Playing 'Top Gun' for the cameras

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Oct 3, 2002
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President Bush after landing on the USS Abraham Lincoln. (Reuters Photo)


FROM THE TEXAS (MIA) Air National Guard during the Vietnam era to Top Gun.

The president recently jumped aboard a Navy S-3B Viking jet to land dramatically on an aircraft carrier at sea. Wearing a green flight suit and carrying a helmet, George W. Bush emerged from the jet and declared major combat over in Iraq. In a political world driven by image and pictures, he has much to gain from that perfect media moment. Perception is reality, right?

Bush as a presidential candidate was criticized for his thin foreign policy credentials. As he faces reelection, Democrats can debate his response to terrorism and his decision to go to war. But he certainly has more foreign policy experience today than he did as governor of Texas.

The pictures from the aircraft carrier also suggest that Bush is willing to use the recent war in a political way to redefine public perception of his past military service. As president, he is, of course, commander in chief. Playing pilot for a day and a photo-op sends another, more personal message.

However, pictures should not disguise the truth of Bush's military record. As the Globe reported bluntly during the 2000 presidential campaign, ''During the Vietnam War, Texas Governor George W. Bush compiled a spotty attendance record in a Texas Air National Guard billet arranged through family political connections.''

Bush's military records, obtained by Globe reporter Walter V. Robinson during the 2000 campaign, revealed the following: ''In his final 18 months of military service in 1972 and 1973, Bush did not fly at all. And for much of that time, Bush was all but unaccounted for: For a full year, there is no record that he showed up for the periodic drills required of part-time guardsmen.'' The military records showed that Bush flew with the 111th Fighter-Interceptor squadron from June 1970 until April 1972. ''That month, he ceased flying altogether, two years before his military commitment ended, an unusual step that has left some veteran fight pilots puzzled,'' reported Robinson in one of several follow-up accounts.

At the time, Bush insisted that he fulfilled his miltary obligation and disputed part of the Globe report. ''I did the duty necessary.... That's why I was honorably discharged,'' Bush said in May 2000. He acknolwedged, however, that he fulfilled his Guard duties at irregular intervals.

The issue did not hurt him in the 2000 general election, nor did his choice for vice president, Dick Cheney, whose extended college career insulated him from military service during the Vietnam War. The Bush-Cheney team, after all, was following Bill Clinton, who avoided service during the Vietnam War and still took the White House away from the first President Bush, a World War II Navy pilot.

Why the eagerness to look like a real soldier in 2004? This Bush won't be running against Bill Clinton. And he could be running against a real veteran: Massachusetts Senator John F. Kerry, a decorated Vietnam hero.

Bush's approval ratings are high - 71 percent in a recent ABCNews/Washington Post poll. But the economy remains a problem, and international events can still work against him in the year ahead. No one knows what will happen in Iraq. Major combat may be over there, but the rebuilding of that country holds major challenges for the Bush administration.

It makes political sense for Bush to wrap himself in the military success of the moment. He owns Iraq and the foreign policy it represents, anyway, whatever happens from this point forward. Even so, he may yet come to regret that flamboyant, self-indulgent flyboy moment. There was an arrogance to using genuine military men and women as extras for a future campaign ad - and a dishonesty, too.

Like many rich, privileged, or otherwise politically well-connected young American men, he avoided real war. Like many young men - Republicans and Democrats - he refused and still refuses to acknowledge his effort to avoid combat. Did it cross his mind when he was ordering troops to Iraq, or afterwards, when he was comforting wives, mothers, and children of dead American soldiers? His answer to that question would be interesting to hear.

The photos from the president's day on the USS Abraham Lincoln feed a certain perception. But when perception becomes disconnected from truth, there is also political risk.

http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/126/oped/Playing_Top_Gun_for_the_cameras+.shtml
 
May 8, 2002
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#2
you know what.

what hurts you liberals the most is that the American people actually like the guy and believe him to be a genuine man.


also that the crew of the USS Lincoln was proud to have him on thier ship and as their leader.

unlike when they felt the opposite when the last liberal president made an appearence on a ship. when they couldnt wait for his 3 hours on the ship to run out.
 
Oct 3, 2002
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I am not a liberal, so who are you referring to? People can disagree with the president and not be a liberal, I am not sure if you are aware of that or not. & once again Mcleanhatch's obsession with Clinton continues; always bring him up one way or another. I am a psychology major Mcleanhatch, I can help you through this. Tell me, when exactly did these obsessions start?
 
