Harper’s Magazine on Undoing Bush

I don’t usually read Harper’s Magazine (though I usually mean to) but I was attracted to the June cover, which asks the question “How to Repair Eight Years of Sabotage, Bungling and Neglect?” under a photo of a smiling George W. Bush.

Since I tend to walk down the street pondering the exact same question these days, I picked up this magazine and was pleased to find a broad and well-considered set of essays on this question, including the following topics by the following authors: The Constitution by David Cole, The Courts by Dahlia Lithwick, The Environment by Bill McKibben, The Marketplace of Ideas by Jack Hitt and The Military by Edward Luttwak. Being generally a foreign policy minded kind of guy, I was most interested in Anne Marie Slaughter’s suggestions on Diplomacy.

How are we going to handle diplomacy after the failure known as George W. Bush waves his last goodbye? It’s a question every 2008 presidential candidate should be able to answer, for one thing, and voters are going to demand something more than the candy-coated sugar language most of the candidates have been delivering on this topic. In her Harper’s article Slaughter wisely sticks to specific instructions: close Guantanamo, get serious about nuclear disarmament, join the International Criminal Court, get serious about the United Nations, and get serious about fighting global warming.

I think these are all important suggestions, though I’d add one more and put it at the very top of the list: renounce torture as an intelligence-gathering technique (that is to say, renounce torture).

I’m less impressed with Earl Shorris on The National Character. Where Slaughter’s prescriptions are based on the existence of concrete objects (Gitmo, the United Nations), Shorris puts too much faith into the meanings of terms like “virtue”, “evil”, “courage”, “fear”. He quotes Immanuel Kant, but he needs to be doused with a bucket of Ludwig Wittgenstein, who would have reminded him that all of these words are ultimately chimeral entities, and really aren’t likely to serve any useful purposes in any discussions, debates or exchanges of ideas, because they are too easily co-opted by alternative meanings or willful misinterpretations.

But Harper’s has put together a good essay series overall, and I’m glad it hammers home the point that those of us who really can’t stand the sight of George W. Bush anymore aren’t necessarily obsessive Bush-haters, and are really not motivated by emotion or anger when we talk about him incessantly. The problem is rather that we feel a desperate need to begin recovering from George W. Bush … and it doesn’t help that this walking disaster is still in office. In other words, it really isn’t about George W. Bush at all. It’s about how the hell we’re going to clean up the mess this moron made, and how we’re going to save our great country once he’s gone.

3 Responses to “Harper’s Magazine on Undoing Bush”

  1. Mikael Covey Says:

    There’s a lot more to do in fixing the world, than reporting on the problems.

    A systematic approach: 1st - identify the problem, 2nd - find the solution, 3rd - just do it.

    Examples:
    we could solve the Israeli-Palestinian problem tomorrow;
    we could leave Iraq tomorrow;
    we could fix Afghanistan;
    fix Africa; fix the UN.

    The problem then - there’s no leadership in American governance.

    Look/listen to politicians - they’re dumber than dirt; cheerful little mindless pawns of the corporations who run the planet.

    A president should say to Saudi - we don’t want your oil. Give it to China. We’re going to import all the electric cars from India that we can. The rest will run on ethanol 85, by law.

    I’ve suggested to Litmocracy that they do a weekly Kos discussion. I would like very much for Cherry Orchard and LitBlog Co-op to join us in that forum. A united front for a ‘just do it’ sort of approach.

  2. brooklyn Says:

    Mike, I agree that I want to do more than report on problems. I’m still sort of figuring out what I’m trying to do with this site, and I don’t think I’ve fully figured it out yet. Stay tuned!

  3. Mike Covey Says:

    Levi, I think you’re doing as much as anyone; and it’s making a difference. Just that I’m an impatient little bastard - lived through Vietnam, Reganomics crap, neo-nationalism, and Lee Greenwood. I’m old, getting older - gonna die in this muck with nothing ever getting fixed. Feels like the calm before the French Revolution to me.

    I said on Kos that once we replace Republicans with Democrats, we gotta start replacing Democrats with Greens - people who care about planet and inhabitants. In short, we need a top to bottom fix; need it now.

    Michael Moore said on ‘Now’ - the difference between US and France - we’re afraid of our government and our corporations. In France, the government and the corporations are afraid of the people.

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