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torresD
 
Default "Israelization of American foreign policy."


Both Southern Protestant fundamentalists
and Jewish neoconservatives view themselves
as embattled minorities within their own ethnic groups,
while the fierce religiosity of Anglo-Celtic Texans,
traceable to Ulster and Scotland, provides an
opportunity for neoconservatives to complete
their plan for the "Israelization of American foreign policy."
http://www.nypress.com/16/28/books/books.cfm

Lone Star Nation State
What is the "Texas Model" and why should we care?
Made in Texas: George W. Bush and the Southern Takeover of American Politics
By Michael Lind
New America Books/Basic, 201 pages, $24.00

Bush's Brain: How Karl Rove Made George W. Bush Presidential
By James Moore and Wayne Slater
Wiley, 395 pages, $27.95

Boy Genius: Karl Rove, The Brains Behind the Remarkable Political Triumph of
George W. Bush
By Lou Dubose, Jan Reid, and Carl M. Cannon
PublicAffairs, 253 pages, $15.00

Should Texas be seen as the
southern part of the Great Plains,
or the western edge of the Deep South?

The contrast between the LBJ and GWB
ranches tells us all we need to know about
this crucial distinction.

Johnson's ranch,
west of Austin on the Pedernales River,
was in a region inhabited by people of
German, Czech and Scandinavian descent.

These folks tended to be Unionist,
liberal and anti-slavery, trying to preserve
a vibrant pluralist tradition in the heart of Texas.

Bush's Crawford ranch, near Waco,
is located in a region with predominantly
Anglo-Celtic stock, people who have
tended to be violent, militaristic and
disdainful of hard labor and intellectual
achievement.

Over the last 30 years, the latter model has
assumed nearly complete political ascendancy
in Texas, and since 2001 has, for the first time,
succeeded in translating its peculiar religious,
militarist and economic compulsions into
national and international policy.

If Bush is a feudalist of a certain kind,
Michael Lind offers invaluable help in
situating him as a partisan of
Southernomics in Made in Texas.

In a nutshell,
Southernomics believes
in anti-unionist, low-wage,
low-service crony capitalism based on
primitive extraction rather than technologically
efficient production.

Current proposals for guest worker programs
that deprive immigrants of civil rights are the
embodiment of the school.

When it comes to foreign policy,
Lind describes Bush's militarism as a

"Frankensteinian operation" joining
"the bodiless head of Northeastern
neoconservatism onto the headless
body of Southern fundamentalism."

Both Southern Protestant fundamentalists
and Jewish neoconservatives view themselves
as embattled minorities within their own ethnic groups,
while the fierce religiosity of Anglo-Celtic Texans,
traceable to Ulster and Scotland, provides an
opportunity for neoconservatives to complete
their plan for the "Israelization of American foreign policy."

Lind boldly concludes that Bush's conservative
imperialism has "no precedents in U.S. foreign policy"
but resembles most closely "nineteenth-century British imperialism."

It was thus no coincidence that 19th-century
British imperialists found allies among the
Southern planter class, content to have the
United States remain the agricultural resource
colony of the British empire.

The economic nationalist tradition of Hamilton,
Clay and Lincoln is in opposition to this tradition.

This, says Lind, is how we should understand
the current unilateralist, laissez-faire, free-trade
model espoused by the Southern-dominated
American right, in flat repudiation of the post-
1945 internationalist world order.

Lind doesn't mince words in raising the alarm:

"For the sake of America as well as the world,
it is important that the proponents of this bizarre
strategy be quickly removed from power along
with George W. Bush by America's voters."

Otherwise, the devout Protestant Southern militarists
will lead America down the same self-destructive
path that the "British imperial officer corps,
the Prussian Junkers, and the Japanese samurai"
led their respective countries in earlier generations.

The structural dimensions of the
Southern takeover are only half the story.

How does a model so at odds with the
instincts of the majority of the American people,
certainly those in the coastal conurbations,
become political reality?

For that, we must turn to the personalities of
Bush and his backers, and none is more
important than his key political adviser
Karl Christian Rove.

One disconcerting fact that emerges
from two recent books on the subject-
Boy Genius by Lou Dubose et. al.,
and Bush's Brain by James Moore and Wayne Slater-
is the length of time Rove had Bush in his sights
as his ultimate political prize.

