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Washington Post
2005.01.12


President of Fabricated Crises

Author: Harold Meyerson

Some presidents make the history books by managing crises. Lincoln had Fort Sumter,
Roosevelt had the Depression and Pearl Harbor, and Kennedy had the missiles in Cuba.
George W. Bush, of course, had Sept. 11, and for a while thereafter -- through the
overthrow of the Taliban -- he earned his page in history, too.

But when historians look back at the Bush presidency, they're more likely to note that what
sets Bush apart is not the crises he managed but the crises he fabricated.
The fabricated
crisis is the hallmark of the Bush presidency. To attain goals that he had set for
himself before he took office -- the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, the
privatization of Social Security -- he concocted crises where there were none.

So Iraq became a clear and present danger to American hearths and homes, bristling with
weapons of mass destruction, a nuclear attack just waiting to happen. And now, this week,
the president is embarking on his second great scare campaign, this one to convince the
American people that Social Security will collapse and that the only remedy is to cut
benefits and redirect resources into private accounts.

In fact,
Social Security is on a sounder footing now than it has been for most of its
70-year history. Without altering any of its particulars, its trustees say, it can pay
full benefits straight through 2042.
Over the next 75 years its shortfall will amount to
just 0.7 percent of national income, according to the trustees, or 0.4 percent, according to
the Congressional Budget Office. That still amounts to a real chunk of change, but it pales
alongside the 75-year cost of Bush's Medicare drug benefit, which is more than twice its
size, or Bush's tax cuts if permanently extended, which would be nearly four times its size.

In short, Social Security is not facing a financial crisis at all. It is facing a need for some
distinctly sub-cataclysmic adjustments over the next few decades that would increase its
revenue and diminish its benefits.

Politically, however, Social Security is facing the gravest crisis it has ever known. For the
first time in its history, it is confronted by a president, and just possibly by a working
congressional majority, who are opposed to the program on ideological grounds, who view
the New Deal as a repealable aberration in U.S. history, who would have voted against
establishing the program had they been in Congress in 1935. But Bush doesn't need Karl
Rove's counsel to know that repealing Social Security for reasons of ideology is a
non-starter.

So it's time once more to fabricate a crisis. In Bushland, it's always time
to fabricate a
crisis. We have a crisis in medical malpractice costs, though the CBO says that malpractice
costs amount to less than 2 percent of total health care costs. (In fact, what we have is a
president who wants to diminish the financial, and thus political, clout of trial lawyers.) We
have a crisis in judicial vacancies, though in fact Senate Democrats used the filibuster to
block just 10 of Bush's 229 first-term judicial appointments.

With crisis concoction as its central task -- think of how many administration
officials issued dire warnings of the threat posed by Saddam Hussein or, now, by
Social Security's impending bankruptcy -- this presidency, more than any I can
think of, has relied on the classic tools of propaganda. Indeed, it's almost
impossible to imagine the Bush presidency absent the Fox News Network and
right-wing talk radio.

With the blurring of fact and fiction so central to the Bush presidency's purposes,
is it any wonder that government agencies ranging from Health and Human
Services to the Office of National Drug Control Policy have been filming editorial
messages as mock newscast segments, complete with mock reporters, and
offering them to local television stations?

Is it any wonder that the Education Department paid commentator Armstrong Williams
$241,000 to promote its No Child Left Behind programs? In this administration, it is the role
of a government agency to turn out pro-Bush news by whatever means possible. Fox News
viewership in the African American community wasn't very large, and here was Williams,
who seemed to have learned during his clerkship for Clarence Thomas that it was rude to
decline any gifts.

We've had plenty of presidents, Richard Nixon most notoriously, who divided the
media into friendly and enemy camps. I can't think of one, however, so
fundamentally invested in the spread of disinformation -- and so fundamentally
indifferent to the corrosive effect of propaganda on democracy -- as Bush. That,
too, should earn him a page in the history books.

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