Richard Cheney, the 46th vice-president of the USA, is about to release his memoirs next week titled, "In My Time: A Personal and Political Memoir.
According to a CBS News/New York Times poll conducted when Dick Cheney left office in January 2009 his approval ratings (13%) were less than that of George W. Bush's (22%). At their departure both men received historic disapproval ratings and continue to be considered by the majority of Americans as having failed to improve America. The Bush presidency is highlighted by some of the following:
- advancing the unconstitutional notion of a unitary presidency
- repeated and consistent withdrawal from international treaties and agreements
- pushing through the civil rights destroying PATRIOT act
- massive and illegal wiretapping and spying on American citizens
- using torture upon seized enemy combatants and prisoners of war
- the failure to prevent the 9-11 attack on New York City and the Pentagon
- failing to adequately neutralize Osama Bin Laden and Al Qaeda's terrorist network
- pursuing the Iraq war under bogus pretenses and then failing to contain the regional civil war
- the abandonment of New Orleans and its citizens after Hurricane Katrina
- allowing the housing bubble to expand and eventually cause the financial collapse of 2008
- promoting corporate-written legislation that bolstered special interest profits
- promoting a laissez-faire regulatory framework that allowed corporate crime to exponentially grow throughout his two terms
- advancing the interests of oil and gas companies and rejecting sustainable and renewable forms of energy production
- denying climate change was occurring
- doubling the national public debt
- cut taxes for the richest Americans, while expanding the deficit
- cut national science and engineering budgets to pay for his wars and tax cuts
- limited scientific investigations on subjects deemed controversial for religious supporters, such as stem cell studies and environmental assessment studies
- preventing any international agreement that would prevent rises in global warming gases, which in the end may possibly be his greatest failure if even conservative predictions about climate change prove true
Cheney undoubtedly represented the very worst elements of the Bush administration. Although Bush's approval didn't collapse until after Katrina, Cheney's approval amongst most Americans was in the gutter early into his first term. His approval was constantly in the twenty-percent area and never improved. He represented to his base an unapologetic statist who wanted to project American hegemony to its fullest level. Cheney famously stated that "deficits don't matter!" He was responsible for pursuing an energy policy that promoted America's addiction to foreign fossil fuels. And as former Secretary of Defense, he was very familiar with the nature of the Pentagon machinery and sought to project America's military power domestically and across foreign shores.
To the rest of America, Cheney represented a Machiavellian operator. With his over-the-top rhetoric, war making bravado, riddiculous claims that 3rd world nations with 2nd rate militaries were a threat to America, and his continuous scowl, the public turned on this crypto-fascist.
Reviews of Cheney's memoirs indicate a man who controlled both the president and policies of the Bush presidency in it early years. During the infamous 9-11 attack, Cheney states, despite clear lines of command set forth in the constitution, that it was him and neither Bush nor Rumsfeld who was in command of immediate operations. At that moment in history, Cheney made it clear that the president of the United States had been unofficially deposed and that he had assumed all the controls of commander-in-chief.
The NY Times review of the book further highlights a man who is completely unrepentant of his actions. The Times describes the book as being
often pugnacious in tone and in which he expresses little regret about many of the most controversial decisions of the Bush administration — casts him as something of an outlier among top advisers who increasingly took what he saw as a misguided course on national security issues.So it is clear that as Cheney's policy failures mounted, George W. Bush and others in the Bush administration became progressively unwilling to accept Cheney's worldview and provocations. In the end, the rift was so great that Bush himself was unwilling to even grant full pardon to Cheney's Chief of Staff I. Lewis Libby for his acts of lying to prosecutors in order to protect Mr. Cheney.
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