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The Push for mass Doublethink: "Bush
targets tyranny"
Comment: Why is it that for EVERYTHING he says, he does the exact opposite, its more than simple lies, it's an encouragement towards mass Orwellian Doublethink.
WASHINGTON - President Bush will take new aim at tyranny
across the globe in next week's State of the Union Address - bolstering
his inaugural pitch that America must expand freedom and democracy abroad
to stay safe at home.
``It will be a speech that continues to talk about freedom,'' Bush said
in a wide-ranging 45-minute Oval Office interview with Herald editors yesterday,
one of his first such sessions since being sworn in to a second term last
week. ``In order to lead, you gotta know where you are going. These two
speeches will make it very clear I know where I'm going - and I think the
people will come.''
Appearing relaxed in a beige-and-blue striped cloth armchair before a crackling
fire in a stately white marble fireplace, a reflective Bush also spoke expansively
about his presidential legacy.
``I would hope people would say the world is more peaceful,'' said Bush,
flanked by sculpted busts of Winston Churchill and Abraham Lincoln. ``I
truly believe the world is going to become more free and more democratic
- and therefore more peaceful.''
The former Texas governor steadfastly took the long view as he brushed off
his Iraq war critics, saying history and not the headlines of the day would
be the final judge of his presidency.
With a wry smile, Bush said he found it ``ironic'' that one of his best
friends among world leaders is Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi.
``Yet, it was, what, 60 years ago that my dad was a young fighter bomber
at war with this enemy,'' said Bush. ``And because we believed in democracy
and freedom, the Japanese have now become free. It is one of the great lessons
of history about the effect of freedom on societies.''
If then-President Harry Truman had tried to tell reporters during World
War II that Japan would later become one of America's great allies, Bush
opined: ``Everybody would look at the guy and say, `Forget it.' But that's
in fact what happened.''
The president predicted history could repeat itself in Iraq, Afghanistan
and elsewhere where the seeds of democracy are nurtured and protected by
free nations.
``That hopefully will be one of the legacies,'' he mused. ``Somebody will
be sitting around saying, `Ole George W stood the line. He truly believed
that a free society would grow up in a peaceful world. ''
Bush also offered a correction for those who saw his inaugural address last
week as a dramatic shift to a more aggressive and militaristic U.S. foreign
policy.
``The speech laid out a strategy as to how the United States will work with
others to end tyranny in the world,'' the president said. ``The speech wasn't,
`Anybody who's not free, here we come.' '' Military might is only part of
the equation, he added.
``The military is always the last resort for the commander in chief,'' said
Bush.
In a wide-ranging discussion with Herald publisher and president Patrick
J. Purcell and the newspaper's editorial board, Bush also:
Praised former Democratic presidential rival Sen. John F. Kerry [related,
bio], whom he hasn't spoken to since Kerry conceded Nov. 3: ``He waged a
tough campaign. I was hoping coming down the stretch he would tire, lose
his composure, but he didn't. He was a very strong candidate.''
Said he worries some Americans might become too complacent about terrorism
as 9/11 memories fade: ``I knew there would be a natural tendency for people
to kind of settle in and forget the moment. And that's natural. No one wants
to relive that kind of horrific day on a regular basis. I know that would
be my duty to remind people of the nature of this war we're in.''
Stressed that free elections in Afghanistan were the first in 5,000 years
there: ``That's an extraordinary achievement for the Afghan people. And
that matters.''
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