by Mia T,
1.06.02 Richard
Gere stunned fellow liberals Monday by
suggesting that President Bush is doing a
better job of fighting AIDS than President
Bill Clinton did. Introduced
by Sharon Stone at a fund-raiser at Cipriani
42nd Street for the American Foundation for
AIDS Research, the "Chicago" star hailed Bush
for his State of the Union proposal to
contribute $15 billion toward the AIDS battle
in Africa and the Caribbean. Gere then
addressed the track record of Bush's
predecessor in the White House. "I'm
sorry, Sen. [Hillary] Clinton, but
your husband did nothing about AIDS for eight
years," Gere said. They
say that the clear focus of American policy
was to discourage the state sponsorship of
terrorism. So persuading Khartoum to expel
Bin Laden was in itself counted as a clear
victory. The administration was
"delighted". Bin
Laden took off from Khartoum on May 18 in a
chartered C-130 plane with 150 of his
followers, including his wives. He was bound
for Jalalabad in eastern Afghanistan. On the
way the plane refuelled in the Gulf state of
Qatar, which has friendly relations with
Washington, but he was allowed to proceed
unhindered. Barely
a month later, on June 25, a 5,000lb truck
bomb ripped apart the front of Khobar Towers,
a US military housing complex in Dhahran,
Saudi Arabia. The explosion killed 19
American servicemen. Bin Laden was
immediately suspected... bill
clinton, State of Union Speech, January 27,
2000 Among
the comments clinton made in presence of
Secret Service agents: After
the Monica Lewinsky story broke, however,
clinton toned down his rhetoric and
behavior in front of his Secret Service
agents, but those who guarded the
president say enough of them saw and heard
things which could be damaging to clinton.
Turnover
In clinton's Secret Service Detail
'Highest That Anyone Can
Remember' Why
does the press continue to ignore the
Juanita Broaddrick
story? To wit: A proven
felon and utter reprobate can remain president; clinton
can be a failed human being but a good president.
The error in these
statements arises, says Steele, from the belief that
virtuousness is separate from personal responsibility so
that one's virtuousness as an individual is determined by
one's political positions on issues rather than on
whether or not in one's personal life there is a
consistency and a responsibility. Steele's contention
is that this compartmentalization, rather than being the
amazing advantage the clintons would have us believe, in
fact, spills toxicity into, corrupts, the culture.
If mere
identification with good policies is what makes
one virtuous then those policies become, what Steele
calls, iconographic, that is to say they just
represent virtuousness. They don't necessarily
do virtuous things. If clinton's
semantic parsing strips meaning from our words, clinton's
iconographic policies strip meaning from our society,
systematically deconstructing our society as a democracy.
. . I would take Shelby
Steele's thesis one step further. I maintain that
iconographic policy functions like a placebo, producing a
real, physiological and social effects. The placebo effect
is, after all, the brain's triumph over reality.
Expectation alone can produce powerful physiological
results. The placebo effect was, at one time, an
evolutionary advantage: act now, think later bill clinton is the
paradigmatic Placebo President. Placebo is Latin for "I
shall please." And please he does doling out sham
treatments, iconographs, with abandon. To please, to
placate, to numb, to deflect. Ultimately to showcase his
imagined virtue. Or to confute his genuine
vice. clinton will
dispense sugar pills (or bombs) at the drop of a
high-heeled shoe... or at the hint of high
treason... clinton's
charlatanry mimics that of primitive medicine. Through
the 1940s, doctors had little effective medicine to offer
so they deliberately attempted to induce the placebo
response. The efficaciousness
of today's medicines does not diminish the power of the
placebo. A recent review of placebo-controlled studies
found that placebos and genuine treatments are often
equally effective. If you expect to get better, you will.
Which brings me
back to the original question: Can clinton be a failed
human being but a good president? Clearly he cannot.
These two propositions are mutually exclusive. clinton's
fundamental failure is a complete lack of integrity. He
has violated his covenant with the American
people. Because clinton has
destroyed his moral authority as a leader, he can no
longer function even as a quack; the placebo effect is
gone. And so the Placebo
President must now go, too. My entire
worldview changed. If you would have told me
September 9 that I would have been at the world
series game filming George Bush throwing out the
first pitch with my 6-year-old son crying, I
never would have believed you, but I was.
Because my whole worldview changed. WAR
AND TREASON AND THE NEW YORK
TIMES
The boot in the face, the brute
Brute heart of a brute like you.

he
placebo effect
immediately came to mind as I listened to Shelby Steele,
a research fellow at the Hoover Institution, debunk the
following pernicious spin intended to save
clinton.

"There
are only two years left. What harm can he
do?":
Sen. Dale Bumpers
September
11 changed a lot of things for me, Bill
[O'Reilly]. I will say this, before
September 11, I was definitely mildly myopic in
terms of my political agenda. If you were
Democrat you were probably right, and if you
were a Republican you were probably wrong.
Everything changed for me that day...
by
Mia T, December 29, 2005
COPYRIGHT
MIA T 2006