Rule By the
Ridiculous
by Jeffrey
A. Tucker
David
Frum did not intend to write a send-up of the state. His goal was not to
demystify the White House. But that is the effect of his chatty little
book, The
Right Man: The Surprise Presidency of George W. Bush (NY: Random
House, 2002).
It has very little
substance, and no content of grave historical import. It mainly consists
of goofy stories concerning what words Bush ought to use and how, what
headlines are consuming the White House staff on a particular day, what
issues were discussed before a certain press conference, etc. Petty
stuff, mostly. To turn all this into a book underscores just how
resourceful Frum is as a writer, and just how ridiculous the presidency
(the patina on the state apparatus) really is.
You get the sense of what
I mean from Frum's description of his new office.
The first time I sat on
the sofa, I detonated a mushroom cloud of dust and insect fragments
that hovered about my head for a quarter of a minute. The rest of the
place as not much more hygienic: The phones were greasy to the touch,
the carpet was spotted with dried chewing gum, and the surface of my
desk was sticky with ancient coffee and soda spills. My wife was so
horrified by her first visit to the place that she arrived the
following weekend with disinfectant, vacuum cleaner, and scouring
pads.
Frum blames Clinton for
the mess (wait, the spills are "ancient"!). In fact, the filth
is predictable. Take any public building (un-owned and un-saleable) and
assign new management every four years and see what happens. It will be
a mess, just as every older government building in Washington is a dump.
Now imagine putting the
people who can't be bothered to wipe up a coffee spill – and have no
reason to do so or care either way, only the incentive to use up what
they can before their time is over – in charge of the whole country.
What Frum doesn't realize is that it is not just his office or this
building that is overutilized, unkempt, and vandalized. This is a
metaphor for how the government treats the entire country.
What can we say about
these interlopers, these temporary rulers of the world empire? What
clowns these people are, funny but also gravely menacing because they
take themselves and their role in history seriously.
They are not serious
enough to put much thought into the effects of their actions on the
country, on liberty, on the world, or much of anything else. Not a word
in this book indicates that the White House has any sense of the moral
and practical responsibilities associated with heading the world's
biggest state. But they are serious enough to believe that they have
somehow been blessed by the god democracy to make big, important
decisions. Paul O'Neil, who was just fired as Treasury secretary, is
right that it is all about "deluding the people" into
believing something that is not true.
In his first meeting with
Bush, soon after the inauguration, Frum reports that the president had
only one firm policy item backed by real conviction: "his
determination to dig Saddam Hussein out of power in Iraq." This was
six months before 9-11, and two years before weapons inspections. Why
should anyone take seriously the idea that Bush is waiting for Iraq to
comply with anything? Though Iraq was not discussed much during the
campaign, the secret plan for vengeance was always there.
Frum was hired as an
economic speech writer, and out by the time it became clear that no one
in the White House thinks that economics matters much. Of course, we've
all noted the return of Keynesianism under Bush (did it ever go away?),
as when he told an audience in Billings, Montana: "We want you to
have more cash flow so you can expand your business when this economy is
slowing down."
Well, Frum does not
believe in demand-side theory; he just sees this as part of the
necessary rhetorical apparatus. "As the nominal author of remarks
like these, I would receive anguished telephone calls afterward from
free-market theorists. 'He's spouting gibberish!' they would complain.
'You have to make him stop.' 'I have a better idea,' I'd reply. 'You
make him stop.'"
Can you imagine? Centuries
of writings on economic science! Hundreds of journals currently in
publication! Thousands and thousands of students and professors studying
economics in graduate school! And in the end, when it comes to actually
making economic policy, it's all reduced to a flimflam man trying to
create words that a guy like Bush can repeat with conviction. If you
raise an objection, prepare to be dismissed.
