President Bush sounded just like a liberal.
Yes, you read that right. Bush. Liberal. Same sentence.
At the new U.S. embassy in Beijing on the opening day of the
Olympics, he said, �All people should have the freedom to say what they think.�
Without even blinking, he also told the world, while directing his comments at
the Chinese, �We strongly believe societies which allow the free expression of
ideas tend to be the most prosperous and the most peaceful.�
The day before, in Tibet, he boldly said, �America stands in
firm opposition to China�s detention of political dissidents and human rights
advocates and religious activists.� He said he was speaking out �for a free
press, freedom of assembly, and labor rights, not to antagonize China�s leaders
but because trusting its people with greater freedom is the only way for China
to develop its full potential.�
There was only one problem with the president�s comments.
His actions the past seven years have proven he doesn�t believe what his speech
writers told him to say.
In Charleston, W. Va., at a Bush speech on July 4, 2004,
non-violent protestors were handcuffed and arrested.
In Pittsburgh, a retired steelworker was arrested for
carrying a sign. In Michigan, it was a student. In Hamilton, N.J., it was the
mother of a soldier killed in Iraq who asked the wrong question of Laura Bush.
Almost 2,000 peaceful protestors at the 2004 Republican
convention in New York City were arrested and subjected to what can only be
called �primitive� prison conditions for several days -- until the courts threw
out almost all of the arrest warrants.
As Texas governor, Bush had ordered peaceful protesters away
from the governor�s mansion. As president, he directed there be zones as much
as a half-mile from any presidential cavalcade or speech for anyone protesting
his policies. For those who refuse to enter into these remote and generally
obscure �free-speech zones, police arrest them for trespassing or disorderly
conduct, and then detain them until the president or vice-president is out of
the area and the media leave.
When challenged, law enforcement officials claim the
separation is for security reasons. Persons carrying pro-administration signs
are allowed to be in the line of sight of the president and vice-president.
Anyone wishing to harm the president needs only to carry a sign praising the
president or not to carry one at all. By creating a protest zone hundreds of
yards away, the Bush�Cheney administration�s actions are designed not so much
to protect the president as to give the political illusion of the president�s
�popularity.� The media, especially the television media, focus upon the
president and crowds that are carefully selected and deftly manipulated to show
enthusiastic support of Bush and his policies. Because they believe the �story�
is with the president, they usually ignore dissenters, especially if they�re
away from the president. It gives a false picture, yet is politically clever.
Under the USAPATRIOT Act, Americans� rights of privacy,
including their reading habits, could be scrutinized by the FBI. Protestors -- even
peaceful ones -- can be charged with terrorism. Dissenters are often denied the
right to fly on commercial airlines. In Bush�s crosshairs have been Greenpeace
and the Quakers. Like China�s leaders, America�s leaders say these restrictive
measures only exist to protect the nation.
Americans are right to condemn China for its totalitarian
suppression of dissent, the manipulation of free expression, and for building
three �Protest Pens� in Beijing to keep protestors away from an international
sporting event. Americans should also have condemned the �protest pens� at the
Salt Lake City Olympics in 2002. More important, Americans should have spent
the past seven years condemning the Bush�Cheney administration for systematic
violations of six constitutional amendments, including the First Amendment
guarantees of free expression.
Walter
Brasch is professor of journalism at Bloomsburg University and president of the
Pennsylvania Press Club. He is senior author of the critically-acclaimed �The
Press and the State,� and author of ��Unacceptable�: The Federal Response to
Hurricane Katrina� (January 2006) and �Sinking the Ship of State: The
Presidency of George W. Bush� (November 2007), available through amazon.com. You
may contact Brasch at brasch@bloomu.edu
or through his website at: www.walterbrasch.com.