Jul 6, 2002
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#4
Bush's facial expression leads me to believe that he more than likely shit his pants while trying to figure out how to fly that airplane.....
 
May 8, 2002
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ReservoirDog said:
I am not a liberal, so who are you referring to? People can disagree with the president and not be a liberal, I am not sure if you are aware of that or not. & once again Mcleanhatch's obsession with Clinton continues; always bring him up one way or another. I am a psychology major Mcleanhatch, I can help you through this. Tell me, when exactly did these obsessions start?
you are either liberal or even farther to the left. you have never taken a stand here for any mainstream or conservative idea
 
Oct 3, 2002
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Mclanahan, I understand you do not personally know me so I can understand you judging me and your generalizing. I happen to vote mostly Republican in the State of Nevada. I think Republican Governor Kenny Quinn does an excellent job and I agree with a lot of what he has to say because he is a smart man and he knows what he is doing and the same goes with a lot of other republican's in my state. However, I do not agree with George W. Bush and his administration on many issues. I was watching one of Bushes horrible speeches a while back and he actually said "there is no growth in a surplus only in deficit will there be growth" I shit you not those were his words. That is something I simply will never agree with. & seeing how we have been through 2 wars and the worst economic slump ever, I don't see how huge tax cuts will help. His first tax cut did nothing and the one he is trying to get passed now most likely won't either except hurt the economy even further. Also considering Budget director Mitch Daniels is resigning which means that Bushes entire initial economic team is gone. Everyone knows Bush-Economics doesn't work and it's no surprise that no one wants to stay on his economic committee. You can label me what you want, but just because I disagree with this asshole
doesn't make me a liberal...
 
May 8, 2002
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#9
ReservoirDog said:
Mclanahan, I understand you do not personally know me so I can understand you judging me and your generalizing. I happen to vote mostly Republican in the State of Nevada.
well you are obviously one of those LIBERALS in republican clothing. kinda like lincoln chaffey, and olympia snowe.

ReservoirDog said:
I think Republican Governor Kenny Quinn does an excellent job and I agree with a lot of what he has to say because he is a smart man and he knows what he is doing .
you mean MR. Raise Taxes governor of Nevada Quinn, which the republicans cant stand because in reality he is a LIBERAL
 
Apr 25, 2002
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http://www.nytimes.com/2003/05/06/o...Ed/Columnists

Man on Horseback
By PAUL KRUGMAN

Gen. Georges Boulanger cut a fine figure; he looked splendid in uniform, and magnificent on horseback. So his handlers made sure that he appeared in uniform, astride a horse, as often as possible.

It worked: Boulanger became immensely popular. If he hadn't lost his nerve on the night of the attempted putsch, French democracy might have ended in 1889.

We do things differently here — or we used to. Has "man on horseback" politics come to America?

Some background: the Constitution declares the president commander in chief of the armed forces to make it clear that civilians, not the military, hold ultimate authority. That's why American presidents traditionally make a point of avoiding military affectations. Dwight Eisenhower was a victorious general and John Kennedy a genuine war hero, but while in office neither wore anything that resembled military garb.

Given that history, George Bush's "Top Gun" act aboard the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln — c'mon, guys, it wasn't about honoring the troops, it was about showing the president in a flight suit — was as scary as it was funny.

Mind you, it was funny. At first the White House claimed the dramatic tail-hook landing was necessary because the carrier was too far out to use a helicopter. In fact, the ship was so close to shore that, according to The Associated Press, administration officials "acknowledged positioning the massive ship to provide the best TV angle for Bush's speech, with the sea as his background instead of the San Diego coastline."

A U.S.-based British journalist told me that he and his colleagues had laughed through the whole scene. If Tony Blair had tried such a stunt, he said, the press would have demanded to know how many hospital beds could have been provided for the cost of the jet fuel.

But U.S. television coverage ranged from respectful to gushing. Nobody pointed out that Mr. Bush was breaking an important tradition. And nobody seemed bothered that Mr. Bush, who appears to have skipped more than a year of the National Guard service that kept him out of Vietnam, is now emphasizing his flying experience. (Spare me the hate mail. An exhaustive study by The Boston Globe found no evidence that Mr. Bush fulfilled any of his duties during that missing year. And since Mr. Bush has chosen to play up his National Guard career, this can't be shrugged off as old news.)

