The top story yesterday at Fox News' website (complete with an image set up in the Fox-embraced "LOLCats" style) is about "Bush's Best Kept Secret."
Normally, Bush's best kept secrets are about horrible war crimes, and they are revealed by New York Times reporters who are then labeled traitors. In this case, however, Bush's big secret is that "while the nation's commander in chief waged two wars against terror, he -- along with Vice President Cheney -- also was leading a secret mission of comfort." Oy.
Fox's account basically rehashes a recent Washington Times article, re-relating:
According to The Washington Times, the self-described "comforter in chief" said it's his duty as president to try to help as "best as I humanly can a loved one who is in anguish."
According to The Washington Times, the self-described "comforter in chief" said it's his duty as president to try to help as "best as I humanly can a loved one who is in anguish."
The Times notes that people familiar with Bush's routine say he has written letters personally to every one of the families of the more than 4,000 troops who have died in Afghanistan and Iraq. The hours of his time taken to do that and to meet with family members of troops killed in action has forced Bush to rely on his wife, Laura, for emotional support, the president said.
The Times original is similarly hagiographic, but it at least includes the not-trivial detail that the Walter Reed Army Medical Center was "a symbol of controversy earlier in his presidency over the quality of care the veterans were receiving." That quality of care was abysmal, by the way, as documented in depth by the Washington Post.
Unfortunately for the President, writing 4,000 letters will do nothing to remove the stain of waging an unnecessary and destructive war from his legacy. Nor will 500 family meetings make up for the many substantive lapses in care for veterans and their families over which this president has presided. From the fiasco at Walter Reed, to the opposition to the new GI Bill, to the gross mishandling of care and claims for wounded vets at the VA, this administration has broken faith with its combat veterans time and again. Therefore, proclaiming himself to be the "Comforter-in-Chief" as he visits Walter Reed is just plain insulting. This is reminiscent of the time President Bush decided that his idea of "sacrifice" was to give up golf while the troops were fighting. After eight years in office and seven years of war, it's painfully clear that he still doesn't get the military, veterans, or their families.
Read on.
Read on.
1 comment:
I don't know how many people will think it was a good thing to have the comforter in chief comfort them when they learn he was the casue of their son/daughter dying. Yes Bush used our troops to get control of Iraq oil and for Israel to have land to be in place to bomb Iran. It had nothing to do with WMD's or Iraq Freedom or even Saddam. It was based totally on GREED. With Law Makers getting paid to go along and of course the Media Executives along with Jouranlist the plan worked very well. Funny how Evil works and it worked well for 8 years.
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