Gore Vidal: Bush is a tyrant

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Gore Vidal: Bush is a tyrant

Post by BlkbrryTheGreat »

I absolutly agree with Vidal on this matter.

http://www.laweekly.com/ink/printme.php?eid=48666

Uncensored Gore
The take-no-prisoners social critic skewers Bush, Ashcroft and the whole damn lot of us for letting despots rule.
by Marc Cooper
(Photo by Debra DiPaolo)

It's lucky for George W. Bush that he wasn’t born in an earlier time and somehow stumbled into America’s Constitutional Convention. A man with his views, so depreciative of democratic rule, would have certainly been quickly exiled from the freshly liberated United States by the gaggle of incensed Founders. So muses one of our most controversial social critics and prolific writers, Gore Vidal.

When we last interviewed Vidal just over a year ago, he set off a mighty chain reaction as he positioned himself as one of the last standing defenders of the ideal of the American Republic. His acerbic comments to L.A. Weekly about the Bushies were widely reprinted in publications around the world and flashed repeatedly over the World Wide Web. Now Vidal is at it again, giving the Weekly another dose of his dissent, and, with the constant trickle of casualties mounting in Iraq, his comments are no less explosive than they were last year.

This time, however, Vidal is speaking to us as a full-time American. After splitting his time between Los Angeles and Italy for the past several decades, Vidal has decided to roost in his colonial home in the Hollywood Hills. Now 77 years old, suffering from a bad knee and still recovering from the loss earlier this year of his longtime companion, Howard Austen, Vidal is feistier and more productive than ever.

Vidal undoubtedly had current pols like Bush and Ashcroft in mind when he wrote his latest book, his third in two years. Inventing a Nation: Washington, Adams, Jefferson takes us deep into the psyches of the patriotic trio. And even with all of their human foibles on display — vanity, ambition, hubris, envy and insecurity — their shared and profoundly rooted commitment to building the first democratic nation on Earth comes straight to the fore.

The contrast between then and now is hardly implicit. No more than a few pages into the book, Vidal unveils his dripping disdain for the crew that now dominates the capital named for our first president.

As we began our dialogue, I asked him to draw out the links between our revolutionary past and our imperial present.



MARC COOPER: Your new book focuses on Washington, Adams and Jefferson, but it seems from reading closely that it was actually Ben Franklin who turned out to be the most prescient regarding the future of the republic.

GORE VIDAL: Franklin understood the American people better than the other three. Washington and Jefferson were nobles — slaveholders and plantation owners. Alexander Hamilton married into a rich and powerful family and joined the upper classes. Benjamin Franklin was pure middle class. In fact, he may have invented it for Americans. Franklin saw danger everywhere. They all did. Not one of them liked the Constitution. James Madison, known as the father of it, was full of complaints about the power of the presidency. But they were in a hurry to get the country going. Hence the great speech, which I quote at length in the book, that Franklin, old and dying, had someone read for him. He said, I am in favor of this Constitution, as flawed as it is, because we need good government and we need it fast. And this, properly enacted, will give us, for a space of years, such government.

But then, Franklin said, it will fail, as all such constitutions have in the past, because of the essential corruption of the people. He pointed his finger at all the American people. And when the people become so corrupt, he said, we will find it is not a republic that they want but rather despotism — the only form of government suitable for such a people.



But Jefferson had the most radical view, didn’t he? He argued that the Constitution should be seen only as a transitional document.

Oh yeah. Jefferson said that once a generation we must have another Constitutional Convention and revise all that isn’t working. Like taking a car in to get the carburetor checked. He said you cannot expect a man to wear a boy’s jacket. It must be revised, because the Earth belongs to the living. He was the first that I know who ever said that. And to each generation is the right to change every law they wish. Or even the form of government. You know, bring in the Dalai Lama if you want! Jefferson didn’t care.

Jefferson was the only pure democrat among the founders, and he thought the only way his idea of democracy could be achieved would be to give the people a chance to change the laws. Madison was very eloquent in his answer to Jefferson. He said you cannot [have] any government of any weight if you think it is only going to last a year.

This was the quarrel between Madison and Jefferson. And it would probably still be going on if there were at least one statesman around who said we have to start changing this damn thing.



Your book revisits the debate between the Jeffersonian Republicans and the Hamiltonian Federalists, which at the time were effectively young America’s two parties. More than 200 years later, do we still see any strands, any threads of continuity in our current body politic?

Just traces. But mostly we find the sort of corruption Franklin predicted. Ours is a totally corrupt society. The presidency is for sale. Whoever raises the most money to buy TV time will probably be the next president. This is corruption on a major scale.

