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Opinion: George Bush's moment of blinding clarity
President Bush, a politician who so frequently found himself pinned to the mat by the English language, emerged this week, in an interview at SXSW, as a beacon of clear, plain, unambiguous sense writes Paul Begala.
www.cnn.com
3/20/21
Former President George W. Bush did something unusual Thursday: he made news. He has spent his post-White House years perfecting his reclusive J.D. Salinger act, surfacing only to promote his books of portraits, and to join his odd-couple buddy Bill Clinton in supporting worthy causes. So, it was newsworthy when Bush, in an interview with the Texas Tribune as part of the Austin-based South by Southwest festival,spoke out in personal terms about the January 6 insurrection in Washington. "I was sick to my stomach," he said, "to see our nation's Capitol being stormed by hostile forces." Good for him for using clear, plain, unambiguous language. Those who attacked our Capitol were indeed "hostile forces." They may also be traitors. For an American, to wage war against the United States is treason -- the only crime specifically defined in the Constitution. Or perhaps they were terrorists. At another level, though, it is disheartening to realize that Bush's comments were so noteworthy. In any other time, it would hardly surprise us to learn that a former President didn't like seeing his nation's Capitol attacked, its police officers bludgeoned and brutalized, its hallways defiled with feces, its Senate Chamber breached and occupied and the Vice President hustled to safety from a mob screaming "Hang Mike Pence!"
These are not normal times, and the Republican Party is not a normal political party. Already, Trumpist Republicans are trying to gaslight their followers, saying what they saw on January 6 was not what actually happened. Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin described the domestic terrorists whose riot caused five deaths and scores of injuries this way: "I knew these were people who love this country, that truly respect law enforcement, would never do anything to break the law." This is how completely Trumpian dishonesty has come to dominate the GOP. Those who attack our Capitol with pipe bombs, Molotov cocktails, a spear, tasers and bear spray are described as "people who love this country." A Capitol Police officer is dead, and 140 officers are injured, by people "that truly respect law enforcement." More than 300 people have been charged with federal offenses -- but they "would never do anything to break the law." It has become commonplace to label bald-faced lies as "Orwellian", after the author of 1984, where Big Brother gave us Newspeak in which "War is Peace" and "Ignorance is Strength." But perhaps we need to update that label. In the 21st century, to lie so obviously, so blatantly, so incontrovertibly is, simply, Trumpian. It is odd, perhaps, that President Bush, a politician who so frequently found himself pinned to the mat by the English language, would emerge now as a beacon of clarity.
Not terrified of being primaried by Donald Trump or ostracized in a tweet by the Chief Insurrectionist, GWB rightly called it as he saw it. As we all saw it.
Sen. Ron Johnson can blow his gaslighting smoke elsewhere. GWB isn't having it.