Anyway, it was quite a show. Luckily for Mr. Bush, the frustrating search for Osama bin Laden somehow morphed into a good old-fashioned war, the kind where you seize the enemy's capital and get to declare victory after a cheering crowd pulls down the tyrant's statue. (It wasn't much of a crowd, and American soldiers actually brought down the statue, but it looked great on TV.)

Let me be frank. Why is the failure to find any evidence of an active Iraqi nuclear weapons program, or vast quantities of chemical and biological weapons (a few drums don't qualify — though we haven't found even that) a big deal? Mainly because it feeds suspicions that the war wasn't waged to eliminate real threats. This suspicion is further fed by the administration's lackadaisical attitude toward those supposed threats once Baghdad fell. For example, Iraq's main nuclear waste dump wasn't secured until a few days ago, by which time it had been thoroughly looted. So was it all about the photo ops?

Well, Mr. Bush got to pose in his flight suit. And given the absence of awkward questions, his handlers surely feel empowered to make even more brazen use of the national security issue in future.

Next year — in early September — the Republican Party will hold its nominating convention in New York. The party will exploit the time and location to the fullest. How many people will dare question the propriety of the proceedings?

And who will ask why, if the administration is so proud of its response to Sept. 11, it has gone to such lengths to prevent a thorough, independent inquiry into what actually happened? (An independent study commission wasn't created until after the 2002 election, and it has been given little time and a ludicrously tiny budget.)

There was a time when patriotic Americans from both parties would have denounced any president who tried to take political advantage of his role as commander in chief. But that, it seems, was another country.
 
May 8, 2002
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#11
ColdBlooded said:
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/05/06/o...Ed/Columnists

Man on Horseback
By PAUL KRUGMAN

Gen. Georges Boulanger cut a fine figure; he looked splendid in uniform, and magnificent on horseback. So his handlers made sure that he appeared in uniform, astride a horse, as often as possible.

It worked: Boulanger became immensely popular. If he hadn't lost his nerve on the night of the attempted putsch, French democracy might have ended in 1889.

We do things differently here — or we used to. Has "man on horseback" politics come to America?

Some background: the Constitution declares the president commander in chief of the armed forces to make it clear that civilians, not the military, hold ultimate authority. That's why American presidents traditionally make a point of avoiding military affectations. Dwight Eisenhower was a victorious general and John Kennedy a genuine war hero, but while in office neither wore anything that resembled military garb.

Given that history, George Bush's "Top Gun" act aboard the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln — c'mon, guys, it wasn't about honoring the troops, it was about showing the president in a flight suit — was as scary as it was funny.

Mind you, it was funny. At first the White House claimed the dramatic tail-hook landing was necessary because the carrier was too far out to use a helicopter. In fact, the ship was so close to shore that, according to The Associated Press, administration officials "acknowledged positioning the massive ship to provide the best TV angle for Bush's speech, with the sea as his background instead of the San Diego coastline."

A U.S.-based British journalist told me that he and his colleagues had laughed through the whole scene. If Tony Blair had tried such a stunt, he said, the press would have demanded to know how many hospital beds could have been provided for the cost of the jet fuel.

But U.S. television coverage ranged from respectful to gushing. Nobody pointed out that Mr. Bush was breaking an important tradition. And nobody seemed bothered that Mr. Bush, who appears to have skipped more than a year of the National Guard service that kept him out of Vietnam, is now emphasizing his flying experience. (Spare me the hate mail. An exhaustive study by The Boston Globe found no evidence that Mr. Bush fulfilled any of his duties during that missing year. And since Mr. Bush has chosen to play up his National Guard career, this can't be shrugged off as old news.)

Well, Mr. Bush got to pose in his flight suit. And given the absence of awkward questions, his handlers surely feel empowered to make even more brazen use of the national security issue in future.
http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/comment-whitney050803.asp
May 8, 2003, 8:45 a.m.
George W. in the Flight Suit
Continuing a Precedent of the first George W.

By Gleaves Whitney

It's driving liberals nuts — the image of President George W. Bush in a flight suit on the deck of the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln. There he was, slapping officers on the back, posing for pictures, joking with sailors and aviators. You can bet your bottom dollar these images will be used during the 2004 campaign — they'll make Bush harder to beat. But those who are complaining loudest, who are fixated on the political use of the images, are apparently deaf to their historical resonance.

