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From Jude, posted by Eric...is this cynical? Somehow it's refreshing, I think.

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Jude Writes:

I try not to fill up your in-box on the weekend, but ... this is spot
on -- and a good one to push out the walls of the box and give us the
larger perspective.  The test of power is the one most humans fail --  
the test of superpower is the SAT of spiritual aptitude.

We can't fix it til we know it's broke -- and by the time Dub finishes
breaking it, we might even have to start from scratch.  Worse things
have happened.

Jude


A Man for Our Times
The Inevitability of George W. Bush

By BEN TRIPP
July 9 / 10, 2005

http://www.counterpunch.org/tripp07092005.html

With regrets for all the chaos and death and destruction, it was
necessary that George W. Bush should ascend to power and retain it for
two terms of office. He is a singularly giftless man, but he brings one
gift to everyone: disaster. Placed at the pinnacle of the greatest
military empire in human history, its wealth and reach unimaginable in
Caesar's day, equipped with every conceivable advantage that the very
most powerful, influential cabals of rulership and commerce and
warmaking can bestow, all of their collective beneficence concentrated
behind his every purpose, yet he will fail.

Say what you will about the accomplices secretly running the show: Bush
himself is the president. He is no dupe. A slobbering cretin nearly
incapable of forming a coherent thought, or of operating a bicycle on a
hill without running over a policeman; a feckless, soulless
meta-bureaucrat with the attention span of a hydroencephalitic flea
preoccupied with revenge, machismo, booze, and proving to his father
he's not a latent homosexual: these things he indubitably is. But he's
not a puppet merely. It is his magical ability to wrest defeat from the
jaws of victory that will end America's unsuitable world domination.
Then we can get on with averting the next ice age. Far too late to save
what's left of the world as we know it, but that's the cosmic joke our
species seems never to get, no matter how often the punch line is
repeated.

Bush is only the latest of many such necessary evildoers. There's always
somebody. Hitler, an even more egregious schmekel than G.W. Bush, was
the inevitable instrument of the destruction of Europe as it had been
known for a thousand years. Things simply could not remain as they were,
and he saw to it that they didn't. The Great War wasn't enough of a hint
for those old countries whose pastime it had long been to annex each
other and swap royal bloodlines, feeding their various empires on the
flesh of distant lands. So along came Hitler with WWII. Unfortunately
America, which came late to both World Wars, got to feeling superior and
decided an empire could be done properly: it just needed to be run by
folks that were elected, not handed the job through fortunate birth. We
set about the task, our elected leaders passing the torch from one
grasping claw to the next, and built up a pretty good portfolio of
client states and resource-rich territories outside our borders. That
showed those old-Europe types!

Here's the problem. Empire is the sole purpose and certain downfall of
political power. We got our post-European empire sure enough, paddling
around in various bits of Asia before settling on oil-rich climes at the
buckle between Eurasian shirt and African trousers. We got fat and
complacent and began to believe our own press about the goodness and
greatness and rightness of America, her jiggle & kill blow-dried Surfer
Jesus playtime commercial culture, anaesthetic low-calorie pilsner
beers, and infinite opportunity for the right blend of complexion and
connection. We began to imagine we were shaping the world to fit our
image.

This is the first symptom of a dying empire. Check out this kickin'
toga, bro. Pretty soon everybody will be wearing them instead of pants.
Hey, are those Visigoths? The second symptom is when the leaders start
electing themselves by divine right or noble blood. The final symptom is
that the popular weal ceases to be a factor in governance. One might
argue that most empires were founded and maintained without the popular
weal being considered at all, but this is simplistic. Empires rely on a
mutual parasitism between leaders and people: you send us to war, we get
cheap resources (or Poland). That sort of thing. Eventually, the rulers
start running the show entirely for their own benefit, putting
increasing downward pressure on the populace until society breaks down
like my Fiat Cinquecento. Bingo! The spoils of a sprawling,
resource-grabbing common enterprise have been diverted to a
self-selecting few. The ticks are exsanguinating the hyena. What's next?
A leader must emerge from the top ranks to ruin everything, pronto.

That leader is George W. Bush. He brings his gift of failure to our
nation and the world. That is the real similarity between him and Adolf
Hitler. And various Caesars. And Richard of the Crusades. They come
along at a time when empires need collapsing, after which the common
business of mankind can proceed. That said, I'm hoping he gets it over
with soon– - I'd look awful in a toga. ++

Ben Tripp is an independent filmmaker and all-around swine. His book,
Square In The Nuts, may be purchased here, with other outlets to follow:
http://www.lulu.com/Squareinthenuts



It is not enough to be compassionate; you must act.
-- The Dalai Lama

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is
distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior
 interest in receiving the included information for research and
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