I
never thought I would miss our 43d President, George W. Bush. And
I’ve never much thought of him as a great, or even good,
speaker. But the speech he gave at a conference convened by the
George W. Bush Institute was simply eloquent, excellent, thoughtful,
and compelling. After keeping a low profile for the past eight
years, he spoke up to decry the fact that “bigotry seems
emboldened”. “Bullying and prejudice in our public life
sets a national tone, provides permission for cruelty and bigotry,
and compromises the moral education of children”.
Why
did George W. Bush choose to speak so forcefully, in a speech that
did not mention 45 but was at least partly directed to him? Perhaps
it was Charlottesville, since he and his father, 41st President
George Herbert Walker Bush, issued a joint statement denouncing white
supremacists, something that 45 simply could not bring himself to do.
The younger Bush was blunt last week when he said, “Bigotry
or white supremacy in any form is blasphemy against the American
creed.”
I
knew that I would miss our 44th President Barack Obama. Like his
predecessor, he has kept a low profile since leaving office, stepping
out very briefly to campaign for Virginia gubernatorial candidate
Ralph Northam and to reflect on the challenges we face in our
democracy. Like President Bush, President Obama did not refer to 45
by name, but his speech in Virginia was a repudiation of virtually
everything our prevaricating “president” stands for.
“Some of the politics we see now, we thought we put that to
bed,” said Obama. “That has folks looking 50 years back.
It’s the 21st century, not the 19th century. Come on!”.
Seemingly scolding the current administration, Obama said, “Instead
of looking for ways to work together to get things done in a
practical way, we’ve got folks who are deliberately trying to
make folks angry, to demonize people who have different ideas, to get
the base all riled up because it provides a short-term tactical
advantage.”
Watching
Presidents Bush and Obama reminded me of how far the quality of our
nation’s leadership has fallen. I saw two men who, with
absolute class, reminded us of our nation’s values and that
which is repugnant in the current administration. The contrast is
the persistent crassness of 45, an ill spoken, bumbling, coarse, and
classless individual. He never met a fight he could not pick and
escalate, never met an opposing viewpoint he could not demonize. He
has belittled everyone he has disagreed with, from his own inner
circle to football players he does not even know, calling them “sons
of bitches”.
In
his entire eight years of service, President Obama never disparaged
his predecessor, President George W. Bush, even as he cleaned up some
of his messes. In his several months of leadership, 45 has missed no
opportunity to criticize President Obama. If I had a dollar for
every time President Obama critiqued President Bush, I’d barely
have enough money for a fast-food meal. If I had a dollar for every
time 45 disparaged President Obama, I could dine at the nation’s
best restaurants for a full week!
Class
is visiting Walter Reed hospital to look in on wounded soldiers, or
hosting White House luncheons for Gold Star families. Crass is
calling widow Myeshia Johnson, never mentioning her deceased husband,
Sgt. La David Johnson, by name, and telling her “he knew what
he signed up for.” Class is refusing to disparage either
predecessor or successor. Crass is trashing anyone and everyone,
including his predecessor. Class is disagreeing with dignity and
civility. Crass is name-calling, challenging people to IQ tests, and
making fun of ill and disabled people, including war hero Senator
John McCain.
To
be sure, I don’t think that 45 maliciously called Myeshia
Johnson in an attempt to cause her pain. I think he simply does not
know how to talk to people, and we have plenty of evidence. The
recent book, The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump: 27 Psychiatrists and Mental Health Experts Assess a President
explains that the sociopathic narcissist we elected is so
fundamentally flawed that he could easily imperil our very survival
by pushing us into war.
45
told Myeshia Johnson “he knew what he signed up for”. So
did nearly half of our nation’s voters when they chose crass
over class.
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