Tonight could have been different. Tonight - of all nights -
should have been different. Tonight was, after all, a night falling exactly five years after one of the worst days in American history. A day whose commemoration five years on should have been anything but political.
But it was. For tonight, as he has so many times before, President Bush again did what he does best -
squander goodwill and
blow important opportunities. He took an opportunity to unite Americans as they haven't been since that terrible day five years ago and purposely wasted it, turning another in along line of once-in-a-lifetime opportunities into yet another trip into the partisan gutter, a low-down destination both he and his party know so well. As has become a far-too-frequent occurrence, this president again came across as a small man, an unqualified man, a man unworthy of the position he was so carelessly first handed five years and eight months ago.
How shameful that this president would again turn tragedy into opportunity. Then, he used it to shift our national gaze from those who
actually attacked us on September 11 to those whom
he wanted to attack. Now, he used it to shift our national gaze from those feelings we all felt on and after September 11 to those both he and his party used to tear us apart in the days thereafter. Tonight, instead of leaving his mark on the office by delivering a speech for the ages, this president and his arrogant handlers - the ones
to whom our pain is their gain - decided to pat themselves on the back for doing a heck of a job keeping us safe. Safer to them, yes, but not yet safe enough to even
consider leaving Americans' health and well-being to, of all people, the Democrats. His unnamed opposition tonight, therefore,
wasn't al Qaeda, which, since attacking us then, has gained an ominous foothold in Iraq. No, it wasn't even Osama bin Laden, the still-at-large terrorist mastermind.
It was the Democratic Party. Or, more broadly, those with the utter temerity to not be afraid of their own shadows, to not accept without question the last word as delivered by this administration, to not view dissent with as much disdain as does the ruling party.
There's something
criminally incompetent - no, criminally negligent - about the short shrift this president seems willing to give the task at hand. When he had the opportunity to once and for all eliminate bin Laden, this president instead sought out war with Iraq. When he had the opportunity to show leadership in the early moments of Hurricane Katrina, this president instead
sought to praise an already failing political process in Iraq. And again tonight, when he had the opportunity to pay thoughtful tribute to the memory of those who died five years ago today, this president instead sought to draw connections between the attacks that affected all of us and the preemptive war that now affects his party's chances at the ballot box. The first time, the president's negligence dishonored those who died on September 11. This time, the president's negligence again dishonors those about whom tonight should have been. And instead of healing the wounds opened here five years ago today, this president tonight reaffirmed his belief that
opening wounds elsewhere throughout the Middle East is a sound enough substitute for properly honoring those who died on that September day.
"America did not ask for this war," the president
said, "and every American wishes it were over." No, Mr. President, America
didn't ask to get attacked on September 11. Nor did her citizens ask you to turn our collective desire to see those responsible for those attacks held to account into the misguided desire by those sharing your misguided ideology to carry out a
costly war of choice in Iraq, a nation
shown again and again to not have any ties with those who planned or carried out the initial attacks. No, Mr. President, we did not ask for this war. We won't, however, thanks to your administration's wrong-headed post-September 11 behavior, have the luxury of asking "Why?" when the
next attack reaches our shores. You've already given our enemies, those you've often likened to the most tyrannical despots our world has ever seen, all the reason they'll need. Not only due to your
continued depiction of this conflict as a war between the Americans who defend freedom and the Muslims who despise it, but due also to your
failure to look after your own people when they needed you most last fall.
By doing what he did tonight - making an overtly political speech on a day when only the complete opposite was appropriate - this president further shed light upon the hypocrisy that permeates his
morally and intellectually confused administration. The same president who repeatedly trumpets the supposed spread of freedom
there doesn't seem to share the same pride in democracy
here. What good, after all, is our unique brand of freedom if we as Americans aren't allowed its trappings? When a president can turn a somber, soul-searching occasion into an opportunity to exact political revenge on an opposition whose views are
now held by a majority of Americans, our society has not progressed one bit from where it was five years ago. When what happened tonight becomes second nature, we at once forget history and doom ourselves to repeating it. And when a political party can rhetorically render indistinguishable its enemies from its critics, the mirage of our freedom disappears.
Tonight, as he had shortly after the
first September 11, this president had the opportunity to bring America together, to see that her so bitterly divided factions work together to heal our wounds and bring about a better tomorrow. Yet now, as in the weeks, months and years after that tragic day, this president squandered that opportunity, instead turning tragedy into political opportunity, shamefully marketing his presidency as the only thing standing between the America we love and unthinkable disaster, his party the sole stewards of our very existence. The president has been right all along; there
is a threat to our American way of life, our freedom. Now, however, it comes less from the enemy without than it does the enemy within. "They," the president said tonight describing our so-called enemies, represent a "totalitarian ideology that hates freedom, rejects tolerance, and despises all dissent." For a brief second, as my gaze shifted away from the television, I had a hard time discerning which regime - theirs or ours - he was talking about.