There is more insight here
concerning Bush's economics. We find out that Bush is against saving
consumers money on gasoline, and, indirectly, that he has no plan to use
the Iraqi oil fields to lower gas prices:
I once made the mistake
of suggesting to Bush that he use the phrase cheap energy to describe
the aims of his energy policy. He gave me a sharp, squinting look, as
if he were trying to decide whether I was the very stupidest person he
had heard from all day or only one of the top five. Cheap energy, he
answered, was how we got into this mess. Every year from the 1970s
until the mid-1990s, American cars burned less and less per mile
traveled. Then in about 1995 that progress stopped. Why? He answered
his own question: Because of the gas-guzzling SUV. And what had made
the SUV craze possible? This time I answered. "Umm, cheap
energy?" He nodded at me. Dismissed.

There is a nugget of
information that may prove to be the fatal decision of the Bush
administration. "Early in January [2002], the president summoned
his writers into the Oval Office for a preview of the coming year. His
message boiled downed to this: We're finished on the home front until
November, boys…. The domestic agenda was the same as the foreign
agenda: Win the war – then we'll see." A year later, the
recession is still on, Osama is still loose, and Bush's ratings are
falling.
Remember the famous
"Axis of Evil" phrase? It was originally "Axis of
Hatred," and it was written by Frum. Why? Frum writes: "Bush
decided that the United States was no longer a status-quo power in the
Middle East. He wanted to see plans for overthrowing Saddam, and he
wanted a speech that explained to the world why Iraq's dictator must go.
And from that presidential decision, bump, bump, bump down the
hierarchy….to me."
Again, what can this mean?
Bush knew he wanted to get rid of Saddam but didn't know why? He hires
people like Frum to drum up some, any, rationale? Talk about pulling
back the curtain!
There's an interesting
account of 9-11, how all White House staffers, there to protect the
nation from its enemies, were running for their lives, clamoring for
news, desperate to find a television set with CNN on, so they could find
out what was happening.
The really chilling aspect
of this book concerns the extent to which rhetoric as devised by
speechwriters ends up determining policy. "We will make no
distinction between the terrorists who committed these acts and those
who harbor them." Nice phrase, a product of the speechwriters'
office. Once uttered, it becomes the great excuse for the Garrison
State.
In Frum's account, Bush
has no core, no real understanding; he seems to wake up with a hankering
for something and then order everyone to fall into line. Bush's
nescience is matched only by his edgy arrogance, constantly on display.
Page after page reports this kind of thing: an insular White House run
by an "impatient," "dogmatic,"
"uncurious," and "ill-informed" president who
believes he has been appointed by divine providence; a staff fixated
mainly on what the mainstream media is saying day to day; advisers who
specialize in election hokum and the art of propaganda; a widespread
lack of clarity concerning what the administration believes on any
issue; and a complete lack of concern about much of anything or anyone
outside their immediate orbit.
Not that it really matters
in the end. The state continues to burn through $2 trillion in private
wealth every year, doing untold amounts of damage, and it will do so
regardless of what the Bush administration believes or does.
Frum seems unaware of what
a damning picture he is painting. You half expect him to report that
Bush looked out the window one day and said, what are all those
buildings and things out there? Are they part of the executive branch or
the legislative branch? Can I tell the people in them what you do? Yes?
Well, then, tell them to help with the War!!
How does the book
contribute to understanding the state? As I read, I developed a picture
in my mind of the state as a huge locomotive that forges ahead on
auto-drive. At some point, Bush and his staff have the chance to sit in
the front car of the train and pretend to be the drivers and affect
various poses and rationales for why the train is moving and where it is
going. They are given a pot of cash to toss out the window as they see
fit, and some guns to shoot people from the windows. They are also given
a press corps to write up their every move. They are generally happier
to be perceived as driving the thing rather than actually driving it,
and they are glad to use whatever is at their disposal to make their
turn in the cabin really meaningful, even historic.
Frum didn't set out to
make the government look ridiculous. But by giving us a peek into the
workings of the inner sanctum, that is what he has done. Meanwhile, the
next inhabitant of his former office will find a bigger mess than the
one he found, and leave it, and the country, even more of a dump.
January
17, 2003
Jeffrey Tucker [send
him mail] is vice president of the Mises
Institute.
Copyright © 2003
LewRockwell.com
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