WHERE Were the tough questions?
- By l.t. Dravis
- Published 01/13/2009
l.t. Dravis
I created and have written the nationally distributed marketing newsletter, BOTH SIDES NOW, since 2003. I authored two books, BOTH SIDES NOW, Sell Like Professional Athletes Win and DEATH OF A SALES MANAGER. In 2008, I introduced a daily column for national syndication to newspapers.
Photo Credit: Chip Smodevilla/Getty
By l.t. Dravis
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Monday, January 12, 2009 – George W. Bush held
his final news conference today, played fast and loose with the truth as he defended
his eight year record, and no one in the room had guts enough to challenge him.
George W. Bush opened the door wide several times for
tough questions, but reporters didn’t dare rush in.
Why,
I’ll never know . . . it’s not like any of these reporters had to worry about
being barred from the next Bush Press Conference for having committed the
mortal sin of asking a tough question.
Bush was aggressive, arrogant, and even
joked about the incredible mess he’s left this country in.
And the White House Press Corps laughed
with him.
Not one professional journalist had the
courage to challenge Bush when he commented on his presidency’s record by
saying, “I think it’s a good, strong record. You know, presidents can try to
avoid hard decisions and therefore controversy. That’s just not my nature.”
With America mired in two wars, with our
military nearing the breaking point, with our infrastructure falling down, with
unprecedented deficit spending adding up to a $10+ trillion national debt, with
unprecedented mismanagement of American resources in Iraq, with our economy in
shambles, with millions of Americans facing foreclosure, with millions more out
of work, with our banking system on the edge of failure, and with our
manufacturing base nearly destroyed, why wouldn’t at least one journalist challenge
that statement?
Who in the room, who in the nation, who
in the world sincerely believes George W. Bush’s record, is ‘good and strong’?
When asked about America’s image around
the world, Bush said, “I disagree with this assessment that, you know, that
people view America in a dim light. It may be damaged amongst some of the
elite. But people still understand America stands for freedom.”
Of course, eight years of George W. Bush’s
arrogant, detached, incompetence has damaged America’s image around the world.
Did the reporters at Bush’s final press
conference truly believe that our image around the world has been strengthened
by his mismanagement of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq? Did those reporters
believe our image has been helped by Bush’s lack of leadership in coping with
the ongoing nuclear threat in Iran? Did any of those reporters seriously believe
that the Bush administration strengthened America’s image by ‘rendering’ and ‘torturing’
suspected terrorists in secret prisons in foreign countries and at ‘Gitmo’?
Yet not one reporter challenged him.
George W. Bush then defended his record
in the Middle East by justifying his failure. “It’s been a long time since they’ve
had peace in the Middle East,” Bush said. “The challenge, of course, has been
to lay out the conditions so that a peaceful state can emerge. Will this ever
happen? I think it will. And I know we’ve advanced the process.”
No reporter pointed out the fallacy of
his argument or asked Bush to explain how his administration had ‘advanced the
process’.
Bush then said he’d “thought long and
hard about Katrina. You know could I have done something differently, like land
Air Force One either in New Orleans or Baton Rouge.”
Bush was revealing that the most
important thing on his mind when Katrina hit was where to have a photo op . . .
in New Orleans or Baton Rouge . . . yet no one in the room pointed out that he was
talking about something completely unrelated to the question of his
administration’s abysmal response to a national tragedy.
Bush then said something absurd . . . even for him. He said, “Don’t tell me
the federal response was slow when there were 30,000 people pulled off roofs
right after the storm passed. Could things have been done better? Absolutely. But
when I hear people say the federal response was slow, what are they going to
say to those chopper drivers or the 30,000 who got pulled off the roof?”
That Bush could get away with making a
statement like that . . . in front of experienced journalists was unbelievable.
It is well documented that George W. Bush
failed to take charge; that he failed to make certain that every federal
resource was utilized to quickly and effectively save lives and property
throughout the Gulf Coast after Katrina. His failure cost lives and seriously delayed
the rebuilding effort. George W. Bush and his minions failed to anticipate the
scope of the disaster (despite very clear warnings from the national weather
service) and they failed to react and they failed to follow-through.
Three and a half years after the fact, damage
done by Katrina is still impacting the lives of hundreds of thousands of
Americans on the Gulf Coast.
Yet not one reporter pointed out that the
Coast Guard’s valiant efforts to save 30,000 Katrina victims had absolutely
nothing to do with Bush’s leadership or with his administration’s response to
the tragedy.
Not one reporter asked George W. Bush to
explain or justify why his Secretary of the Treasury, Henry Paulson, threw the
first $350 billion of the financial bailout at banks with no accountability.
The outgoing president stood at that
podium in front of the White House Press Corps for three-quarters of an hour so
it wasn’t like reporters didn’t have time enough to ask the tough questions.
If the media exists only to serve as a
conduit for truth between us and them, why didn’t reporters hold George W. Bush
accountable for his failures today?
Were those reporters more concerned about
playing by the unspoken rules of presidential press conferences, which are
designed, first and foremost, to protect the president’s image or were they
more concerned about honoring their obligation to report the truth?
After today, we know the answer to that
question.
Don’t we?
Copyright © 2008 by LTD Associates West,
Ltd. All rights reserved.
