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Compassion

28 Jan 2008 09:46 am

Jacob Weisberg, somewhat bizarrely, is sitting here in 2008 writing about Bush's "compassionate conservatism" as if it's a part of his persona that we ought to treat very seriously. Krugman wonders "Why are political writers still unaware that Bush’s phrase 'compassionate conservatism' wasn’t an acceptance of the Great Society, but rather a dog-whistle to the religious right?" Beyond that, why are political writers still unaware that politicians deliberately lie in order to enhance the popularity of their political prospects? Compassionate conservatism obviously wasn't just a dog-whistle, it was also deliberately designed to foster an impression of a more moderate strain of Republicanism. And, indeed, to do that you had to toss some meat into the soup:

The following year, in 2003, Mr. Bush pressed his case for invading Iraq and uttered the infamous 16 words (“The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa”). But alongside that disingenuous indictment, Mr. Bush presented Congress with a new raft of centrist-minded initiatives: $450 million to minister to the needs of children of prisoners, $600 million to treat drug addicts, $1.2 billion for hydrogen-powered cars, $10 billion in new money to fight AIDS in Africa and the Caribbean.

You need to put $450 million into some kind of context relative to the federal budget -- $450 million is tiny. $450 million is the kind of budget request you make when you don't really care about the issue at hand but are hoping to gull innumerate reporters into writing about your $450 million initiative as if it were roughly on par with your proposed war whose costs run three orders of magnitude higher.

Similarly with the hydrogen cars. Spending $1.2 billion on hydrogen-powered cars certainly could be an element of a centrist environmental policy. Certainly what doling out a subsidy like that suggests, logically speaking, is concern about carbon emissions and global warming. And of course, that's exactly the suggestion the subsidy was intended to implant but the Bush administration isn't concerned about carbon emissions and global warming at all. They hand out tons and tons of subsidies to the oil and coal industries, they steadfastly oppose all limits to curb carbon emissions, and they act like a diplomatic wrecking ball at international conferences.

Compassionate conservatism was, in practice, nothing more than spin and a vague gesture at a higher-order justification for corruption. It's bad enough that the press got spun at the time, but to look backward from a Bush-critical perspective and get spun all over again is bizarre. Look at Bush -- he used to care and now he doesn't! But no, he never cared; what everyone can now see is what people who looked at his policies in detail and in context could see clearly back in 1999-2003.

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"You need to put $450 million into some kind of context relative to the federal budget -- $450 million is tiny. $450 million is the kind of budget request you make when you don't really care about the issue at hand but are hoping to gull innumerate reporters into writing about your $450 million initiative as if it were roughly on par with your proposed war whose costs run three orders of magnitude higher."

Um, no. $450M is a perfectly adequate budget request for a problem that can be adequately addressed with $450M. I have no idea whether or not that's enough money to "minister to the needs of children of prisoners," but I suspect you don't either.

Its an odd sort of fiscal policy that says that government isn't really trying to solve a problem unless it spends a sum of money on it that is a large % of the federal budget. You can't have 200 programs each of which you spend 5% of the budget on.

It truly was a bizarre column. Bush lies. He lies almost every time he opens his mouth. And we're supposed to take something he said in a state of the union speech as a sign of his inner goodness?

"Spending $1.2 billion on hydrogen-powered cars certainly could be an element of a centrist environmental policy."

Well, not really. Whether proposed by George Bush or Al Gore, spending one dollar of federal money, much less a billion, on hydrogen-powered cars is total bullshit. If hydrogen-powered cars ever come into existence, and the odds are about one billion to one against, it won't be because of government subsidies. And by the way, whatever happened to those 1oo miles a gallon cars that Al and Bill were going to give way back in the nineties? You know, the ones they gave all that government money to Detroit to create for us?

Don't forget the man to Mars initiative.

Eventually, it occurs to Jake to note that Bush never actually got around to doing most of the things he talked about. And even says something about being "disingenuous.'

But, by and large, this is a testament to the effectiveness of the Big Lie in the bully pulpit.

There was also this that ticked me off today:

From a strictly economic perspective, it is difficult to blame Mr. Bush for the current crisis. Even some economists who have been critical of the president, like Bruce Bartlett, who worked in the Reagan and first Bush administrations, say he cannot be held liable for the burst of the housing bubble or problems in credit markets.

from an "analysis" piece by Stohlberg. She also mentions that Bush doesn't get "credit" for the economy's growth.