In 1990, Bush was seriously considering
making a run for governor of Texas,
but was dissuaded by the elder Bush's
White House for fear that the son's
candidacy might become a referendum
on the father's presidency.

It is to Rove's credit that he disciplined Bush
enough around certain resonating themes-
social promotion in education, juvenile crime,
welfare reform and tort reform-
that he defeated a seemingly invincible
Ann Richards in his 1994 run for the governor's office.

In both books, Rove comes across as the
man with the plan, a plan so detailed and
precise that he never deviated an inch from it,
beginning from his days in the Nixon era as
a college Republican specializing in dirty tricks.

In this, Rove was 30 years ahead of his time.

More than any single individual, he transformed
Texas from a Democratic state to a Republican state.

Beginning with his victory with Governor Bill Clements in 1978,
he recruited other stars like Phil Gramm (whom he convinced
to switch from the Democratic party), Kay Bailey Hutchison,
Rick Perry and of course, his star pupil, Bush himself.

In Bush's Brain, one Democrat claims
after the 2002 election that Rove is

"single-handedly dismantling the Democratic party."

Boy Genius notes that even as a hyper-competitive
high-school debater and college political operative
in the Nixonian mold, friends noticed a lack of
emotion or soul in him.

That characteristic marks the actual route
through which the premodern policies of the
Bush administration have become political fact,
steamrolling all opposition in the process.

The Rove that emerges from the
two books is a chilling figure.

In Bush's Brain, one of Rove's political victims
says we should be worried about the extent of
this man's influence in the making of domestic
and foreign policy.

Quite possibly, both books suggest,
Rove is not only kingmaker, but king himself.

Dubose, Reid and Cannon's Boy Genius does
a rather superficial job of recounting the various
underhanded tactics that are Rove's trademarks.

Moore and Slater's narrative is more petrifying
because it is more detailed and based on
extensive personal interviews with Rove's
victims and allies alike, while Boy Genius
seems too indebted to Dubose's earlier
primer on Bush, Shrub (2000),
co-written with Molly Ivins.

But both books do examine the history of Rove's dirty tricks.

Rove all but admitted to being allied to an FBI agent
named Greg Rampton, who was repeatedly involved
in pursuing Rove opponents in Texas, in particular
bringing about the downfall of popular Agriculture
Commissioner Jim Hightower and his staff.

On the eve of a 1986 debate between incumbent
Democratic governor Mark White and Rove's
embattled client Bill Clements,

Rove called a press conference to announce
the discovery of a bug in his office, implying
that it had been planted by the White campaign
(by all accounts, Rove himself seems to have planted the bug).

Rove exposed emerging Democratic star
Lena Guerrero, Railroad Commissioner under
Governor Ann Richards, for lying about having
finished college, destroying her career.

Roveian rumors about Richards' lesbianism
hurt her during her 1994 campaign.

When Tom Pauken, the Texas Republican party chair,
crossed Rove by criticizing Governor Bush's policies,
Rove persecuted him until his career was effectively over.

In the end, despite their persuasiveness,
both books remain star-struck by Rove's legacy.

They both enshrine Rove as the single most
important political operator in American history.

But without the appeal of Southernomics,
and its allied feudal-religious culture,
in Texas and the rest of the South and West,
Rove's dream would have remained just that.

He would still be a man ahead of,
or out of touch with, his time.

Had it not been for the 2000 election,
would we now be talking of Rove as a genius,
or as someone too smart by half who got
outmaneuvered by Al Gore's middle-of-the-road policies?

Before September 11, Rove's premier candidate was
on his way to becoming the most quickly failing president
in modern times, and barring the attacks, there would
have been no scope for Rove's strategic calculations
on steel tariffs, farm subsidies or Homeland Security
during the 2002 elections.

Rove looks like a genius, and probably is,
but the bigger story is the economic and
cultural transformation that his brand of
political calculation has allowed to succeed.

That's where Lind comes in, explaining the
substance of the Texas-Confederate model.

In the Bush-Rove alliance,
substance and form perfectly, radically intertwine.

Volume 16, Issue 28










 
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