Enron was an eye-opener to naive lovers of modern capitalism. Our accounting brotherhood, in its entirety, turned out to be corrupt, on the take. With the government absolutely colluding with them and not giving a damn.

Bush’s friend, old Kenny Lay, is still at large and could just as well start some new company tomorrow. If he hasn’t already. No one is punished for squandering the people’s money and their pension funds and for wrecking the economy.

So the corruption predicted by Franklin bears its terrible fruit. No one wants to do anything about it. It’s not even a campaign issue. Once you have a business community that is so corrupt in a society whose business is business, then what you have is, indeed, despotism. It is the sort of authoritarian rule that the Bush people have given us. The USA PATRIOT Act is as despotic as anything Hitler came up with — even using much of the same language. In one of my earlier books, Perpetual War for Perpetual Peace, I show how the language used by the Clinton people to frighten Americans into going after terrorists like Timothy McVeigh — how their rights were going to be suspended only for a brief time — was precisely the language used by Hitler after the Reichstag fire.



In this context, would any of the Founding Fathers find themselves comfortable in the current political system of the United States? Certainly Jefferson wouldn’t. But what about the radical centralizers, or those like John Adams, who had a sneaking sympathy for the monarchy?

Adams thought monarchy, as tamed and balanced by the parliament, could offer democracy. But he was no totalitarian, not by any means. Hamilton, on the other hand, might have very well gone along with the Bush people, because he believed there was an elite who should govern. He nevertheless was a bastard born in the West Indies, and he was always a little nervous about his own social station. He, of course, married into wealth and became an aristo. And it is he who argues that we must have a government made up of the very best people, meaning the rich.

So you’d find Hamilton pretty much on the Bush side. But I can’t think of any other Founders who would. Adams would surely disapprove of Bush. He was highly moral, and I don’t think he could endure the current dishonesty. Already they were pretty bugged by a bunch of journalists who came over from Ireland and such places and were telling Americans how to do things. You know, like Andrew Sullivan today telling us how to be. I think you would find a sort of union of discontent with Bush among the Founders. The sort of despotism that overcomes us now is precisely what Franklin predicted.



But Gore, you have lived through a number of inglorious administrations in your lifetime, from Truman’s founding of the national-security state, to LBJ’s debacle in Vietnam, to Nixon and Watergate, and yet here you are to tell the tale. So when it comes to this Bush administration, are you really talking about despots per se? Or is this really just one more rather corrupt and foolish Republican administration?

No. We are talking about despotism. I have read not only the first PATRIOT Act but also the second one, which has not yet been totally made public nor approved by Congress and to which there is already great resistance. An American citizen can be fingered as a terrorist, and with what proof? No proof. All you need is the word of the attorney general or maybe the president himself. You can then be locked up without access to a lawyer, and then tried by military tribunal and even executed. Or, in a brand-new wrinkle, you can be exiled, stripped of your citizenship and packed off to another place not even organized as a country — like Tierra del Fuego or some rock in the Pacific. All of this is in the USA PATRIOT Act. The Founding Fathers would have found this to be despotism in spades. And they would have hanged anybody who tried to get this through the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia. Hanged.



So if George W. Bush or John Ashcroft had been around in the early days of the republic, they would have been indicted and then hanged by the Founders?

No. It would have been better and worse. [Laughs.] Bush and Ashcroft would have been considered so disreputable as to not belong in this country at all. They might be invited to go down to Bolivia or Paraguay and take part in the military administration of some Spanish colony, where they would feel so much more at home. They would not be called Americans — most Americans would not think of them as citizens.



Do you not think of Bush and Ashcroft as Americans?

I think of them as an alien army. They have managed to take over everything, and quite in the open. We have a deranged president. We have despotism. We have no due process.



Yet you saw in the ’60s how the Johnson administration collapsed under the weight of its own hubris. Likewise with Nixon. And now with the discontent over how the war in Iraq is playing out, don’t you get the impression that Bush is headed for the same fate?

I actually see something smaller tripping him up: this business over outing the wife of Ambassador Wilson as a CIA agent. It’s often these small things that get you. Something small enough for a court to get its teeth into. Putting this woman at risk because of anger over what her husband has done is bitchy, dangerous to the nation, dangerous to other CIA agents. This resonates more than Iraq. I’m afraid that 90 percent of Americans don’t know where Iraq is and never will know, and they don’t care.