Historically, Americans tend to elect presidents with military experience, the more heroic the better. Consider:

Of the 42 men who have been president, 27 served in the armed forces (64 percent).
Of the 27 presidents who were in the armed forces, at least 12 served with distinction (Washington, Monroe, Jackson, William Henry Harrison, Taylor, Grant, Hayes, Garfield, Theodore Roosevelt, Eisenhower, Kennedy, and George H. W. Bush).
Of the 12 who served with distinction, at least 8 became heroes in their day. (Most lists would include Washington, Jackson, William Henry Harrison, Taylor, Grant, Theodore Roosevelt, Eisenhower, and Kennedy.)
The officer corps of the Union Army proved to be a veritable farm club for presidents: five generals (Grant, Hayes, Garfield, Arthur, and Benjamin Harrison) and one major (McKinley) ascended to the White House.
This trend of Americans electing commanders-in-chief who have been veterans has strengthened over time. Since World War II, there have been 11 presidents. Ten of them are veterans. The exception: William Jefferson Clinton.

Against this background, liberals are now saying there should be a wall of separation between commanders-in-chief and their prior military experience. Recently the Senate's senior Democrat, Robert Byrd, blasted Bush for flying out to the Lincoln in a fighter jet. He denounced the action as "self-congratulatory" and "flamboyant showmanship." (Byrd is just jealous that Bush's showmanship comes off better than Byrd's in Gods and Generals.)

Over in the House, Rep. Henry Waxman, in flamboyant contradiction to his entire career, is suddenly concerned about government spending: How much did Bush's flight cost the Treasury?

More ominously, New York Times columnist Paul Krugman warns that "Mr. Bush was breaking an important tradition" when he donned a flight suit; that his "Top Gun act" was "scary"; that American presidents just don't wear uniforms or military accoutrements. (Never mind that the president had to wear a flight suit to go up in an S-3B Viking jet, and that after mixing and mingling with the sailors, he got out of his flight suit and put on civilian clothes for his public address.)

Let's test Krugman's assertion by turning to the greatest authorities in matters presidential, our Founding Fathers. Consider the Father of Our Country. Our nation's first commander-in-chief was certainly alive to the fact that everything he did could set a precedent. Washington was as image conscious as they come. Shortly after the first Inauguration, he wrote: "I walk on untrodden ground. There is scarcely any part of my conduct which may not hereafter be drawn into precedent."

There is no question that Washington was committed to civilian control of the armed forces. He knew that our experiment in self-government could fail if he had a serious lapse of judgment. The new republic could falter if he became militaristic. So how did our image-conscious first president handle his military past? Well, the first thing he did was sport a sword at his inauguration. During a subsequent crisis, he squeezed into his old uniform and met troops on a mission to quell the Whiskey Rebellion. Finally — most brazen of all — he strapped on his sword to address Congress. (Tom Daschle, take note!) None of these sartorial details is conjecture; each of the events is well documented and was illustrated by contemporaries.

By the way, Washington preferred to be addressed as "General," even when he served as president. And his official portrait, by Gilbert Stuart, depicts that same darned sword, his hand on it no less. (Egads!)

Another Founding Father merged the presidency and military in even more dramatic fashion. As Rick Brookhiser points out, during the War of 1812, when the situation looked bleak for Americans, President James Madison rode out to Bladensburg, Maryland, and personally oversaw the early stages of the battle against invading British soldiers. It was the first and only time in U.S. history that a sitting president exercised his constitutional authority in battle. This, mind you, by the Father of Our Constitution.

An interesting aside: not far from Madison at Bladensburg was his secretary of state, James Monroe. The future president donned his old revolutionary uniform to lead troops into battle. To get the full impact of that historical scene, imagine Secretary of State Colin Powell next to President Bush in combat.

There are other instances in which presidential politics mixed with the military, and never did they raise the dust liberals are kicking up today. For example, in June of 1952, when General Eisenhower began to seek the presidency in earnest, he wore his Army uniform and even paid a courtesy call to President Truman in his duds.

In historical perspective, when George W. put on a flight suit to fly out to the Lincoln, he was not creating a precedent; he was continuing one. Admittedly, he has far to go before he matches the specter of the first George. (What is the 21st-century equivalent of strapping on a sword — wielding an M-16?)

On the talk shows, Bush-bashers haven't helped their case any — in fact, they've looked monumentally small. Not one of them has criticized the Democratic politicians who flew out to the Lincoln in a helicopter following the president's visit. (How much did that cost?) Not one of them has said why the president shouldn't act like what the Constitution requires him to be: commander-in-chief. Not one of them has conceded that the attacks on Bush reveal a party in desperation. Last night on MSNBC, Chris Mathews rhetorically asked: "Why are the Democrats so stupid to attack the best presidential picture in years?"
 
