The Toronto Star
Jan. 20, 2005. 01:00 AM 
Welcome to Bush Fantasy Land: The Sequel

It has been said that George W. Bush is in denial of
reality, in Iraq and elsewhere. But what of America
itself? More particularly, what of the majority of
Americans who re-elected him?

They had the right to their democratic choice. Still,
what sort of nation rewards a leader who misled it
into war, spawned worldwide anger, eroded America's
moral authority, turned the Iraqi occupation into a
showcase for American ineptitude, and increased
terrorism?

The same sort that also:

Accepts the death of 100,000 Iraqis as unavoidable
road kill by a rampaging giant avenging its 3,000 dead
on 9/11, even though Iraq had nothing to do with that
terrorist atrocity.

Dismisses the missing weapons of mass destruction, the
raison d'ętre for the war, as irrelevant.

Tolerates breaches of the rule of law at home while
preaching democracy abroad. 

Of course, nearly half the American electorate is as
upset as the rest of the world, if not more so, and
has fallen into shell-shocked silence since Nov. 2.
Bush promised to reach out to them. But, as usual, his
words and deeds never did connect.

Donald Rumsfeld stays on. Colin Powell goes out.
Condoleezza Rice gets a promotion. So does Alberto
Gonzales, the White House consigliere who justified
torture. All will dance to the drumbeat of Dick
Cheney's next war, perhaps on Iran.

Tax cuts are to continue, worsening the record deficit
(already at 5 per cent of the GDP).


Social security is to be privatized, in the name of
fixing it. 

Medicare is to stay private, leaving 45 million
citizens uncovered. 

Democracy, too, is being handed over to corporate
interests and lobbies. 

Bankrolling much of this week's $40 million
presidential inaugural, as also last summer's $200
million Republican and Democratic conventions and the
$1 billion election in between, they will get a return
on investment through government contracts and
licences, along with the policy changes they are bound
to dictate.

As the trumpets herald the president's second term, 81
prisoners held in Afghanistan for three years are
freed as a gesture of "reconciliation" on today's
Islamic festival of Eid — a Bush twist on the old
autocratic custom of arbitrary arrest and equally
arbitrary release at Christmas and on the king's
birthday.

Afghans and Iraqis are yet to get clean drinking
water, steady electricity or medicine. Most cannot
venture outside without risking their lives.

Those Iraqis who make it to the polling booths Jan. 30
will vote for candidates they have never seen or heard
from.

Malnutrition among Iraqi children has doubled under
the occupation. The risk of death for Iraqis is 58
times higher, according to the same Johns Hopkins
University study that said its count of 100,000 dead
is "a conservative estimate."

Equally revealing are America's bilateral
relationships.

Bush is at loggerheads with most democracies but
closest to autocracies. In the Muslim world, he is
chummy with petro-monarchs but distant from the
leaders of emerging democracies Turkey, Malaysia and
Indonesia.

Surveying the scenes of these military and political
disasters, Bush sees only the need for better public
relations and more spin. "We've got to continue to do
a better job of explaining what America is all about."

HAROON SIDDIQUI

-------------------------------------------------
Haroon Siddiqui is The Toronto Star's editorial page
editor emeritus. His column appears Thursday and
Sunday. [EMAIL PROTECTED] 


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