WRT the quotation, the housing bubble and the problems in the credit markets are directly tied to the growth of unregulated financial institutions engaging in banking activities with no oversight. A systematic policy of ignoring regulations, redefining the meaning of regulations, permitting illegal activity and otherwise allowing businesses to operate without oversight is a central element of this administration's policy regime. The credit problems can be laid directly to the door of the Treasury.

Likewise, the reason, widely reported, that Bush doesn't get credit for the economy's growth is that it has benefited only capital holders, not wage earners.

It's amazing that this kind of story is still running. What does the administration have to do for the press to call out its lies?

I can't tell if Wiesberg is being sly and clever or if he's really that dense. Towards the end, he writes something about how the right hand not knowing what the left hand was doing, referencing the Rovian politics of this administration, implying some conflict with Bush's inner liberal. However, if this list of SotU abortive social "programs" is the best evidence that Bush had such a creature lurking in his soul, color me unimpressed. The best sign of who someone really is is what they consistently do. The record here is clear.

Um, no. $450M is a perfectly adequate budget request for a problem that can be adequately addressed with $450M. I have no idea whether or not that's enough money to "minister to the needs of children of prisoners," but I suspect you don't either.

What I mean is this: You can't look at a $450 million initiative and decide it's something close to the core of a president's political identity. If the Yglesias White House is pro-choice, supports single-payer health care, supports an 80 percent reduction in carbon emissions by 2050, supports gay marriage, wants to build a nationwide high-speed rail network and backs a $450 million program that conservatives like, the administration doesn't suddenly become a moderate one.

Fair enough, though you did cherry pick the smallest ticket item on the list.

Liberals don't like the prescription drug benefit and NCLB - mostly for good reasons. But remember that most conservatives don't like those programs either, and many go so far as to say that they are evidence that Bush has not governed as a conservative, but as a big government internationalist. And the drug plan & NCLB are not $450M programs.

one of the few things the bush years have been good for is to expose the emptiness of contrarianism as a pundit shtick (jacob weisberg, this means you).

as for substance, sd, it doesn't matter whether "conservatives" (whomever they may have been in this context) liked NCLB or the prescription drug benefit: republicans voted for them as the two gestures towards "compassionate conservatism" that the bush administration would make. given that they are neither compassionate nor conservative, i think the case is closed.

I must say that Weisberg's even more of a total nit-wit than I always thought he was...

Incidentally, one thing that anyone who's spent any time in the political world quickly learns is that most voters---and many journalists---are pretty hazy on the difference between "millions" and "billions". After all, they're both kinda big numbers, and "big equals big" doesn't it?

Finally, I really don't know if I'd really describe Bush as "lying" about this sort of thing. He's such an empty-headed moron, he'd just read whatever speech was handed to him, and never really connect it with anything he's ever said or done otherwise, either before or afterwards...

Weisberg on Bush is the kind of thing the phrase 'too clever by half' was invented for.

I think the end of Weisberg's piece shows his actual view of the "compassionate conservative."

The Compassionate Conservative will surely pay us a final visit tonight. He remains an appealing character, but a largely fictional one. I wonder how the last seven years might have turned out if he had actually existed. In the final year of a failed presidency, I bet Mr. Bush does too.

"[L]argely fictional" is his verdict. The preceding paragraphs appear to give too much credence to Bush's periodic suggestions of compassionate programs, but his final point is that Bush gave them no support, polarized the debate, and was a failure. Not so far off, in the end.

David in NY, the notion that george bush might spend a second reflecting on his performance in office in any way, shape, or form is laughable but typical of the kind of parallel reality that weisberg's analysis occupies: he is far off, in the end, because he takes seriously something that he shouldn't and ascribes credibility to things that are bogus.

"Dogwhistle to the religious right" doesn't tell you very much. You could dogwhistle to Benedict XVI by speaking boilerplate on abortion or stem cell research, or you could do it by renouncing pre-emptive war or rethinking capital punishment. The choice makes a difference.

Not, by the way, that Benedict is part of the religious right -- he's just less amorphous as an example.

Fair enough, though you did cherry pick the smallest ticket item on the list.