May 8, 2002
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#12
cont......


Desperate as liberals are to make President Bush look like a dunce or a danger to the republic, their criticism won't stick. His tail-hook landing on the Lincoln elicited no hue-and-cry from the heartland. On the contrary, the American people were thrilled to see their president give a victory speech to the perfect audience — the people who achieved the victory. Bush genuinely connects with our fighting men and women, and they with him.

That's what galls his detractors. Democrats who distrust the Pentagon, liberals who loathe the military, Bush-bashers who still can't get over Election 2000 — all these types were on the sidelines during a great American moment; they were not at the victory party on the Lincoln. It slays them that this president has come into his own; that he has grown as a leader in the war on terrorism; that his instincts on Iraq were proven right; and that the majority of Americans are behind him. The image on the carrier conveys all that is strong and hopeful and confident in the man.

And it's driving liberals nuts.

— Gleaves Whitney is editor of a book of wartime speeches by American presidents, to be published later this year by Rowman & Littlefield.
 
Oct 3, 2002
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Mcleanhatch said:


well you are obviously one of those LIBERALS in republican clothing. kinda like lincoln chaffey, and olympia snowe.
No I am a "unbiased" voter, unlike yourself...


Mcleanhatch said:


you mean MR. Raise Taxes governor of Nevada Quinn, which the republicans cant stand because in reality he is a LIBERAL
If you mean Mr. Raise Cigarette and Alcohol Taxes to make money from all of the tourism that comes here to help out our school system and provide all day daycare services for single working mothers then yep that is my liberal governor...

Mcleanhatch, you are so closed minded and idiotic, because Kenny Guinn (last name spelled with a G get it right) isn't raising taxes when the economy is so shitty we might have to cut classes to only 4 days a week so they can cut teachers pay even more to save money.
 
Oct 3, 2002
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Mcleanhatch said:
cont......


Desperate as liberals are to make President Bush look like a dunce or a danger to the republic, their criticism won't stick. His tail-hook landing on the Lincoln elicited no hue-and-cry from the heartland. On the contrary, the American people were thrilled to see their president give a victory speech to the perfect audience — the people who achieved the victory. Bush genuinely connects with our fighting men and women, and they with him.

That's what galls his detractors. Democrats who distrust the Pentagon, liberals who loathe the military, Bush-bashers who still can't get over Election 2000 — all these types were on the sidelines during a great American moment; they were not at the victory party on the Lincoln. It slays them that this president has come into his own; that he has grown as a leader in the war on terrorism; that his instincts on Iraq were proven right; and that the majority of Americans are behind him. The image on the carrier conveys all that is strong and hopeful and confident in the man.

And it's driving liberals nuts.

— Gleaves Whitney is editor of a book of wartime speeches by American presidents, to be published later this year by Rowman & Littlefield.
Keep dreaming...

oh and "his instincts on Iraq were proven right"... I think you need to replace instincts with bad intelligence and what was proven right?
 
May 8, 2002
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ReservoirDog said:
No I am a "unbiased" voter, unlike yourself...
i am a recovered former liberal who found the light on the right side of the politcial spectrum

ReservoirDog said:
If you mean Mr. Raise Cigarette and Alcohol Taxes to make money from all of the tourism
you act as if smokers and drinkers are second class citizens.

i dont drink nor smoke so those taxes dont affect me but i can also see the unfairness of taxing the shit out of alcohol and tobacco all the time. is it fair?? should we go out and tax black people an extra tax, or any other race tax them a little bit extra for being different. should we go out and tax fags at a higher rate???? why does every1 attack the smokers and drinkers with Multiple taxes???

ReservoirDog said:
Mcleanhatch, you are so closed minded and idiotic, because Kenny Guinn (last name spelled with a G get it right) isn't raising taxes when the economy is so shitty we might have to cut classes to only 4 days a week so they can cut teachers pay even more to save money.
have you guys ever heard of "cuts" in spending. stop spending unnecessary amounts of money


ReservoirDog said:
Mcleanhatch, (last name spelled with a G get it right
my bad i know you never make i simple mistake right???
 
Sep 28, 2002
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mcleanhatch your the only one who cares what you think. Seperating people by group and standard definitions of fluctuating circumstances allows you a buffer zone with reality. Until you come to view all people as individuals you will continue to draw imaginary lines between people & concepts you do not fully understand, when in reality the only line that exists is a circle around you. Your ego is the reason for your ill fate not "the liberals"