But that number of $87 billion is seared into their brains, because there isn’t enough money to go around. The states are broke. Meanwhile, the right wing has been successful in convincing 99 percent of the people that we ‰ are generously financing every country on Earth, that we are bankrolling welfare mothers, all those black ladies that the Republicans are always running against, the ladies they tell us are guzzling down Kristal champagne at the Ambassador East in Chicago — which of course is ridiculous.

And now the people see another $87 billion going out the window. So long! People are going to rebel against that one. Congress has gone along with that, but a lot of congressmen could lose their seats for that.



Speaking of elections, is George W. Bush going to be re-elected next year?

No. At least if there is a fair election, an election that is not electronic. That would be dangerous. We don’t want an election without a paper trail. The makers of the voting machines say no one can look inside of them, because they would reveal trade secrets. What secrets? Isn’t their job to count votes? Or do they get secret messages from Mars? Is the cure for cancer inside the machines? I mean, come on. And all three owners of the companies who make these machines are donors to the Bush administration. Is this not corruption?

So Bush will probably win if the country is covered with these balloting machines. He can’t lose.



But Gore, aren’t you still enough of a believer in the democratic instincts of ordinary people to think that, in the end, those sorts of conspiracies eventually fall apart?

Oh no! I find they only get stronger, more entrenched. Who would have thought that Harry Truman’s plans to militarize America would have come as far as we are today? All the money we have wasted on the military, while our schools are nowhere. There is no health care; we know the litany. We get nothing back for our taxes. I wouldn’t have thought that would have lasted the last 50 years, which I lived through. But it did last.

But getting back to Bush. If we use old-fashioned paper ballots and have them counted in the precinct where they are cast, he will be swept from office. He’s made every error you can. He’s wrecked the economy. Unemployment is up. People can’t find jobs. Poverty is up. It’s a total mess. How does he make such a mess? Well, he is plainly very stupid. But the people around him are not. They want to stay in power.



You paint a very dark picture of the current administration and of the American political system in general. But at a deeper, more societal level, isn’t there still a democratic underpinning?

No. There are some memories of what we once were. There are still a few old people around who remember the New Deal, which was the last time we had a government that showed some interest in the welfare of the American people. Now we have governments, in the last 20 to 30 years, that care only about the welfare of the rich.



Is Bush the worst president we’ve ever had?

Well, nobody has ever wrecked the Bill of Rights as he has. Other presidents have dodged around it, but no president before this one has so put the Bill of Rights at risk. No one has proposed preemptive war before. And two countries in a row that have done no harm to us have been bombed.



How do you think the current war in Iraq is going to play out?

I think we will go down the tubes right with it. With each action Bush ever more enrages the Muslims. And there are a billion of them. And sooner or later they will have a Saladin who will pull them together, and they will come after us. And it won’t be pretty.
Devolution is quite as natural as evolution, and may be just as pleasing, or even a good deal more pleasing, to God. If the average man is made in God's image, then a man such as Beethoven or Aristotle is plainly superior to God, and so God may be jealous of him, and eager to see his superiority perish with his bodily frame.

-H.L. Mencken
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Re: Gore Vidal: Bush is a tyrant

Post by Nathan F »

BlkbrryTheGreat wrote:
II think we will go down the tubes right with it. With each action Bush ever more enrages the Muslims. And there are a billion of them. And sooner or later they will have a Saladin who will pull them together, and they will come after us. And it won’t be pretty.
Oh, this is rich, what with coming right after Al Quaeda starts attacking the Saudis. Lemme tell you, the Muslim world is being pulled together against the US even more, what with them now carrying out Jihad against fellow Muslims... :roll:
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Re: Gore Vidal: Bush is a tyrant

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Nathan F wrote: Oh, this is rich, what with coming right after Al Quaeda starts attacking the Saudis. Lemme tell you, the Muslim world is being pulled together against the US even more, what with them now carrying out Jihad against fellow Muslims... :roll:
All that implies is later rather then sooner.
Devolution is quite as natural as evolution, and may be just as pleasing, or even a good deal more pleasing, to God. If the average man is made in God's image, then a man such as Beethoven or Aristotle is plainly superior to God, and so God may be jealous of him, and eager to see his superiority perish with his bodily frame.

-H.L. Mencken
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Post by Joe »

God, I can't stand this guy.
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Durran Korr wrote:God, I can't stand this guy.
The sad thing is, This interview was rather mild compared to some of the others he's given. He's a sad bitter old man who once important.
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Heard the heavens fill with shouting, and there rain'd a ghastly dew
From the nations' airy navies grappling in the central blue;
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Post by Darth Wong »

He's not saying anything that others have not already said, and in a more reasonable manner.

