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  <updated>2008-08-19T15:42:48-04:00</updated>
  <entry>
    <title>Andrew Bacevich on Bill Moyers: Every sentence a gem</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.correntewire.com/andrew_bacevich_on_bill_moyers_every_sentence_a_gem" />
    <id>http://www.correntewire.com/andrew_bacevich_on_bill_moyers_every_sentence_a_gem</id>
    <published>2008-08-19T09:45:05-04:00</published>
    <updated>2008-08-19T15:42:48-04:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>lambert</name>
    </author>
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[ <p>Via  Libby<a href="/glossary/term/119" title="Verb. 1. To lie for the purpose of convincing a large number of persons to adopt some policy that was bad for them. Usage example: &quot;The mole libbied the public on behalf of a foreign power.&quot; 2. To launch a vindictive smear. &quot;To retaliate for the critical review of the film, the director had the newspaper libbied.&quot; Suggested by Juan Cole." class="glossary-icon"><img src="/sites/all/modules/glossary/glossary.gif" /></a><a href="/glossary/term/119" title=" &quot;The mole libbied the public on behalf of a foreign power.&quot; 2. To launch a vindictive smear. &quot;To retaliate for the critical review of the film, the director had the newspaper libbied.&quot; Suggested by Juan Cole." class="glossary-icon"><img src="/sites/all/modules/glossary/glossary.gif" /></a> Spencer at <a href="http://the-reaction.blogspot.com/2008/08/consumerism-is-killing-us.html">The Reaction</a>,  <a href="http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/08152008/transcript1.html">the Moyers/Bacevich transcript</a>. Here's an extended excerpt, but go read the whole thing:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>ANDREW BACEVICH: Our foreign policy is not something simply concocted by people in Washington D.C. and imposed on us. Our foreign policy is something that is concocted in Washington D.C., but it reflects the perceptions of our political elite about what we want, we the people want. And what we want, by and large - I mean, one could point to many individual exceptions - but, what we want, by and large is, we want this continuing flow of very cheap consumer goods.</p>
<p>We want to be able to pump gas into our cars regardless of how big they may happen to be, in order to be able to drive wherever we want to be able to drive. And we want to be able to do these things without having to think about whether or not the book's balanced at the end of the month, or the end of the fiscal year. And therefore, we want this unending line of credit.</p>
<p>BILL MOYERS: You intrigued me when you wrote that "The fundamental problem facing the country will remain stubbornly in place no matter who is elected in November." What's the fundamental problem you say is not going away no matter whether it's McCain or Obama?</p>
<p>ANDREW BACEVICH: What neither of these candidates will be able to, I think, accomplish is to persuade us to look ourselves in the mirror, to see the direction in which we are headed. And from my point of view, it's a direction towards ever greater debt and dependency.</p>
<p>BILL MOYERS: And you write that "What will not go away, is a yawning disparity between what Americans expect, and what they're willing or able to pay." Explore that a little bit.</p>
<p>ANDREW BACEVICH: Well, I think one of the ways we avoid confronting our refusal to balance the books is to rely increasingly on the projection of American military power around the world to try to maintain this dysfunctional system, or set of arrangements that have evolved over the last 30 or 40 years.</p>
<p>BILL MOYERS: You, in fact, say that, instead of a bigger army, we need a smaller more modest foreign policy. One that assigns soldiers missions that are consistent with their capability. "Modesty," I'm quoting you, "requires giving up on the illusions of grandeur to which the end of the Cold War and then 9/11 gave rise. It also means reining in the imperial presidents who expect the army to make good on those illusions." Do you expect either John McCain or Barack Obama to rein in the "imperial presidency?"</p>
<p>ANDREW BACEVICH: No. I mean, people run for the presidency in order to become imperial presidents. The people who are advising these candidates, the people who aspire to be the next national security advisor, the next secretary of defense, these are people who yearn to exercise those kind of great powers.</p>
<p>They're not running to see if they can make the Pentagon smaller. They're not. So when I - as a distant observer of politics - one of the things that both puzzles me and I think troubles me is the 24/7 coverage of the campaign.</p>
<p>Parsing<a href="/glossary/term/131" title="1. What a Republican does with words, to evade detection or indictment. 2. To decode a Republican lie, or other emanation of the VRWC." class="glossary-icon"><img src="/sites/all/modules/glossary/glossary.gif" /></a><a href="/glossary/term/131" title="1. What a Republican does with words, to evade detection or indictment. 2. To decode a Republican lie, or other emanation of the VRWC." class="glossary-icon"><img src="/sites/all/modules/glossary/glossary.gif" /></a> every word, every phrase, that either Senator Obama or Senator McCain utters, as if what they say is going to reveal some profound and important change that was going to come about if they happened to be elected. It's not going to happen.</p>
<p>BILL MOYERS: It's not going to happen because?</p>
<p>ANDREW BACEVICH: Not going to happen - it's not going to happen because the elements of continuity outweigh the elements of change. And it's not going to happen because, ultimately, <b>we the American people, refuse to look in that mirror. And to see the extent to which the problems that we face really lie within.</b></p>
<p>We refuse to live within our means. We continue to think that the problems that beset the country are out there beyond our borders. And that if we deploy sufficient amount of American power we can fix those problems, and therefore things back here will continue as they have for decades.</p>
<p>BILL MOYERS: I was in the White House, back in the early 60s, and I've been a White House watcher ever since. And I have never come across a more distilled essence of the evolution of the presidency than in just one paragraph in your book.</p>
<p>You say, "Beginning with the election of John F. Kennedy in 1960, "the occupant of the White House has become a combination of demigod, father figure and, inevitably, the betrayer of inflated hopes. Pope. Pop star. Scold. Scapegoat. Crisis manager. Commander in Chief. Agenda settler. Moral philosopher. Interpreter of the nation's charisma. Object of veneration. And the butt of jokes. All rolled into one." I would say you nailed the modern presidency.</p>
<p>ANDREW BACEVICH: Well, and the - I think the troubling part is, because of this preoccupation with, fascination with, the presidency, the President has become what we have instead of genuine politics. Instead of genuine democracy.</p>
<p>We look to the President, to the next President. You know, we know that the current President's a failure and a disappoint - we look to the next President to fix things. And, of course, as long as we have this expectation that the next President is going to fix things then, of course, that lifts all responsibility from me to fix things.</p>
<p>One of the real problems with the imperial presidency, I think, is that it has hollowed out our politics. And, in many respects, has made our democracy a false one. We're going through the motions of a democratic political system. But the fabric of democracy, I think, really has worn very thin.
</p>
</p></blockquote>
<p>Yeppers.</p>
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