A
report on what real people think about Bush
Maia Cowa, p. 9
August 14, 2001
ANECDOTAL EVIDENCE: REAL PEOPLE KNOW THE TRUTH ABOUT BUSH
by Maia Cowan - Failure
Is Impossible
I just had a new front door installed. My chat with the contractor
who did the installation work is "only" anecdotal evidence from a
sample of one, but it brightened my day to hear an average working
guy's spontaneous (well, almost spontaneous) opinion of George W.
Bush and related matters.
When he brought the paperwork
over for me to sign and saw I was on the Internet, he commented about
how easy it is just to live on it, and talked about how you could
probably spend your whole life on it.
I could not resist the
opening he offered me. "And it's hard to remember there was a time
we didn't have it."
He fell right into my trap.
"It started out as just for the government."
"Yes," I replied, "and
never mind all those false reports that Al Gore said he invented it,
and that his claim wasn't true -- he really was responsible for making
it available for civilians."
He was already onto me,
having been in my garage. "I saw your bumper sticker. I voted for
him, too. And now I think of all the suckers who supported Bush who
are saying, 'Did we ever make a mistake.'
So we talked a bit about
the economy going into the tank, and how it was Bush's fault. The
contractor's in a position to know -- buying new front doors is something
people only do when they've got extra money, and his business has
gone from work scheduled for the next four weeks to work scheduled
for the next three days.
"And where's Bush? Playing
golf. When you're in charge and things are going wrong, you're supposed
to be on the job trying to do something about it, not out playing
golf."
So I told him about the
phony photo op with the Habitat for Humanity house, and how the neighbors
weren't allowed to leave their houses while Bush was there; and about
the "First Amendment Zones" and the Tampa 3.
He also said, "For all
the trouble around Clinton's sex life, he sure ran the country right.
The economy just kept getting better and better. And now it's going
downhill again."
And then he said -- I swear
I didn't prompt him -- "And now they're spending all that money investigating
that congressman out in California, what's his name? She's a missing
girl, and I really feel for her parents, but the only reason they're
having such a big investigation into it is because he's a Democrat.
What about the hundreds and hundreds of missing children? Why don't
they look for those children instead of spending all that effort on
one grown woman?"
So I told him about Lori
Klausutis having been found dead in a Republican Congressman's office.
Of course he hadn't heard anything about her, and he readily agreed
that the reason there wasn't a big investigation and headlines every
day and hours of talk on TV about that case is that Joe Scarborough
isn't a Democrat.
As he was leaving, I told
him how the whole Whitewater thing got started because David Hale,
a known perjurer who was looking at a stiff jail term for cheating
his clients, offered to hand the prosecutors Clinton's head on a platter
if they went easy on him; and the prosecutors accepted everything
Hale said without caring whether it was really true or not. He had
no trouble believing that, either.
I'm hoping he passes on
even just a small part of what I casually brought up in our
conversation. We don't have the news media on our side, but I'm seeing
more and more evidence that the news media don't have the Real People
on their side.