He has a point about the wealthy having more control over the nation than they should have, though. Ironically enough, the same technology that has liberated many societies has led to a sharp class division in ours. The media has made political campaigning a ridiculously expensive proposition: eight or nine figure campaign budgets are par for the course if one wants to be president. The days of a penniless Abraham Lincoln growing up to be president through persuasive public oratory are over.
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Darth Wong wrote:He's not saying anything that others have not already said, and in a more reasonable manner.

He has a point about the wealthy having more control over the nation than they should have, though. Ironically enough, the same technology that has liberated many societies has led to a sharp class division in ours. The media has made political campaigning a ridiculously expensive proposition: eight or nine figure campaign budgets are par for the course if one wants to be president. The days of a penniless Abraham Lincoln growing up to be president through persuasive public oratory are over.
Presidents like Lincoln have always been the exception. Almost all of our presidents have been wealthy men. Deep down Gore Vidal is an elitest who has never had any real respect for democracy or the middle class. He's an almost perfect exampleof the guilty white liberal. He claims to love the working man but he certainly does not believe they can really rule themselves. Sorry for the rambling but the more books I read from this man the more I loath his hypocracy.
For I dipt into the future, far as human eye could see,
Saw the Vision of the world, and all the wonder that would be;
Saw the heavens fill with commerce, argosies of magic sails,
Pilots of the purple twilight dropping down with costly bales;
Heard the heavens fill with shouting, and there rain'd a ghastly dew
From the nations' airy navies grappling in the central blue;
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Post by Dark Hellion »

All that implies is later rather then sooner.
How much later? You seem to think that the combined muslim world is somehow a military threat to the U.S. Hmmm, I don't recall china, russia or any of the E.U. being muslim. In fact, wait a minute, we kicked unholy amounts of ass last time we had to fight a muslim country (at least in straight up combat.)
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Post by RedImperator »

Shit like this just irritates me. Yeah, poor, oppressed Gore Vidal, living in his mansion in the Hollywood Hills, singing a sad song for the working man.
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The Muslim are coming? Quick! Hide! The MUSLIMS are coming! Next them black folk will be after us, too!
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Post by BlkbrryTheGreat »

RedImperator wrote:Shit like this just irritates me. Yeah, poor, oppressed Gore Vidal, living in his mansion in the Hollywood Hills, singing a sad song for the working man.
What a brilliant cricticism of the points he made. :roll:
Devolution is quite as natural as evolution, and may be just as pleasing, or even a good deal more pleasing, to God. If the average man is made in God's image, then a man such as Beethoven or Aristotle is plainly superior to God, and so God may be jealous of him, and eager to see his superiority perish with his bodily frame.

-H.L. Mencken
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Post by Dark Hellion »

Seriously blackberry, if you can't see the many major flaws in his paper already, then you are quite hopeless. He generalizes and skews information to a great degree. Its not even worth a point by point, because so much is flawed that bringing up this article and expecting some hollistic rebuttal is simple gullability.
Don't waste our time with this shit. If you had a point by posting it other than, he look, this guy wrote this big long paper, say it. Don't sit and say, look, evidence. Oh read it, theirs evidence in it. Look at my evidence. You are starting so sound a little like a certain other person I know.
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Ahhh ben franklin, the revolutionary of 1776, who as a
statesman in 1794, called for the hangings of the poor farmers
who led the Whiskey Rebellion.

Contrast that with Washington who led the army/milita that
put it down and then he pardoned them all.
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Post by BlkbrryTheGreat »

Dark Hellion wrote:Seriously blackberry, if you can't see the many major flaws in his paper already, then you are quite hopeless. He generalizes and skews information to a great degree. Its not even worth a point by point, because so much is flawed that bringing up this article and expecting some hollistic rebuttal is simple gullability.
Because I criticize Red for making a stupid comment, (basically a round about appeal to motive) I'm a some sort of argument zealot?
Don't waste our time with this shit. If you had a point by posting it other than, he look, this guy wrote this big long paper, say it. Don't sit and say, look, evidence. Oh read it, theirs evidence in it. Look at my evidence. You are starting so sound a little like a certain other person I know.
For all your talk you've yet to retute a single thing I've said. If this article is shit then state why and back up. Its easy to fling out opinionated one liners, backing up what you say takes work.
Devolution is quite as natural as evolution, and may be just as pleasing, or even a good deal more pleasing, to God. If the average man is made in God's image, then a man such as Beethoven or Aristotle is plainly superior to God, and so God may be jealous of him, and eager to see his superiority perish with his bodily frame.

