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With clear power centers and interconnections between them. Paul "Maud Dibs" vision of those connections, and of his own nearing towards a major leverage point was interesting and, as you say, a merging between tech, politics and religion.
But I see different connection than you seem to suggest. While Maud Dib did use the religion factor in his favor, his power in that realm was, in the end, not a false claim. In addition to those mystical abilities was a keen understanding of the political realities of his universe, which allowed him to use his peoples resources to their best advantage. And he starts his true journey as a political underdog, albeit one with an aristocratic foundation.
Your analogy seems to suggest placing Bush in Pauls role. He doesn't fit. His actions do not follow the convictions of his religion. He appears to have a gravely disfunctional view of this universe, and he is wasting his peoples resources like non other before. And while he does have an aristocratic background, you'd be hard pressed to say he's an underdog.
Academically, I'd say a far better fit for Paul Atriedes today would be Osama. He is an underdog from an aristoratic family. He resides in, and is tied to, people who inhabit the lands from which the resource of ultimate power (oil) comes from, and he too is wrapped in that peoples religious cloth. (Legitimately or not.) He's kind of a desert nomad to boot.
I do love America. Which makes it hard for me to say that this Administration has really fit us to the role of House Harkonnen. But that's my view.
To me, Bush fits in as Beast Rabban, who was put into power by Baron Harkonnen (Dick Cheney, the real power player in my opinion.) But, as did Rabban, Bush has made a mess of everything he's controlled. Rumsfeld is a bit old for Feyd-Ruatha, but I'll put him there as the militant enforcer. And I see Rove making an excellent Piter De Vries.
Hey, this also works! Joseph Wilson fits in nicely as Liet-Kynes, the screwed over Imperial Planetologist assigned to Arrakis.
Do I say all this to claim that America is doomed, as was House Harkonnen? No. "Dune," although entertaining, is just a work of fiction. As such, it can maybe be used to gleen insight into our view of our own world. But we shouldn't take it so far as to consider it prophecy.
Just my .02
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