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January 14, 2009

The Last Presser… And The Real Bush

Bush-Last-Presser.jpg

Alternately wounded, aggrieved, persecuted and somehow fundamentally misunderstood, me thinks he doth protest … all the way to the history books.

***

I just finished watching the whole 45 minutes of Bush’s final press conference on Monday (as opposed to responding strictly to the photos and a radio interview with NPR White House correspondent Don Gagne, as I did in the previous post).

Abandoning his typical act as a tightly scripted pitchman, Bush — cycling through bitterness, defensiveness and anger — seemed intent on putting almost every single controversial and misguided thing he had done as President on the table so, like a defendant acting as his own counsel, he could make, and declare for the record, a defense of every significant action of his tenure. (The rationalization about Katrina was particularly thin and pathetic — that it would have been unconscionable to land in Baton Rouge and divert all those resources on the ground … when that’s exactly what he did on all the CYA trips he made.)

Throughout his term, Bush insisted that he didn’t reflect, didn’t look back, didn’t pay attention to criticism. Yet, what Bush explained as well as demonstrated in this press conference was that he was thoroughly immersed in the criticism, as if it all tumbled this hour for him to fire back.

I suppose I preserve these moments because it’s some relief to finally match the real attitudes to these characteristic facial gestures, as well as to see, as if for the first and only time, the real unguarded Bush.

Bush-Final-Presser-2.jpg

At least starting off, Bush plied the press with awkward teasing and back-handed humor, these little moments of smugness seeming to create brief islands of protection from the hurt and defensiveness he was feeling, and from the tension between him and the reporters. In the C-SPAN screen grab above, the President gets a kick out of having said his name in French after acquiescing to-, then making a joke out of the proper pronunciation of “Suzanne Malveaux.” (End of the part 1 segment.)

Bush-Last-Presser-1.jpg

Bush was plaintive and emphatic throughout, often hanging his chin in the air after offering one reference after another to what he evidently deemed un- or under-appreciated accomplishments, listing most of these off without ever having been asked. In the example above, at the 7:11 mark in part 1, Bush has just finished a digression from a question about Israel’s right to defend itself, emphasizing how his administration had helped the Palestinians establish democracy.

Bush-Last-Presser-3.jpg Bush-Last-Presser-4.jpg

In the sequence above, from about the 5:20 mark in part 2, Bush uses utterly childish and concescending tones and gestures to mock what he intimates as the hand-wringing, weak-kneed thinking of doubters who opposed the “surge.”

Bush-Last-Presser-5.jpg  Bush-Last-Presser-6.jpg

Quite a few time, Bush’s composure simply disintegrated.

At one point (around 7:15 of part 2), he vigorously lashed out at critics who questioned his “chucking aside of his free market principles” in support of the Wall Street bail-out, arguing testily that nothing short of the threat of a depression made him do it. Just above (at the 5:19 point of part 4), we see Bush ranting about criticism of America’s preparation for 9/11 and the charge that the Administration never “connected the dots.” (The image next to it reveals the tortured reaction of White House staffers Gillespie and Perino.)

Looking again at the image in the previous post, I can’t place where in the press conference it occurred but it looks a lot less like starry-eyed than one of those many moments of upset self-righteousness.

The painful awkwardness of the entire episode — the press briefing itself, but also the way it summed up and exposed a dysfunctional presidency — is plain on the faces of the reporters. Looking at the pregnant image from today’s NYT above, what do you do in that moment but simply stare straight ahead and wait until the man is gone?

  • http://profile.typepad.com/6p010536b2fa33970c/ Lightkeeper

    Its really hard for me to really look at these images of this man, not least because I already said au revoir to him over a year ago and don’t particularly feel the need to see him literally walk off the stage (and grimace and pout while doing so). Here Obama probably is right: we should look toward the future – which does not mean we should *not* prosecute a war criminal. But it is physically and psychologically painful to look at him. I suspect I am not the only one who feels this way.
    However:
    1) Helen Thomas looks like a mama lionnes about to chew him to pieces…Or conversely she looks like she is cowering from him cause she thinks he will give her cooties (ew).
    2) Dana Perino is thinking: how long should I wait before I publish my account lambasting this man and his administration?
    3) It seems significant that he’s walking on stars on his way out; like trampling on the American flag. Besides the obvious invocation of ‘walking out,’ I think they probably ran this picture cause we’re really tired of seeing his stupid face.

  • thirdeye pushpin

    what stikes me is the way that both of his arms are forward as he walks off; it seems as if he is hunched slightly forward, like an aggressive/defensive sapien walking away from an encounter of defeat. For me the sight of Bush is a blemish to democracy and that blemish will dissappear when his legacy is recognized for the war crimes and corruption of the constitution that it engendered.

  • merl

    You watched the entire 45 minutes? I can’t take more than a minute or two of him.