-H.L. Mencken
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Post by BlkbrryTheGreat »

MKSheppard wrote:Ahhh ben franklin, the revolutionary of 1776, who as a
statesman in 1794, called for the hangings of the poor farmers
who led the Whiskey Rebellion.

Contrast that with Washington who led the army/milita that
put it down and then he pardoned them all.
I always did like Jefferson and Washington more then Franklin. None of them were perfect though. As you pointed out Franklin wanted to hang the farmer's while Jefferson and Washington were both slave-holding aristocrats. For all their flaws they did set up the longest lasting constitutional republic in history; and the Constitution they established, though under attack by the Bush adminstration, still retains many of the Freedoms that would otherwise have been stripped from us by now. Just imagine the level of theocracy we would have to suffer through if the 1st Amendment was not in place.
Devolution is quite as natural as evolution, and may be just as pleasing, or even a good deal more pleasing, to God. If the average man is made in God's image, then a man such as Beethoven or Aristotle is plainly superior to God, and so God may be jealous of him, and eager to see his superiority perish with his bodily frame.

-H.L. Mencken
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Darth Wong wrote:He's not saying anything that others have not already said, and in a more reasonable manner.

He has a point about the wealthy having more control over the nation than they should have, though. Ironically enough, the same technology that has liberated many societies has led to a sharp class division in ours. The media has made political campaigning a ridiculously expensive proposition: eight or nine figure campaign budgets are par for the course if one wants to be president. The days of a penniless Abraham Lincoln growing up to be president through persuasive public oratory are over.
Which is really a critisism of the whole system and has no specific bearing on Bush. The trully massive media blitzes are something that had it's orgins far back (though it has been argued that Kennedy started the modern trend) in the American political system.

I find it funny that liberals are using that particular issue to attack Bush. Bill Clinton was as bad when it came to campaign corruption, if not more so. It's hardly a partisan problem.

As for the PATRIOT Act, I don't like it but Vidal seems to be forgetting that it's mostly based on anti-espionage laws from WW1 and WW2. It should be struck down but it's hardly the herald of jackboots in the street as he would have us believe.

And man, his characterizations of the Founding Fathers are the ludicrous carcitures popular with the liberal elite. None of them hold much water at all, mostly just the desire of small elitist men to shred the works and character of those better than they are. The most that could be said of the Founding Fathers was that they were keenly aware of the drawbacks of democracy.
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Re: Gore Vidal: Bush is a tyrant

Post by RedImperator »

BlkbrryTheGreat wrote:What a brilliant cricticism of the points he made. :roll:
You want criticism, you smarmy shit? Enjoy.
BlkbrryTheGreat wrote:Your book revisits the debate between the Jeffersonian Republicans and the Hamiltonian Federalists, which at the time were effectively young America’s two parties. More than 200 years later, do we still see any strands, any threads of continuity in our current body politic?

Just traces. But mostly we find the sort of corruption Franklin predicted. Ours is a totally corrupt society. The presidency is for sale. Whoever raises the most money to buy TV time will probably be the next president. This is corruption on a major scale.
And you know who raises the most money most of the time? The people who have the support of the party establishment--in other words, the same guys who would have gotten elected before the mass media. This is not a new criticism--a valid one, perhaps, but not new.
Enron was an eye-opener to naive lovers of modern capitalism. Our accounting brotherhood, in its entirety, turned out to be corrupt, on the take. With the government absolutely colluding with them and not giving a damn.
And as soon as people found out what Enron was doing, the company lost all value, its accounting firm lost all its credibility, and all of the sudden Wall Street started demanding everybody open up their accounting records. The market has made it virtually impossible today to pull off those schenanigans. Some indictment of capitalism.

Oh, and as for collusion? Bush refused to even speak to Ken Lay while Enron was circling the drain.
Bush’s friend, old Kenny Lay, is still at large and could just as well start some new company tomorrow. If he hasn’t already. No one is punished for squandering the people’s money and their pension funds and for wrecking the economy.
Ken Lay should be in jail, agreed. Unfortunately, the laws didn't allow for it, and even if we changed them tomorrow, we still couldn't imprison him (ex post facto and all that). Unless you've got proof that Bush came into office and changed the law to protect his old buddy Ken, that's hardly an indictment of this administration in particular.

