Our Reckless Employee
George Bush says we don"t understand the nature of the world, but he doesn"t comprehend the nature of the presidency.
by James Heflin - August 24, 2006
It must be hard to be president and maintain a sense of life beyond security perimeters and G-men with earpieces. But there's more than that behind a naive statement George W. Bush uttered last week. After federal judge Anna Diggs Taylor issued a ruling that laid waste Attorney General Gonzalez' novel defense of Bush's extra-constitutional eavesdropping habit--that, in effect, the judge had no right to judge George, the argument also currently employed by Saddam Hussein--Bush claimed that "those who herald this decision simply do not understand the nature of the world in which we live." It's hard to swallow that line from a man who is himself so very distant from the world in which the rest of us live. And that's the crux of the Bush problem: Bush, ensconced in his privileged life, has lost sight, or perhaps never even had sight of his actual, constitutionally decreed job decription.
In the Bush era, a lot of words have been drained of their once useful meanings. "Hypocrisy," for instance, is but the fading shadow of its former glory. Last week, when Bush and his pals trotted out to show the cameras lots of chiselled resolve in the face of a terrorist plot across the ocean, the word was begging to be hauled out. The Boston Globe reported that many types of liquid explosive-detecting technology have already been produced, and some have proven to work well. But "the TSA has not outfitted airports with the devices, in part, because officials have to prioritize where they spend limited dollars." George Bush projected his resolve from a safe distance--he already has scanning technology at the White House.
But of all the terms left without meaning, there is one which most strongly deserves revival. It sounds positively quaint in the age of Bush propaganda. George Bush, whether he knows it or not, is a "public servant." He is subservient to you. To me. And most of all, to the Constitution. His oath of office, after all, calls for him to protect that venerable document, that enshrining of all the rights that he and his see as mere impediments to their "unitary executive" and wartime powers theory.
A majority of the nation seems to have repeatedly been hoodwinked into a very different view of Bush's job. The term "public servant" has disappeared from public discourse, and perception managers like Karl Rove would just as soon usher it quietly into the graveyard where its cousins "liberal democracy" and "greater good" now wander, diaphanous specters.
The word deserves revival, if only to give a name to what Bush has defied in order that we might better explain it to those who would prefer a protective, strict father figure as leader. We don't elect bosses--we elect employees. Just because you get the corner office doesn't mean you own the building.
If you accept, as the Constitution sets out, that Bush is merely the head of one of three equal centers of power among public servants, it becomes all too clear just how far Bush is from any notion of public servitude. Jesus reversed his disciples' expectations by washing their feet. That, as Bush should know if he is the devotee of the Bible his conservative Christian base believes him to be, is the Biblical view of power through servitude.
It's time to inject a few choice words back into what remains of our public discourse, poisoned though it has been by a relentless and amoral onslaught of perception management over reality-based substance. Our reckless employee thinks we don't understand that he should be in charge of the whole shop.
The most frightening aspect of Bush's words is that he really seems to believe that his constitutional duties could include ignoring what the Constitution says. If he ignores our founding document, what is "America" but a nostalgic campaign buzzword?
Bush, faced with the presidential role of servitude, has not acted as the law requires him to do, let alone as his favorite philosopher Jesus might. Bush has instead let his own feet be washed, set the rest of the water aside for a few friends, and charged us for the towel.