Before I go into my thoughts on former White House Press Secretary Scott McClellans's book reaming the Bush administration for "political manipulation," let me preface it by saying that no one really cares. I dare you to find one person that has looked at this "uncovering" and said "Oh my gosh...I had no idea...All this time I had thought that Bush was a great man with a bold purpose, but now I see him for the dark villian that he is!" That's right, this person does not exist. I admit, there may be a select few who were teetering on the brink of suspision about the validity of the war and the sincerity of the President, but they are a small minority.
The truth is that the vast majority of the nation is already polarized on the war. People are already for it or against it. And no book by any secretary of anyting is going to yank anybody from their positions. This book only gives more amunition to the left, more frustration to the right, and, most importantly, more money in McClellan's pocket.
That being said, let me say that I have not read the book yet, I have only read the reports and seen the interviews. Let me also say that my beef with McClellan is not that I think he's lying.
My first beef is actually that I don't think he's lying. I just don't care! "Political manipulation" is like "business proft" or "charity service." It's not a sin, it's politics. Now, this is great fodder for the Obama camp, who claims to be a different kind of politician who would never ever "sell" anything or do anything for political gain. But politics is all baout doing what you think is right and then trying to sell it to yoruc onstituency and allies. Anyone who thinks that politics is anything else doesn't know anything. "Change" and "Straight Talk Express" are only slogans.
My next beef is basically what everyone else has been saying: Why now? If he was so uncomfortable with the whole situation, then why didn't he say something then? If the war is as "unnecessary" as he says it is, then there is a good chance that a public exposure of it could have saved a lot of lives. But conveniently he "gave the President the benefit of the doubt." Like they say, hindsight is 20/20.
Lastly, and most importantly, McClellan did not just go public. He didn't call a reporter and give an extensive interview that will service the public good. He called a liberal publisher, PublicAffairs, and wrote a book that will service his own financial good. (Also note that since he announced the book, he has refused interviews to all conservative outlets.) Now, I'm a supporter of the free market, and I think that if someone has something to offer and he can make a buck at it, go ahead. But if he is going public for the good of the country then he ought to have done it long ago to a reporter and then wrote the details in a book. Now he's not selling a war, he's selling a book. Mark my words - it is a matter of weeks before he is offered a job at MSNBC or CNN.
So, is Scott McClellan lying? Probably not. But is he a wiesel? Absolutely. The main stream media is hailing him as a hero and he is loving every second of the limelight. He obviously thinks he is taking the high road by "telling the truth," by coming clean about what he has suffered so greatly over for the past however many years (please note the sarcasm).
Peggy Noonan wrote an interesting piece the the Wall Street Journal. She writes "What he says may be inconvenient, and it may be painful, but that's not what matters. What matters is if it's true. Let the debate on the issues commence." The jist of the article is that his motives, intentions, timing, pretenses, etc. don't matter. All that matters is if it's true.
I couldn't disagree more. Even if what he said is true - even if he has drastically understated them himself - it doesn't matter at all! McClellan doesn't claim that Bush lied, that Bush cheated, that Bush did anything even illegal. He claims that Bush tried to convince the American public that what he wanted to do was necessary. That is not a crime, it's not even unethical! It's normal! And whether it's true is irrelevant.
What is relevant is why he did it. And when money, power, and fame play such a large part in all of this, it's hard not to think that they played a part in his decision to "come clean."
Friday, May 30, 2008
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5 comments:
One detail I'd challenge you on: that McClellan didn't appear on any conservatice media outlets. I did see McClellan on O'Reilly. While I don't consider O'Reilly a necessarily "conservative" personality, I think there are many who would disagree. I give anyone who appears on The Factor props for showing up, which MANY lefties refuse to do.
I found that you can find listings of show appearances on imdb.com
Here is the list, though probably incomplete, of shows that Scott has been on.
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1510135/
Additionally, I had not given the book much thought, and I think most of your comments articulate why I hadn't.
I do however think that the comment ""Political manipulation" is like "business proft" or "charity service." It's not a sin, it's politics." needs clarification.
I do not endorse lying or suppressing evidence to convince a nation. I am ok with leaving info out of comments, but admitting to truths when they are brought up, that is marketing.
You are perhaps in a better position to know/research this, but were all or most of the information channels controlled by supporters of the Iraq war?
You will notice that I separate supporters of the administration and support for the war because it seems that some people would go to war for nary a reason at all.
My aim here is to see if all of the avenues of fact finding were clotted. If they were, then there is a problem with manipulation on a grand scale.
Selling something and lying and shutting down all avenues of research are different.
So, which is the one that likely happened?
yes, I ought to update that post because McClellan has appeared on several conservative shows since I posted this. The first few days were just full of CNN, MSNBS, the Today show, Keith Olberman, and otehrs that basically sat there and sang his praises instead of asking tough questions.
tj - what do you mean by "information channels?" Do you mean agencies like the CIA and the military? Or do you mean the press?
How is anyone to know if facts were clotted? Who knows how much classified eveidence the administration had access to that McClellan and others don't? I'm not sure anything more than speculation will ever produce a clear answer to whether or not the Bush administration ignored huge facts.
Info channels:
Yes, were all the avenues of information that a President would rely on to make this decision, or justify it, controlled by people who wanted war? No matter if they wanted war for political, humanitarian, financial, or military toy testing.
I am not above believing that the President was a spokesperson for someone else's agenda, btw.
Good question. I haven't really delved deep into who knew exactly waht at what time, but I think it's a valid question. I'm also not above saying I don't know.
I don't know.
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