  • http://revolutionredux.wordpress.com/2008/11/20/the-window-is-closing/ Annie

    The Constitution is grayer and a bit more wrinkled after his eight years in office, is what the Getty caption could just as easily have been.
    It has been exceedingly uncomfortable to watch and listen to W in any setting and in all venues. He is the national symbol of failure – from a failed education (his own and that he imposed on the nation), war-mongering and being stunted at the three year old developmental level where children do not yet share, throw tantrums and hurl objects at others with gleeful abandon, failed economy – robbing from the poor to pay “his own kind”, the rule of law – see reference to war-mongering, science – see references to education and economy, and on and on ad nauseum.
    His legacy?
    We now have a farcical “debate” about torture instead of recognizing is as an absolute unacceptable behavior in any civilized society.
    One political party is a de facto treasonous hate group, and the other not only tolerates it, but accedes to its demands, so that the Constitution continues under grievous and lethal assault.
    The Bush legacy is the catastrophic failure of the US as a functional republic.
    It’s a black hole where scarce resources were tossed in with wild abandon, and in which no light escapes.
    The Bush legacy is the destruction of the functional Constitution and the establishment of a Constitutional dictatorship.

  • Asta

    In agreement with thirdeye pushpin. Though I find the image of Bush exiting stage right to be a creepy one. I am reminded of the horror films of the ’30’s, the black and white, the graininess, the monster unleashed upon an unsuspecting public. Except Bush is far more evil than anything Victor Frankenstein could create.
    And it scares the beejeebers out of me that The Monster isn’t really gone at the end, but like in a cheesy B movie, it will return at the very last minute to wreak havoc one more time.
    I really am holding my breath until 1.20.09.

  • Karen

    I’m struck by the four fully shown reporters in the front row: Thomas’ expression probably sums up popular reaction to Bush, the next three do, in fact, seem sort of embarrassed.
    Bush himself looks like he’s practicing for the field sobriety test he’ll be taking in Texas in the next five years.

  • BerkeleyMom

    Helen Thomas’s look of disgust speaks for me. No wonder he didn’t call on her.
    Bush is delusional–he seems mentally unbalanced.

  • http://profile.typekey.com/msobel/ marc sobel

    I think the Pardon photos will be even better.
    As for the exit, sorry to use such a familiar trop, but swinging two arms forward than both legs is of course the chimp walk.
    I think it must have been very disconcerting having Helen Thomas glowering at him. The look is that of a school teacher who knows bullshit when she hears it.
    As I said before I assume that in the final moments of his presidency, writing (pun) like Jeb Bartlet to the rescue, for putting him over the top in his relection bid and enabling the War on Iraq and Afganistan, Bush will pardon Osama Bin Laden.

  • jean

    The reporter next to Helen Thomas looks as if he’s trying to decide whether to stand for Bush’s exit or remain sitting like the rest of them. Or, he’s just ready to get out of there.

  • http://reciprocity-failure.blogspot.com Stan B.

    Six days and counting…

  • http://profile.typepad.com/6p010536554b68970c/ DW

    So great to see everyone finally share the opinion I had of Bush in 2000.
    Too bad none of my Republican friends would speak to me after I told them then what a disaster he would be. His personality was more than obvious even then to those who had the eyes to see who he really was.

  • thomas

    Oh man. Just look at that picture. All those reporters. All those shoes. I mean, come on! He’s right there! Their very last chance and they ALL could have gotten him! What a total and complete disappointment.

  • KarenZ

    W. looked as if he had been grabbed by the ghost of Richard Nixon, on his last day in the White House. The tone of voice, the rambling, the defensiveness, the posture, and of course the staff who can’t bring themselves to watch what’s happening.

  • Gasho

    I SPIT ON YOUR GRAVE YOU PI3CE OF SH*T !
    War Criminal, Torturer, Liar, Traitor, Thief.
    If Obama doesn’t unleash a team of special prosecutors on the misdeads of W and his gang, then the rule of law is DEAD.
    The second to last pic, with Bush screaming at the press corps with the “legacy” caption underneath is a real keeper. What an inappropriately aggressive idiot he is. He can’t escape his Karma, even on the ranch. I just hope, for the sake of our country, that his Karma comes to roost here on Earth (before he’s off to meet his maker).

  • jtfromBC

    ain’t this the truth,
    ‘Whatever else his legacy, the man who called himself “the decider” has left some gripping history. The last eight years have been so rich in epic imperial hubris that it would take a reborn Gibbon to do justice to the fall’ – Simon Schama
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/nov/03/george-bush-legacy-dubya
    Edward Gibbon (1739- 1794) was arguably the most influential historian since the time of Tacitus. His magnum opus, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.

  • dogfood

    Can there be doubt in anyone’s mind what an idiot we’ve had in charge for the last 8 years? He’s really certifiable.

  • dogfood

    Well said Gasho. I couldn’t agree with more.

  • dogfood

    With YOU more. Sorry.

  • cenoxo

    Here’s the color version of the BAGMan’s lead photo. In it, the prominent figure of the Prophetess — whose career began with JFK — watches as the deposed King releases the horns of the altar and walks away.
    Change always comes, but remember that the Office remains bigger than the man.

  • Hermetically Sealed

    Bush was more than a mere “bad president”– he was a war criminal. Whether he is prosecuted or not, he always will be and he knows it.
    Hannah Arendt’s phrase, “the banality of evil” always springs to mind when I think of this sorry excuse for a human being.