The point, of course, is the president cherry picked the biggest ticket items in his SOTU.

Fair enough, though you did cherry pick the smallest ticket item on the list.

The point, of course, is the president cherry picked the biggest ticket items in his SOTU.

howard -- agreed. But seemed like the idea of Bush reflecting was rhetorical, whereas the "fictional" nature of compassionate conservatism seemed truly judgmental. I agree that it's odd that Weisberg first seems to treat Bush's various proposals as substantive programs, and only at the end points out Bush's total lack of interest in them, indeed, their "fictional" nature. But some credit due, he does reach the latter conclusion.

howard -- agreed. But seemed like the idea of Bush reflecting was rhetorical, whereas the "fictional" nature of compassionate conservatism seemed truly judgmental. I agree that it's odd that Weisberg first seems to treat Bush's various proposals as substantive programs, and only at the end points out Bush's total lack of interest in them, indeed, their "fictional" nature. But some credit due, he does reach the latter conclusion.

$450M is a perfectly adequate budget request for a problem that can be adequately addressed with $450M. I have no idea whether or not that's enough money to "minister to the needs of children of prisoners," but I suspect you don't either.

$450 million is a lot of money - but compare it with the roughly 1.5 million American children who have a parent in prison and you get $6 a week. Nice. You think that's enough to minister to their needs?
Alternatively, say you spend it on hiring social workers to look after them. Total cost (salary, benefits, oversight) of a single government employee is between 1.5 and 2 times their salary. So let's say $80,000 per social worker. That'll get you one social worker per 2,700 children. In other words (making some estimates about the way they employ their time) each child could get one visit, lasting 20 minutes, from their case worker each year. (A case worker who also has to deal with 2,700 other children.)

So, no, I don't think it is very much actually.

"the Yglesias White House"

Yglesias/Klein in 2028!

Compassionate conservatism was, in practice, nothing more than spin and a vague gesture at a higher-order justification for corruption.

That's what a lot of Republicans thought in 2000. No one thinks this now. Once elected, Bush actually did all the compassionate conservative stuff he said he'd do, despite the fact that no one would have noticed if he hadn't.

No, Yglesias, Bush actually believes this crap.

I think you missed the best line from the column:

So often with Mr. Bush, compassionate government began and ended with the heartfelt public avowal.
Uh, how heartfelt could a public avowal have been if it was unaccompanied by follow-through?

Change "heartfelt" to "cynical and manipulative."

Gotta say that Weisberg, making the rounds pimping his (destined for the remainder bins) book, arouses nothing but disgust. Here's a shill who was front and center in the Iraq adventure cheerleading section, and now that the stink is so bad, he not only wants to distance himself from it -- he wants to line his pockets more! If the fucking snake had a shred of basic decency, he'd give every penny to veterans' charities and Iraq relief efforts. But it's a safe bet that the little no-talent turd has plans for, say, a swimming pool for the swell Bethesda home.

I see that Paul Wolfowitz is back on the federal payroll. Nice to see that for Beltway courtiers, failure really ISN'T an option.

Is it any wonder the FT last year dropped Weisberg's weekly column with haste that bordered on indecency?

Every Jacob Weisberg column: I refuse to believe that conservatives I like personally are conservative.

Scott Lemieux wrote the ultimate respone almost two years ago here. (It's John McCain specific, but the idea is the same.)

Conversely, he's just an easy mark.

Mr. Bush seemed genuinely to want to be the kind of president indicated by that first address.....He intended to marry the liberal desire for more federal money to the conservative demand for higher standards.....I always sort of liked that George W. Bush. Whatever happened to him?....Mr. Bush never completely abandoned the compassionate conservatism we glimpsed that night seven years ago. ....To this day, Mr. Bush’s compassionate conservatism has never vanished completely.....The Compassionate Conservative will surely pay us a final visit tonight.

God, what a sucker. And he makes his living writing this stuff.

"Beyond that, why are political writers still unaware that politicians deliberately lie in order to enhance the popularity of their political prospects?"

Because political writers--and intellectuals generally--are obsesquious to power. You know that. Why act "unaware"?

"God, what a sucker. And he makes his living writing this stuff."

Posted by John Emerson

Or a wh*re. I vote with Mark.


Comments closed February 11, 2008.

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