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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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fall. By late 1991, this same team had acquired the deserved reputation of a gaggle of<br />

maladroit buffoons.)<br />

<strong>The</strong>se triumphant bureaucrats and above all <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> himself were not kindly<br />

disposed to old Ronald Reagan, in whose shadow they had labored for so long. How<br />

many of them had been consumed with rage when plum posts had been given to Reagan's<br />

fast-buck California parvenu cronies! How they had cursed Reagan for a sentimental<br />

pushover when he made concessions to Gorbachov! <strong>The</strong> bureaucrats would not join<br />

Reagan in slobbering over Gorbachov, at least not right away; they were there to drive a<br />

hard bargain, to make sure the Soviet empire collapsed. <strong>The</strong>y had accepted Reagan as a<br />

useful facade, a harmless vaudeville act to keep the great unwashed masses amused while<br />

the bureaucrats carried out their machinations. But the bureaucrats had a savage temper,<br />

and they never appreciated the bumbling antics of any favorite uncles. If scripted Reagan<br />

had seemed a necessary evil as long as he appeared indispensable to procure election<br />

victories and mass consensus, how intolerable he seemed now that he had been proven<br />

unnecessary, now that imperial functionary <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> had won election in his own<br />

right, without Reagan's bobbing histrionics!<br />

Reagan-bashing became one of the ruling passions of the new patrician regime. This was<br />

a matter of Realpolitik that went beyond mere words: it was the demolition of any<br />

remaining Reaganite political machinery, lest it provide a springboard for a political<br />

challenge to the plutocracy of little Lord Fauntleroy. <strong>The</strong> campaign was so intense that it<br />

elicited a letter from Richard Nixon to John Sununu complaining of a newspaper account<br />

of White House aides speaking on background to depict Reagan as a dunce, much<br />

inferior to his successor. Nixon urged that "whoever was the source of this story should<br />

be fired as an example to others who might be tempted to play the same kind of game."<br />

Nixon denounced "anonymous staffers who believe that the way to build him [<strong>Bush</strong>] up<br />

is to tear Reagan down." Sununu hurriedly telephoned Tricky Dick to reassure him that<br />

he was also found the denigration of Reagan "absolutely intolerable," but the trashing of<br />

the old Reagan machine only accelerated. One assistant to <strong>Bush</strong> boasted that the new<br />

president was "in the business of governing," while poor old Reagan had been a prop for<br />

photo opportunities. [fn 2]<br />

Of course, the imperial functionaries of the <strong>Bush</strong> team had chosen to ignore certain gross<br />

facts, most importantly the demonstrable bankruptcy and insolvency of their own leading<br />

institutions of finance, credit, and government. <strong>The</strong>ir ability to command production and<br />

otherwise to act upon the material world was in sharp decline. How long would the<br />

American population remain in its state of stupefied passivity in the face of deteriorating<br />

standards of living that were now falling more rapidly than at any time in the last twenty<br />

years? And now, the speculative orgy of the 1980's would have to be paid for. Even their<br />

advantage over the crumbling Soviet Empire was ultimately only a marginal, relative, and<br />

temporary one, due primarily to a faster rate of collapse on the Soviet side; but the day of<br />

reckoning for the Anglo-Americans was coming, too.<br />

This was the triumphalism that pervaded the opening weeks of the <strong>Bush</strong> administration.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> gave more press conferences during the transition period than Reagan had given

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