long-established
ties to Al Qaeda." He makes this claim up to the present day. The 9-11 Commission,
however, found that there was "no collaborative relationship" between the two.
Cheney, of course, also has never given up his touching faith that Iraq had
weapons of mass destruction, recently referring to a "nuclear" program that had
in fact been abandoned shortly after the first Gulf War. Bush and Cheney misled
the country into war using these two false premises, and it turns out an enormous
number of our fellow citizens still believe both of them to be true. It's not
because they're stupid, but because an administration they trust is still telling
them both phony propositions are true.
Normally, when you get a situation like
that -- where people are simply not acknowledging reality -- it is considered
a cult, a form of groupthink based on irrational beliefs propagated by what is
normally a charismatic leader. So those Kerry volunteers earnestly engaging Bush
supporters on the latest outrage are way off base. They need to go all the way
back to the Two Great Lies that got us into this: Many American soldiers marching
into Iraq believed it was "payback for 9-11."
A third slightly blinding fact
(to me) is that more people now think Kerry behaved shamefully in regards to Vietnam
than did W. Bush. Incredible what brazen lying will do, isn't it?
A friend
of Bush's dad got him into the "champagne unit" of the Texas Air National Guard,
a unit packed with the sons of the privileged trying to stay out of Vietnam, and
he failed to complete his service there. Kerry is a genuine, bona fide war hero.
The men who served on his boat are supporting him for president, but those who
didn't serve with him, who weren't there, who don't know what happened, have been
given more credence. Wolves will get you!
In further unhappy evidence of how
ill-informed the American people are (blame the media), the Program on International
Policy Attitudes found Bush supporters consistently ill-informed about Bush's
stands on the issues (Kerry-ans, by contrast, are overwhelmingly right about his
positions). Eighty-seven percent of Bush supporters think he favors putting labor
and environmental standards into international trade agreements. Eighty percent
of Bush supporters believe Bush wants to participate in the treaty banning landmines.
Seventy-six percent of Bush supporters believe Bush wants to participate in the
treaty banning nuclear weapons testing. Sixty-two percent believe Bush would participate
in the International Criminal Court. Sixty-one percent believe Bush wants to participate
in the Kyoto Treaty on global warming. Fifty-three percent does not believe Bush
is building a missile defense system, a.k.a. "Star Wars."
The only two Bush
stands the majority of his supporters got right were on increasing defense spending
and who should write the new Iraqi constitution.
Kerry supporters, by contrast,
know their man on seven out of eight issues, with only 43 percent understanding
he wants to keep defense spending the same but change how the money is spent,
and 57 percent believing he wants to up it.
So what's going on here? I do not
think Kerry people are smarter than Bush people, so why are they better-informed?
Maybe a small percentage of ideological right-wingers don't believe anything the
Establishment media say, but I don't think this is a matter of not believing what
they hear, but of not hearing what's factual.
The great triumph of the political
right in this country has been the creation of a network of alternative media.
There are people who listen to Rush Limbaugh for more hours every day than the
Branch Davidians listened to David Koresh. Watch Fox News, read The Washington
Times -- hey, that's what the Bush administration does, according to its own words.
But it's not just the right-wing media purveying lies -- they are quoting the
administration. These misimpressions come directly from the Bush administration,
still, over and over.
© 2004 Working for
Change
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