As for the people, while what happened to their money was criminal, it's no different than what would have happened if they'd invested all their money in one company and it had gone under for perfectly legitimate reasons. They can't be let off the hook for sinking all their money into one company when the price was skyrocketing, especially if they knew they couldn't take it out.
So the corruption predicted by Franklin bears its terrible fruit. No one wants to do anything about it.
Except the market itself, which destroyed Enron and other companies playing the same game, and has demanded a thorough overhaul of the accounting system.
It’s not even a campaign issue.
If Howard Dean doesn't bring it up, I'll eat my hat.
Once you have a business community that is so corrupt in a society whose business is business, then what you have is, indeed, despotism.
You have a funny definition of "despotism", Gore.
It is the sort of authoritarian rule that the Bush people have given us. The USA PATRIOT Act is as despotic as anything Hitler came up with —
Yes, which is why Democrats and raving loony leftists like yourself are getting hauled off to KZ's. Oh, wait...
even using much of the same language. In one of my earlier books, Perpetual War for Perpetual Peace, I show how the language used by the Clinton people to frighten Americans into going after terrorists like Timothy McVeigh — how their rights were going to be suspended only for a brief time — was precisely the language used by Hitler after the Reichstag fire.
I've never read that book, but if your standards of logic and proof there are the same as in this interview, I doubt you "showed" anything.
In this context, would any of the Founding Fathers find themselves comfortable in the current political system of the United States? Certainly Jefferson wouldn’t. But what about the radical centralizers, or those like John Adams, who had a sneaking sympathy for the monarchy?

Adams thought monarchy, as tamed and balanced by the parliament, could offer democracy. But he was no totalitarian, not by any means.
Alien and Sedition Acts, anyone? Those made the PATRIOT Act look like the 14th Amendment.
Hamilton, on the other hand, might have very well gone along with the Bush people, because he believed there was an elite who should govern. He nevertheless was a bastard born in the West Indies, and he was always a little nervous about his own social station. He, of course, married into wealth and became an aristo. And it is he who argues that we must have a government made up of the very best people, meaning the rich.
Personally, I think Hamilton would take one look at how much money Bush is frittering away and vomit. But hey, instead of making legitimate criticisms of the administration, let's compare Bush to Hitler!
So you’d find Hamilton pretty much on the Bush side. But I can’t think of any other Founders who would. Adams would surely disapprove of Bush. He was highly moral, and I don’t think he could endure the current dishonesty. Already they were pretty bugged by a bunch of journalists who came over from Ireland and such places and were telling Americans how to do things. You know, like Andrew Sullivan today telling us how to be. I think you would find a sort of union of discontent with Bush among the Founders. The sort of despotism that overcomes us now is precisely what Franklin predicted.
Evidence of despotism so far: corrupt corporations that collapsed as soon as their misdeeds became public, an admittedly unconstitutional series of laws that was passed in a panic after the worst terrorist attack in history which likely won't be renewed, a set of even worse laws that will never make it past the judiciary committee, and a good old days fallacy about the time when money and connections weren't needed to get elected. Oh yeah, and vague comparisons to Hitler. Seig heil.
But Gore, you have lived through a number of inglorious administrations in your lifetime, from Truman’s founding of the national-security state, to LBJ’s debacle in Vietnam, to Nixon and Watergate, and yet here you are to tell the tale. So when it comes to this Bush administration, are you really talking about despots per se? Or is this really just one more rather corrupt and foolish Republican administration?
A peek into the rigidly unbiased journalistic mind of the interviewer, not to mention certain deficencies in his historical knowledge. Last time I checked, Harry Truman and LBJ were Democrats.
No. We are talking about despotism. I have read not only the first PATRIOT Act but also the second one, which has not yet been totally made public nor approved by Congress and to which there is already great resistance.
Despots, of course, always allow criticism from the public and the media of their laws.
An American citizen can be fingered as a terrorist, and with what proof? No proof. All you need is the word of the attorney general or maybe the president himself. You can then be locked up without access to a lawyer, and then tried by military tribunal and even executed. Or, in a brand-new wrinkle, you can be exiled, stripped of your citizenship and packed off to another place not even organized as a country — like Tierra del Fuego or some rock in the Pacific. All of this is in the USA PATRIOT Act.
No, it's NOT all in the USA PATRIOT act. The exile is from PATRIOT II. Believe it or not, PATRIOT is bad enough without having to make people think the worst excesses of the second PATRIOT have already been put in place. This is part of the problem I have with people like Vidal: they mix real criticism of the administration with shrill leftist ranting and paranoid fantasies, making it harder for anyone, especially a rightist like me, to be taken seriously while criticizing Bush.

