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This article originally provided by
The New York Times
September 17, 2005
Disney on Parade
By
MAUREEN DOWD
WASHINGTON
The president, as he fondly recalled the other day, used
to get well lit in New Orleans. Not any more.
On Thursday night, Mr. Bush wanted to appear casually in
charge as he waged his own Battle of New Orleans in Jackson
Square. Instead, he looked as if he'd been dropped off by
his folks in front of a eerie, blue-hued castle at Disney
World. (Must be Sleeping Beauty's Castle, given the
somnambulant pace of W.'s response to Katrina.)
All Andrew Jackson's horses, and all the Boy King's men
could not put Humpty Dumpty together again. His gladiatorial
walk across the darkened greensward, past a St. Louis
Cathedral bathed in moon glow from White House klieg lights,
just seemed to intensify the sense of an isolated,
out-of-touch president clinging to hollow symbols as his
disastrous disaster agency continues to flail.
In a ruined city - still largely without power, stinking
with piles of garbage and still 40 percent submerged; where
people are foraging in the miasma and muck for food, corpses
and the sentimental detritus of their lives; and where
unbearably sad stories continue to spill out about hordes of
evacuees who lost their homes and patients who died in
hospitals without either electricity or rescuers - isn't it
rather tasteless, not to mention a waste of energy, to haul
in White House generators just to give the president a
burnished skin tone and a prettified background?
The slick White House TV production team was trying to
salvage W.'s "High Noon" snap with some snazzy
Hollywood-style lighting - the same Reaganesque stagecraft
they had provided when W. made a prime-time television
address from Ellis Island on the first anniversary of the
9/11 attacks. On that occasion, Scott Sforza, a former ABC
producer, and Bob DeServi, a former NBC cameraman and a
lighting expert, rented three barges of giant Musco lights,
the kind used for "Monday Night Football" and Rolling Stones
concerts, floated them across New York Harbor and
illuminated the Statue of Liberty as a backdrop for Mr.
Bush.
Before the presidential address, Mr. DeServi was
surveying his handiwork in Jackson Square, crowing to
reporters about his cathedral: "Oh, it's heated up. It's
going to print loud."
As Elisabeth Bumiller, the White House reporter for The
Times, noted in a pool report, the image wizards had put up
a large swath of military camouflage netting, held in place
by bags of rocks and strung on poles, to hide the president
from the deserted and desolate streets of the French Quarter
ghost town.
The president is still looking for a tiny spot of
unreality in New Orleans - and in Iraq, where a violent
rampage has spiked the three-day death tally to over 200.
The Oedipal loop-de-loop of W. and Poppy grows ever
loopier.
With Karl Rove's help, Junior designed his presidency as
a reverse of his father's. W. would succeed by studying
Dad's failures and doing the opposite. But in a bizarre
twist of filial fate, the son has stumbled so badly in areas
where he tried to one-up Dad that he has ended up giving Dad
a leg up in the history books.
As Mark Twain said: "When I was a boy of 14, my father
was so ignorant I could hardly stand to have the old man
around. But when I got to be 21, I was astonished at how
much the old man had learned in seven years."
Of course, it's taken Junior only five years to learn how
smart his old man was.
His father made the "mistake" of not conquering and
occupying Iraq because he had the silly idea that Iraqis
would resent it. His father made the "mistake" of raising
taxes, not cutting them, and overly obsessing about the
federal deficit. And his father made the "mistake" of hewing
to the center, making his base mad and losing his bid for
re-election.
Bush père did make a real mistake in responding slowly to
Hurricane Andrew in 1992, but that blunder has been dwarfed
by what the slothful son hath wrought. Because of his fatal
tardiness, W. now has to literally promise the moon to fix
New Orleans and the rest of the Gulf Coast, driving up the
federal deficit and embarking on the biggest spending
bonanza and government public works program since F.D.R.
In his address from the French Quarter, the president
sounded like such a spendthrift bleeding heart that he is
terrifying the right more than his father ever did.
Read my lips: By the time all this is over, people will
be saying that Poppy was the true conservative in the
family.
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