Former CIA analyst Ray McGovern published a brilliant and damning piece regarding former President Bush’s upcoming memoir, Decision Points. In his essay, McGovern points out W’s little talked about “damn right” remarks he made when authorizing the waterboarding of terrorist Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. Not only did W sign off on the form torture as an acceptable practice, but added “damn right” and asserted that the torture saved lives.
McGovern not only points out the glaring falsehood in that assertion, but shows exactly how the torture of prisoners became a recruiting tool for insurgents in Iraq. In addition, he rightly states that the under-reporting of the torture issue in the media, coupled with plenty of support (or shoulder shrugging) of the American public at large implicates us all. The essay comes on the heels of Bush’s related comments regarding the “lowest point” in his presidency, when Kanye West hurt his feelings by saying he didn’t care about black people during Hurricane Katrina.

Courtesy Wikipedia
While both these comments may seem only tacitly related, public reaction to statements made surrounding Decision Points so far tells a much more damning tale of W’s presidency and our response to it. During the time leading up to Obama’s election, plenty of the public was fed up with disastrous and criminal policies of the Bush Administration – part of the reason why Obama was voted into office. A mere two years later and we’re already willing to rewrite history. Should we feel sorry for W because Kanye made some unscripted comments about his handling of one of the worst natural disasters in American history? Is it right to call that the “low point in the Bush administration?” What about intelligence failures leading up to 9/11? What about launching a war that killed hundreds of thousands based on false pretenses? What about tanking our economy? What about legalizing torture, something even Reagan, demagogue of the right wing, condemned?
Decision Points will be an opportunity for the Bush administration to not only build a more positive post presidential legacy, but to indemnify its criminal actions and whitewash history. As the Bush administration comes back into view with this book, it is the responsibility of the media and the American people to tell the truth about the last 8 years, not to let history be rewritten.


Salon.com
Comments
We shrug our shoulders now, but we are sowing the seeds of hell and come it will.
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Boko - you're probably right about that, provided that we're willing to work with it. Sadly, I think plenty of people out there are all too willing to let the distortions and misinformation repeated by politicians and the MSM become fact, because challenging them is a difficult task.
It was both the torture and the lying about it that earned him so much anger by his critics. Bush is, at heart, very contemptuous of most human beings, and human life. He was only able to make a credible presidential contender by his party by jacking up the execution rate in Texas while serving as governor.
His contempt for human beings and for telling the truth...I hope history will remember these things about him.
Apparently, history isn't only being rewritten. It's being covered up and destroyed, and no one's going to do anything about it.
Well, you could start by throwing the Constitution under the bus and creating a hostile atmosphere for society's producers. Last week's historic events prove that the American public is fairly scornful of that.
you responded:
Well, you could start by throwing the Constitution under the bus and creating a hostile atmosphere for society's producers. Last week's historic events prove that the American public is fairly scornful of that.
You're honestly cool with W bragging about committing war crimes? Our former president? We hung German war criminals for this. What is wrong with you that you think that comment made moral sense? Torture is evil. Some things are more important than political gain. What is wrong with you?
By the way, can someone remove the comment spam above this comment?
I was answering a question and talking about Obama. You're ranting about Bush. And you wonder what's wrong with ME?
Please keep the spam. It makes more sense that the other parts of this thread.