Oh, and nitpick: Tierra del Fuego is split between Chile and Argentina. I'm pretty sure they're countries.
The Founding Fathers would have found this to be despotism in spades. And they would have hanged anybody who tried to get this through the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia. Hanged.
And once elected, they never would have tried to jail political opponents, right Gore? Oh, wait...
So if George W. Bush or John Ashcroft had been around in the early days of the republic, they would have been indicted and then hanged by the Founders?

No. It would have been better and worse. [Laughs.] Bush and Ashcroft would have been considered so disreputable as to not belong in this country at all. They might be invited to go down to Bolivia or Paraguay and take part in the military administration of some Spanish colony, where they would feel so much more at home. They would not be called Americans — most Americans would not think of them as citizens.
Because in the 18th century, the US didn't have any rich idiots or fundamentalist clowns. Oh, wait....
Do you not think of Bush and Ashcroft as Americans?

I think of them as an alien army. They have managed to take over everything, and quite in the open. We have a deranged president. We have despotism. We have no due process.
We're running out of tinfoil for our hats.
Yet you saw in the ’60s how the Johnson administration collapsed under the weight of its own hubris. Likewise with Nixon. And now with the discontent over how the war in Iraq is playing out, don’t you get the impression that Bush is headed for the same fate?

I actually see something smaller tripping him up: this business over outing the wife of Ambassador Wilson as a CIA agent. It’s often these small things that get you. Something small enough for a court to get its teeth into. Putting this woman at risk because of anger over what her husband has done is bitchy, dangerous to the nation, dangerous to other CIA agents. This resonates more than Iraq. I’m afraid that 90 percent of Americans don’t know where Iraq is and never will know, and they don’t care.
That's why Bush's poll numbers remain high despite mounting casualty reports from Iraq. Oh, wait...
But that number of $87 billion is seared into their brains, because there isn’t enough money to go around. The states are broke. Meanwhile, the right wing has been successful in convincing 99 percent of the people that we ‰ are generously financing every country on Earth, that we are bankrolling welfare mothers, all those black ladies that the Republicans are always running against, the ladies they tell us are guzzling down Kristal champagne at the Ambassador East in Chicago — which of course is ridiculous.
What would a Gore Vidal interview be without a little bit of class and race warfare?
And now the people see another $87 billion going out the window. So long! People are going to rebel against that one. Congress has gone along with that, but a lot of congressmen could lose their seats for that.
Another member of the "let's just abandon Iraq" club.
Speaking of elections, is George W. Bush going to be re-elected next year?

No. At least if there is a fair election, an election that is not electronic. That would be dangerous. We don’t want an election without a paper trail. The makers of the voting machines say no one can look inside of them, because they would reveal trade secrets. What secrets? Isn’t their job to count votes? Or do they get secret messages from Mars? Is the cure for cancer inside the machines? I mean, come on. And all three owners of the companies who make these machines are donors to the Bush administration. Is this not corruption?
Of course, Gore then goes on to provide the evidence of this wild assertion--one that in an "honest" election, Bush will get clobbered, and two that the voting machines are fixed. Oh, wait...
So Bush will probably win if the country is covered with these balloting machines. He can’t lose.
No wonder you like him, Blkberry. He's a raving parnoid lunatic who can't back up his assertions, just like you.
But Gore, aren’t you still enough of a believer in the democratic instincts of ordinary people to think that, in the end, those sorts of conspiracies eventually fall apart?

Oh no! I find they only get stronger, more entrenched. Who would have thought that Harry Truman’s plans to militarize America would have come as far as we are today?
What an evil, evil man that Harry. Why, he was so desparate to militarize the United States that he scrapped almost the entire WWII army. He did end up rebuilding it....right after the Soviets detonated a nuclear device. Funny how that works, huh?
All the money we have wasted on the military, while our schools are nowhere. There is no health care; we know the litany. We get nothing back for our taxes.
Except the fall of Communism, though I'm not sure if Gore Vidal thinks that's such a hot idea. By the way, we spend more per pupil on schools now than we ever have in our history, so please, enough crap about how the military-industrial complex (which needs educated workers and soldiers, by the way) is stealing apples from the teacher's desk.
I wouldn’t have thought that would have lasted the last 50 years, which I lived through. But it did last.
I wonder why, Comrade?
But getting back to Bush. If we use old-fashioned paper ballots and have them counted in the precinct where they are cast, he will be swept from office.
Blah blah blah, unsupported assertion, blah blah blah.
He’s made every error you can. He’s wrecked the economy.
With his time machine, no doubt, since it started tanking before he was even nominated.
Unemployment is up. People can’t find jobs. Poverty is up.
Those things tend to happen in recessions.
It’s a total mess. How does he make such a mess? Well, he is plainly very stupid. But the people around him are not. They want to stay in power.
So let me get this straight: Bush is an idiot, so his smart advisors who want to stay in power let him wreck the economy.
You paint a very dark picture of the current administration and of the American political system in general. But at a deeper, more societal level, isn’t there still a democratic underpinning?

