George W. Bush is on the brink of having his presidency remembered as a failure. His poll numbers are very low -- less than 40%. That's worse that Reagan's at the height of Iran-Contra and Clinton's during impeachment. How did it come to this?
Simply put, Bush's character flaws and poor judgment finally passed an unspoken threshold in which people, even those inclined to support his policies, have concluded that Bush is a lost cause.
The straw that broke the camel's back was Hariet Miers. His nomination of her to the supreme court might as well have been a confession that Bush's detractors were right on some of their points: Bush is a shallow, unintelligent, old rich boy who is so far removed from ordinary people that he has few of their values. That nomination demonstrated croneyism at its worse and given how much under the microscope modern presidents are, it revealed a mind boggling arrogance.
Sure, Miers is no longer in the running. But it doesn't matter. The damage is done. We no longer know whether Bush is driven by what is best for the country instead of doing favors for his friends. The reason things like Halliburton never stuck the the President (other than in the minds of the whacko left) is because it was unimaginable that the administration would be so stupid and corrupt to send deals to their friends so brazenly. There's so many other reasonable and more likely explanations about Halliburton that the charges of excess make no sense. But yet...now...there's that tingling of doubt. Anyone who would appoint their own personal attorney to the supreme court...you never know...
Then there's the botching of fiscal policy. Conservates like tax cuts because A) the government is too inept to really help people effectively (Katrina kind of sent that message home) and hence people are better off having as much of their money as possible to spend more wisely. And In theory, tax cuts force the government to become smaller.
But look out, here comes Bush. He'll cut taxes and have party. With Republican control of both houses and the Presidency, the conservatives should be able to institute their long-claimed desire of smaller government and effective fiscal policy. Instead, we have deficits that bordering on insulting in that congress and the President want to throw money at everything.
Then there's the war in Iraq. I supported the invasion. I am glad we went in there. I am still glad we toppled Saddam. The idea in a post 9/11 world that we'd allow a guy like Saddam to stay in power in a strategically vital region is nuts. He had to go. But he's gone now. And over two years have passed and it's still a mess over there. Yes yes, we're still over in Korea, Japan, and Germany and pretty much everywhere else we've ever fought a war. But we're not having to keep 150,000 combat troops those places. We're not having to suck down the National guard in those places. At some point, Iraq is going to have to sink or swim on its own. If their people don't care enough about freedom and keeping themselves from becoming a terrorist state, then there's nothing we can do about that. Not to make too fine a point on it but it was relativley cheap to deal with Afghanistan and Iraq the first time. The rehabilitation of Iraq is proving to be far more costly.
Until recently, I had hoped that the administration had quietly let the Iraqi's know that they have until say next May to get their act together because at that point we would declare victory and start to bring troops back (not all of course, 10,000 here, 10,000 there). I just don't have the confidence that Bush's team knows what they're doing over there.
If there's any "anti-war" people reading this, don't get your hopes up that I'm coming on your side. My complaint is that we're not being tougher. I would have the "glass surface nation" policy if I were emperor. Deterrence may not work on terrorists but you can bet your ass that it would motivate the host countries of these terrorists to weed them out.
But on this and many other policies Bush wants to have it both ways. Sometimes you have to make a tough decision and go all the way. Half-way usually fails and satisfies neither contingent.
It's not so much that any of these things on its own is enough to cause me to lose faith in Bush. It's the combination. When put together (particularly the Miers nomination) it gives credence to the belief that Bush really is just a pampered good old boy of sub-normal intelligence who really has no business being President but is only President because the left-wing of American politics took a sanity vacation (which they're still on) and gave us no viable alternative (I mean what the hell were you left wingers thinking? Michael Moore sitting next to Carter at the DNC?? Hello! Goddam nutballs need to take your noses out of Cindy Sheehan's rear end and get your act together and realize how pathetic your party is when you can't beat someone like Bush).
American politics has to be near the bottom it's ever been. You have the Republicans in full corruption croney-loving mode. And the Democrats are taking pride in their new status of being the party of victims and losers (as if that's a good thing).
We need a viable third-party.