George W. Bush to "write" biography of George H. W. Bush

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George W. Bush to "write" biography of George H. W. Bush

Postby RocketMan » Thu Jul 31, 2014 8:40 am

Ooookay, this could be interesting, in a perverse sort of way. This is clearly an attempt at history management.

http://crownpublishing.com/news/preside ... 9o0rL7yVaQ

George W. Bush, the 43rd President of the United States, has authored a personal biography of his father, George H. W. Bush, the 41st President. The currently untitled book will be released in the U.S. and Canada by Crown Publishers on November 11, 2014, in print and digital formats. Random House Audio will simultaneously issue an audio edition. The hardcover edition has an announced first printing of one million copies.

[...]

A unique and intimate biography, the book covers the entire scope of the elder President Bush’s life and career, including his service in the Pacific during World War II, his pioneering work in the Texas oil business, and his political rise as a Congressman, U.S. Representative to China and the United Nations, CIA Director, Vice President, and President.
Last edited by RocketMan on Thu Jul 31, 2014 12:08 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: George W. Bush to write biography of George H. W. Bush

Postby 82_28 » Thu Jul 31, 2014 9:03 am

I'm beginning to think I don't get anything anymore. That guy couldn't write his way out of a christian monthly devotional. It will be interesting to see the press and narrative on this. Just another mystery.
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Re: George W. Bush to write biography of George H. W. Bush

Postby RocketMan » Thu Jul 31, 2014 9:34 am

82_28 » Thu Jul 31, 2014 4:03 pm wrote:I'm beginning to think I don't get anything anymore. That guy couldn't write his way out of a christian monthly devotional. It will be interesting to see the press and narrative on this. Just another mystery.


Yep, I guess they're just so flagrant about it, it's tough to cotton on. Remember his love for Camus's L'étranger and his reading competition with Cheney? I bet the only thing Cheney reads is De Sade, with maybe a dash of Alfred Rosenberg thrown into the mix.
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Re: George W. Bush to write biography of George H. W. Bush

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Thu Jul 31, 2014 10:31 am

So....David Frum or Michael Gerson?
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Re: George W. Bush to write biography of George H. W. Bush

Postby semper occultus » Thu Jul 31, 2014 10:43 am

^

....I'm sure more than one person'll buy it...
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Re: George W. Bush to write biography of George H. W. Bush

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Thu Jul 31, 2014 10:47 am

I'm wondering who wrote it, actually.

The convervative publishing network is exactly like the liberal one: sales are built-in and guaranteed in bulk. This book will do incredibly well, especially during Christmas.

Might be of interest: http://www.forbes.com/sites/jeffbercovi ... lers-list/
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Re: George W. Bush to write biography of George H. W. Bush

Postby brainpanhandler » Thu Jul 31, 2014 10:52 am

RocketMan » Thu Jul 31, 2014 7:40 am wrote:
The currently untitled book will be released in the U.S. and Canada by Crown Publishers on November 11, 2014, in print and digital formats.


Suggested titles:

A View from the Top (of the pyramid)

Of Bones and Skullduggery

Coup koo kachoo, I am the Eggman


Note: Nov 11th (heh)
"Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity." - Martin Luther King Jr.
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Re: George W. Bush to write biography of George H. W. Bush

Postby semper occultus » Thu Jul 31, 2014 10:54 am

...I knew that... :basicsmile ...Bush's usual books require crayons.....but it'll be a 2-man job...one to do the typing, one to keep Junior from kicking the furniture & flicking elastic bands around...
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Re: George W. Bush to write biography of George H. W. Bush

Postby semper occultus » Thu Jul 31, 2014 10:59 am

...the sub-title will be "...the inspiring story of one man's struggle to reach the top of American society from.....er.....the top of American society..."
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Re: George W. Bush to write biography of George H. W. Bush

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Thu Jul 31, 2014 11:02 am

Aye. As a former ghostwriter, I can't imagine working with a client like GWB.

Then again, maybe not: http://keithhennessey.com/2013/04/24/smarter/

The new George W. Bush Presidential Center is being dedicated this week. This seems like a good time to bust a longstanding myth about our former President, my former boss.

I teach a class at Stanford Business School titled “Financial Crises in the U.S. and Europe.” During one class session while explaining the events of September 2008, I kept referring to the efforts of the threesome of Hank Paulson, Ben Bernanke, and Tim Geithner, who were joined at the hip in dealing with firm-specific problems as they arose.

