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Why Bush Won't Fade in Memory 100 Years from Now

From the Concord Monitor (Oct. 8, 2004):

[http://www.concordmonitor.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20041008/REPOSITORY/410080336/1017]

For all these weeks and months, we have looked at George W. Bush through the lens of a microscope, which shows us a president's scar tissues, exaggerates his flaws and attributes, enlarges the small characteristics that otherwise escape the eye. It might be healthy, about four weeks from the election, to look at the president through a telescope, which tells us what stands out about a political figure from afar.

For through the telescope a remarkable thing becomes clear: While so many of his 20th-century predecessors can easily be described as transitional presidents -- a phrase that, because it has the tendency to diminish a president's importance in history, was a special irritant to Bush's father -- it is apparent that Bush may not be a transitional president at all. There are many reasons to think that Bush will stand out in history for having forged a dramatic departure in the presidency.

Through the microscope -- and in our memory -- the presidents of the past half-century have been distinct individuals: One is remembered for his golf and, by revisionists, his guile (Eisenhower), and another for his rhetoric and vision (Kennedy); one for the splendor of his domestic dreams and for the sadness of his foreign-policy tragedy (Johnson); one for the brilliance of his mind and the commonness of his character (Nixon); another for his good-hearted effort to bring good and heart back to the White House (Ford).

Still others are remembered for idealism and inflation (Carter), for clarity and common sense (Reagan), for deftness and prudence (the first President Bush) and for cleverness and charm (Clinton).

But speed ahead a half-century or more, and the great- grandchildren of George W. Bush and Sen. John Kerry may regard the presidents of our time the way we look at the presidents of the late 19th century, as a long gray line of men who fade into each other in their minds and in their textbooks, no more distinct to them than Chester A. Arthur and Grover Cleveland are to us.


Indeed, regarded that way -- through the telescope -- the presidents of the postwar era responded to crises and viewed the world and America's role in it much the same way their successors did.
George Bush's world

George W. Bush is different. And the proof of it is that both his supporters, who heartily endorse the Bush departure, and Kerry's supporters, who deplore it, agree that Bush has a worldview far different from that of any of his predecessors.

Through the telescope, all the postwar presidents faced the same challenge: the containment of menacing nation-states. Their administrations were about struggles over whether and when to project force against the threats posed by the dictatorial and the demented.

Bush sees the world differently, not as a struggle among nations but as a competition among civilizations. Other presidents -- Kennedy and Reagan especially, who in history will look more and more alike, and whose rhetoric about paying any price to defeat an evil empire will merge into a giant continuum -- wanted to preserve the world order, not to transform it. They were constrained by the reluctance, not the willingness, to court confrontation....