July 14, 2006
Dick Cheney Is And Has Always Been A Failure
I saw Ron Suskind on Democracy Now! this morning (that
will become a later post) and he described how Dick Cheney provided the
so-called foreign policy 'roadmap' and 'vision' for the Bush
Administration and instituted the neo-con policy that even if a
possible threat has but a 1% chance of being viable it must be acted
upon (hence the title of Suskind's book "The One Per Cent Doctrine").
That jarred my memory back to a T.D. Allman August 25, 2004 Rolling Stone
article that detailed how just about everything Cheney has been
involved with has turned sour and how his decision-making and judgment
are so badly flawed. He's simply an empty suit. Bottom line: Cheney is
a fuck-up--there's no other as appropriate way to put it. Read on and
enjoy how our Vice President has each and every time turned value into
fool's gold:
The Curse of Dick Cheney
T.D. Allman
Rolling Stone
August 25, 2004
The veep's career has been marred by one disaster after another
Should George W. Bush win this election, it will give him the
distinction of being the first occupant of the White House to have
survived naming Dick Cheney to a post in his administration. The Cheney
jinx first manifested itself at the presidential level back in 1969,
when Richard Nixon appointed him to his first job in the executive
branch. It surfaced again in 1975, when Gerald Ford made Cheney his
chief of staff and then -- with Cheney's help -- lost the 1976
election. George H.W. Bush, having named Cheney secretary of defense,
was defeated for re-election in 1992. The ever-canny Ronald Reagan was
the only Republican president since Eisenhower who managed to serve two
full terms. He is also the only one not to have appointed Dick Cheney
to office.
This pattern of misplaced confidence in Cheney, followed by disastrous
results, runs throughout his life -- from his days as a dropout at Yale
to the geopolitical chaos he has helped create in Baghdad. Once you get
to know his history, the cycle becomes clear: First, Cheney impresses
someone rich or powerful, who causes unearned wealth and power to be
conferred on him. Then, when things go wrong, he blames others and
moves on to a new situation even more advantageous to himself.
"Cheney's manner and authority of voice far outstrip his true
abilities," says Chas Freeman, who served under Bush's father as
ambassador to Saudi Arabia. "It was clear from the start that Bush
required adult supervision -- but it turns out Cheney has even worse
instincts. He does not understand that when you act recklessly, your
mistakes will come back and bite you on the ass."
Cheney's record of mistakes begins in 1959, when Tom Stroock, a
Republican politician-businessman in Casper, Wyoming, got Cheney, then
a senior at Natrona County High School, a scholarship to Yale. "Dick
was the all-American boy, in the top ten percent of his class," Stroock
says. "He seemed a natural." But instead of triumphing, Cheney failed.
"He spent his time partying with guys who loved football but weren't
varsity quality," recalls Stephen Billings, an Episcopalian minister
who roomed with him during Cheney's freshman (and only full) year at
Yale. "His idea was, you didn't need to master the material," says his
other roommate, Jacob Plotkin. "He passed one psych course without
attending class or studying, and he was proud of that. But there are
some things you can't bluff, and Dick reached a point where you
couldn't recover."
Please read it all here.
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