No. There are some memories of what we once were. There are still a few old people around who remember the New Deal, which was the last time we had a government that showed some interest in the welfare of the American people. Now we have governments, in the last 20 to 30 years, that care only about the welfare of the rich.
Even if any of this were true, 2003-1932 does not equal twenty OR thirty. For Chrissakes, was the New Deal the last time the government cared about the working man, or was is sometime between 1973 and 1983?
Is Bush the worst president we’ve ever had?

Well, nobody has ever wrecked the Bill of Rights as he has. Other presidents have dodged around it, but no president before this one has so put the Bill of Rights at risk. No one has proposed preemptive war before. And two countries in a row that have done no harm to us have been bombed.
This is so stupid it's beyond sarcasm. John Adams and Woodrow Wilson jailing newspaper editors who criticize the government is just "dodging" the Bill of Rights? The Mexican War, Vietnam, Grenada, Panama, weren't preemptive wars? Afghanistan was doing us no harm by harboring Osama bin Laden? Cut me a fucking break.
How do you think the current war in Iraq is going to play out?

I think we will go down the tubes right with it. With each action Bush ever more enrages the Muslims. And there are a billion of them. And sooner or later they will have a Saladin who will pull them together, and they will come after us. And it won’t be pretty.
Because Muslims in Turkey, Muslims in Tanzania, Muslims in Iran, Muslims Turkministan, Muslims in Bangladesh, Muslims in Malasaya, and Muslims in America are a single monolithic culture just waiting for a great leader to come along and unify them to destroy the Great Satan.
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Post by Joe »

Very nice, Red. You oughta start a blog.
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Post by RedImperator »

Durran Korr wrote:Very nice, Red. You oughta start a blog.
I've thought about it, but there'd be too many days where all I'd have is, "I really like Cocoa Krispies" or "Freddie Mitchell should shut his stupid cake hole".
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Post by Darth Wong »

Stormbringer wrote:
Darth Wong wrote:He has a point about the wealthy having more control over the nation than they should have, though. Ironically enough, the same technology that has liberated many societies has led to a sharp class division in ours. The media has made political campaigning a ridiculously expensive proposition: eight or nine figure campaign budgets are par for the course if one wants to be president. The days of a penniless Abraham Lincoln growing up to be president through persuasive public oratory are over.
Which is really a critisism of the whole system and has no specific bearing on Bush.
Where did I say that this criticism exclusively applied to Bush rather than the system in general, or voice any support for Vidal on any issue other than this lone point? Must you be so consistently defensive on his behalf?
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Re: Gore Vidal: Bush is a tyrant

Post by Darth Wong »

Red, you made some good points, but come on:
RedImperator wrote:
Enron was an eye-opener to naive lovers of modern capitalism. Our accounting brotherhood, in its entirety, turned out to be corrupt, on the take. With the government absolutely colluding with them and not giving a damn.
And as soon as people found out what Enron was doing, the company lost all value, its accounting firm lost all its credibility, and all of the sudden Wall Street started demanding everybody open up their accounting records. The market has made it virtually impossible today to pull off those schenanigans. Some indictment of capitalism.
Nice bit of propaganda, but no less a bastion of capitalism than the Wall Street Journal has reported that accounting practices at many large companies are still firmly in the "shady" camp, and that neither corporations or regulatory agencies have fully absorbed the lessons of Enron.
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Post by Joe »

Can I get a link to the article?
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Post by Darth Wong »

Durran Korr wrote:Can I get a link to the article?
It was actually a third-party reference in the print edition of the Globe and Mail newspaper's business edition, where they mentioned somebody from the WSJ saying that. I'm not sure where I'd look to find a direct online reference.
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Post by Joe »

Well, it's true that accounting practices aren't quite where they need to be yet, but companies have been getting pretty conservative with their numbers after Enron and Worldcom. So it's at least getting better.
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Post by RedImperator »

My own information came from the WSJ, so obviously different reporters are learning different things. It's probably like Durran said: things are getting better (certainly if I'm an investor, I don't want to see a repeat of what happened to Enron happen to my stocks), but they still need improvement. At any rate, the point remains: Enron is hardly the indictment of capitalism Gore Vidal would like it to be.
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