One of my students asked “How involved was President Bush with what was going on?” I smiled and responded, “What you really mean is, ‘Was President Bush smart enough to understand what was going on,’ right?”

The class went dead silent. Everyone knew that this was the true meaning of the question. Kudos to that student for asking the hard question and for framing it so politely. I had stripped away that decorum and exposed the raw nerve.

I looked hard at the 60 MBA students and said “President Bush is smarter than almost every one of you.”

More silence.

I could tell they were waiting for me to break the tension, laugh, and admit I was joking.



I did not. A few shifted in their seats, then I launched into a longer answer. While it was a while ago, here is an amalgam of that answer and others I have given in similar contexts.


I am not kidding. You are quite an intelligent group. Don’t take it personally, but President Bush is smarter than almost every one of you. Were he a student here today, he would consistently get “HP” (High Pass) grades without having to work hard, and he’d get an “H” (High, the top grade) in any class where he wanted to put in the effort.

For more than six years it was my job to help educate President Bush about complex economic policy issues and to get decisions from him on impossibly hard policy choices. In meetings and in the briefing materials we gave him in advance we covered issues in far more depth than I have been discussing with you this quarter because we needed to do so for him to make decisions.


President Bush is extremely smart by any traditional standard. He’s highly analytical and was incredibly quick to be able to discern the core question he needed to answer. It was occasionally a little embarrassing when he would jump ahead of one of his Cabinet secretaries in a policy discussion and the advisor would struggle to catch up. He would sometimes force us to accelerate through policy presentations because he so quickly grasped what we were presenting.

I use words like briefing and presentation to describe our policy meetings with him, but those are inaccurate. Every meeting was a dialogue, and you had to be ready at all times to be grilled by him and to defend both your analysis and your recommendation. That was scary.

We treat Presidential speeches as if they are written by speechwriters, then handed to the President for delivery. If I could show you one experience from my time working for President Bush, it would be an editing session in the Oval with him and his speechwriters. You think that me cold-calling you is nerve-wracking? Try defending a sentence you inserted into a draft speech, with President Bush pouncing on the slightest weakness in your argument or your word choice.

In addition to his analytical speed, what most impressed me were his memory and his substantive breadth. We would sometimes have to brief him on an issue that we had last discussed with him weeks or even months before. He would remember small facts and arguments from the prior briefing and get impatient with us when we were rehashing things we had told him long ago.

And while my job involved juggling a lot of balls, I only had to worry about economic issues. In addition to all of those, at any given point in time he was making enormous decisions on Iraq and Afghanistan, on hunting al Qaeda and keeping America safe. He was making choices not just on taxes and spending and trade and energy and climate and health care and agriculture and Social Security and Medicare, but also on education and immigration, on crime and justice issues, on environmental policy and social policy and politics. Being able to handle such substantive breadth and depth, on such huge decisions, in parallel, requires not just enormous strength of character but tremendous intellectual power. President Bush has both.

On one particularly thorny policy issue on which his advisors had strong and deep disagreements, over the course of two weeks we (his senior advisors) held a series of three 90-minute meetings with the President. Shortly after the third meeting we asked for his OK to do a fourth. He said, “How about rather than doing another meeting on this, I instead tell you now what each person will say.” He then ran through half a dozen of his advisors by name and precisely detailed each one’s arguments and pointed out their flaws. (Needless to say there was no fourth meeting.)

Every prominent politician has a public caricature, one drawn initially by late-night comedy joke writers and shaped heavily by the press and one’s political opponents. The caricature of President Bush is that of a good ol’ boy from Texas who is principled and tough, but just not that bright.

