In an earlier post I made the statement that I “have not been thrilled” with George W. Bush. I haven’t been comfortable with that statement since then because I knew as soon as I published the post that it was a cop-out qualifying statement that was generated out of the effects of “group think.”
Group Think is what happens when a particular idea or range of opinion is prevelant enough throughout the “group” that it becomes inherently difficult for the individual within that “group” to break from the prevailing sentiment. It’s a lot like peer pressure in middle school.
Let me now break from the shackles of Group Think and say this: I admire George W. Bush. I haven’t agreed with everything he has done, but I have agreed with much of it. Even when I have dissagreed with him, I have understood his position. And, I believe that he is a good man who cares deeply for his country. He has endured one of the most difficult set of circumstances of any US president in our history. He has, in my opinion, been the recipient of probably the most brutal, unfair, and unreasonable public assaults on his character and his intelligence of any US president in history.
His greatest flaw as a president may be his greatest personal strength, and that is humility. Because of his humility, he has not stood up for himself against a rip-tide of relentless partisan and media attacks. As partisans and biased media organizations learned that he would not, to a large extent, counter their assaults, they became emboldened to push the envelope with their agendas. As a result, President George W. Bush is, in my opinion, one of the most mis-understood US presidents in our history.
This is a man who could have very legitimately lambasted the governor of Louisiana and the mayor of New Orleans for not doing their most important jobs, for it was their responsibility to manage a major emergency in the days just before, during, and immediately after Hurricane Katrina, not the federal government’s. It was their responsibility. The federal government can provide assistance to re-build and recover in the weeks and months following a disaster, but it is not positioned, or intended to be positioned, to manage an emergency as it is happening. And, if you doubt this, just look at the night-and-day difference between how the emergency was handled in Mississippi verses the way it was handled in Louisiana. The difference, obvious to anyone with an objective point of view, is in the way the local authorities managed the situation. And, yet, the perception still remains that the blame lies with the federal government, in large part because President Bush is too good of a man to point the finger at someone else.
Because of Group Think, created by such examples as above, most Americans under the age of about 25 think that President Bush is a nasty, mean-spirited person, when in fact, people who have actually met him consistently describe him as a genuinly compassionate and caring man (even leftists who have met the president often acknowledge this). I recently had a conversation with a guy who believed that President Bush had a lot in common with Hitler—the same old heresay and conspiracy story. I told him that I believed President Bush to be an honest and decent man, even when I dissagree with him. He was astonished that I could possibly believe that. In a conversation with another guy I worked with, I told him that, although I may dissagree with President Bush at times, I didn’t think he was a stupid man. He laughed at me.
There are numerous accounts of the president shedding tears with the families of fallen soldiers in private moments of solace. This is a man who does not take lightly the decision to send our soldiers into battle. This is a man who cares deeply for the people of this country and for the world.
And, what of the rest of the world? Most of the world seems to dislike this man. In my opinion this is just the global extension of the same Group Think phenomenon. Millions of people around the world are deliberately misled by the people who control and disseminate information. Because President Bush is a conservative who has taken some bold action in the world, his persona is presented by world-wide media outlets with an unflattering political slant. And millions of people consume that “information” to form their opinions of the man.
And, yet, look what President Bush has done to help the people of Africa! He has arguably saved more lives and helped more people in Africa than any other person in the history of this planet. At no time in history, I believe, has the collective perception of one man been so completely off-target from the reality.
In that earlier post with the comment that I was uncomfortable about, I made the historical comparison between Lincoln in 1863, Truman in 1952 and Bush in 2008. I surmised that it was possible that George W. Bush could be remembered by history a generation removed as a great president. I strongly believe this because the judgement of history is often at odds with the judgement of the present, as evidenced by Harry Truman who was as unpopular in 1952 as President Bush is today.
So, let me now correct my Group Think qualifying statement from that post and say now: I have, in fact, been thrilled with my president: President George W. Bush. A very good man, a very strong leader, and a very humble individual who led my country for eight years through some very difficult times. And, I sincerely hope that I will be able to say the same for President Elect Barack Obama.