-Caveat Lector-

http://www.onlinejournal.com/Commentary/Deak102402/deak102402.html

The View From Abroad
Our presidential parody

By Linda Deak
Online Journal Contributing Editor



October 24, 2002—Recently on a BBC Sunday morning talk show David Frost interviewed
Tony Blair. An open window with a view to a roadway was in their background. As though 
it
were a Monty Python movie set, a bus with its side covered in a No War in Iraq sign 
kept
driving slowly by and then turning around to do it again while the interview was in 
progress.

The joke in Europe when Tony Blair and George W. Bush share a stage is: "Oh, there is
Bush and his interpreter." David Frost asked Tony Blair if he really liked Bush. "Why, 
yes,"
said Tony. He then used some adjectives like open, friendly accessible and added, and 
"I do
not know why he has been made such a parody."

Tony Blair knows exactly why Bush has been made a parody. He feels, for some reason,
that it is his role to shelter and protect this weak American leader. At least Tony 
Blair
admitted to the widespread feelings about the American president. I do not see how Mr.
Blair can expect to lead his country to war in Iraq when clearly two-thirds of the 
people he
represents in a democratic country are against it. People ponder if there may be more
reason for Blair's support than to fill a vacuum now felt in global leadership. Some 
people
have wondered if he had been offered money, perhaps a board position in the Carlyle
Group. Bush I and James Baker III offered Blair's predecessor, John Major, this lush 
benefit
once he was out of office. This opportunity has made John Major rich beyond his wildest
dreams. The more wars, the more threats, the more bellicose the rhetoric and the louder
the war drums, the richer the Carlyle Group becomes.

The British media has from the beginning acknowledged that Bush was in the White House
because of machinations that usually are not considered kosher in polite societies. 
People
around the world remain incredulous that instead of throwing Bush and his gang in jail,
after Florida Republican voting crimes were turned inside out for the world to see, the
Supreme Court appointed him to the presidency. I know that it is considered to be in 
poor
taste in America to discuss the election, but outside the US, it is acknowledged 
openly and
truthfully. The historical facts remain the same whether they are discussed or not.

Straw polls outside the USA reflected that Gore was the preferred candidate by 86 
percent.
The big questions became "what has happened with the American people? How can they
tolerate this president? What has happened to democracy in America?"

There are a lot of theories put up to try to figure these problems out. Here are some: 
(1)
American culture is so imbued with ads that brainwashing is expected and easy. (2) The
indifference to book learning that the early settlers demonstrated for three 
generations has
never really been overcome. (3) We have so little grounding in history that we 
overvalue
the immediate present; cannot sort out what is truly important from that which is not. 
Here,
of course, there may be some finger pointing to the tabloid infotainment that has 
become
American news. (4) It is purely a mercantile society with a Puritanism that has only
hardened as the centuries roll over. What do you expect from such simplicity, 
righteousness
and naivety? (5) There is a feeling of freedom in the American culture, but decorum is
rarely given heed, so they expect to be run over by gangsterism regularly and they 
have the
freedom to be gangsters if they so desire.

There is a definite anti-intellectual atmosphere that would prop up presidential 
ignorance.
When Bush said he wanted the boys in Lubbock to be able to understand his National
Security Strategy, he told the outside world that the know- nothings in Lubbock were 
more
important than the foreign ministers in the outside world. This document reads as 
though it
was written with crayons mixed with gunpowder. The boys in Lubbock may be pleased but
others in this wide world find that spelled-out arrogance alarming.

In the Netherlands recently the cabinet collapsed and the government resigned. There 
is a
caretaker government in place until new elections happen in January. What was the 
reason
for this? Well, it happened because of voter sloppiness. During the campaign a new,
different candidate distinguished himself on the scene; Pim Fortuyn dazzled people 
with his
flamboyance, his derring-do and his open complaints about the growing Muslim population
in the Netherlands, adroitly dodging charges of racism by declaring that he was not a 
racist
since he slept with Moroccan boys. Then Pim Fortuyn was assassinated. This tragedy was
something that has not happened in this staid, well-organized, comparatively crime-free
country for many centuries.

In the immediate aftermath of this shock to Dutch society, Pim Fortuyn's newly formed,
inexperienced and reckless political party gathered a lot of sympathy votes and won 26 
of
the 150 seats in this coalition government. The seasoned and steady elected officials
worked hard to get the new government functioning smoothly but six months later, after
much bickering and unDutch behavior from the newcomers and plenty of indication from 
the
populace that if they had it to do over again they would have never sent such a bunch 
of
rabble rousers to represent them, the government disbanded. Now there is an opportunity
to get it right. In the Netherlands, it is an honor and a hard- earned privilege to be 
elected
to serve in government. Top students with strong leadership potential shape their lives
early towards this goal. The government is run excellently by kind, learned, caring, 
and very
democratic policy wonks, like Al Gore, who make their decisions based on the common
good. People have grown use to responsible and reasoned government. They trust their
leaders and want the old established way back. They are going to rectify their 
situation.

It is my sincere hope that we can win democracy back in my country. I am tired of 
cringing
in embarrassment at our careless and reckless government that was not put in place by
democratic practices. It would be such a relief to have a president who could work with
other countries and who would govern for their citizens rather than for their corrupt
corporate friends. Imagine having an American president again who was informed and
responsible and could command respect rather than derision. It seems, from the outside,
that it has become those boys from Lubbock vs. the rest of the world.

America is still a great country and we do not deserve a presidential parody at the 
top of
our government. He is not there because of voter sloppiness. He is there because of 
forces
much more dangerous to democracy than that.


Linda Deak is an American currently residing in The Netherlands.



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