That caricature was reinforced by several factors:

•The press and his opponents highlighted President Bush’s occasional stumbles when giving a speech. President Obama’s similar verbal miscues are ignored. Ask yourself: if every public statement you made were recorded and all your verbal fumbles were tweeted, how smart would you sound? Do you ever use the wrong word or phrase, or just botch a sentence for no good reason? I know I do.
•President Bush intentionally aimed his public image at average Americans rather than at Cambridge or Upper East Side elites. Mitt Romney’s campaign was predicated on “I am smart enough to fix a broken economy,” while George W. Bush’s campaigns stressed his values, character, and principles rather than boasting about his intellect. He never talked about graduating from Yale and Harvard Business School, and he liked to lower expectations by pretending he was just an average guy. Example: “My National Security Advisor Condi Rice is a Stanford professor, while I’m a C student. And look who’s President. <laughter>”
•There is a bias in much of the mainstream press and commentariat that people from outside of NY-BOS-WAS-CHI-SEA-SF-LA are less intelligent, or at least well educated. Many public commenters harbor an anti-Texas (and anti-Southern, and anti-Midwestern) intellectual bias. They mistakenly treat John Kerry as smarter than George Bush because John Kerry talks like an Ivy League professor while George Bush talks like a Texan.
•President Bush enjoys interacting with the men and women of our armed forces and with elite athletes. He loves to clear brush on his ranch. He loved interacting with the U.S. Olympic Team. He doesn’t windsurf off Nantucket, he rides a 100K mountain bike ride outside of Waco with wounded warriors. He is an intense, competitive athlete and a “guy’s guy.” His hobbies and habits reinforce a caricature of a [dumb] jock, in contrast to cultural sophisticates who enjoy antiquing and opera. This reinforces the other biases against him.

I assume that some who read this will react automatically with disbelief and sarcasm. They think they know that President Bush is unintelligent because, after all, everyone knows that. They will assume that I am wrong, or blinded by loyalty, or lying. They are certain that they are smarter than George Bush.

I ask you simply to consider the possibility that I’m right, that he is smarter than you.

If you can, find someone who has interacted directly with him outside the public spotlight. Ask that person about President Bush’s intellect. I am confident you will hear what I heard dozens of times from CEOs after they met with him: “Gosh, I had no idea he was that smart.”

At a minimum I hope you will test your own assumptions and thinking about our former President. I offer a few questions to help that process.
•Upon what do you base your view of President Bush’s intellect? How much is it shaped by the conventional wisdom about him? How much by verbal miscues highlighted by the press?
•Do you discount your estimate of his intellect because he’s from Texas or because of his accent? Because he’s an athlete and a ranch owner? Because he never advertises that he went to Yale and Harvard?
•This is a hard one, for liberals only. Do you assume that he is unintelligent because he made policy choices with which you disagree? If so, your logic may be backwards. “I disagree with choice X that President Bush made. No intelligent person could conclude X, therefore President Bush is unintelligent.” Might it be possible that an intelligent, thoughtful conservative with different values and priorities than your own might have reached a different conclusion than you? Do you really think your policy views derive only from your intellect?

And finally, if you base your view of President Bush’s intellect on a public image and caricature shaped by late night comedians, op-ed writers, TV pundits, and Twitter, is that a smart thing for you to do?


Personally, I think the man is motherfucking idiot, but that's only because he looted our Treasury to finance two failed wars. I'm sure he was really good with inter-office memos, though. Hennessy is right that the liberal press were reduced to cheap shot and caricature, but that's a credit to how totally domestic dissent was marginalized in 2000-2004, a process that started under Clinton in response to the NAFTA/WTO protest explosions.

It's funny what a bubble the author of that piece is in: GWB was decisive because he had no time for / interest in the details that would help him understand the potential consequences of his actions.

You know: leadership, maaaaaan.
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Re: George W. Bush to write biography of George H. W. Bush

Postby semper occultus » Thu Jul 31, 2014 11:18 am

...fair point..Sarah Palin's probably incredibly smart and ruthless at many aspects of the political ice-hocky game....but still.....
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Re: George W. Bush to write biography of George H. W. Bush

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Thu Jul 31, 2014 11:51 am

This ties back to this excellent recent Adam Curtis piece: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/adamcurtis/posts/NO-FUTURE

If you are an American politician today, as well as an entourage you also have a new, modern addition. You have what's called a "digital tracker". They follow you everywhere with a high-definition video camera, and they are employed by the people who want to destroy your political career.

It's called "opposition research" and the aim is to constantly record everything you say and do. The files are sent back every night to large anonymous offices in Washington where dozens of researchers systematically compare everything you said today with what you said in the past.

They are looking for contradictions. And if they find one - they feed it, and the video evidence, to the media.

On one hand it's old politics - digging up the dirt on your opponent. But it is also part of something new - and much bigger than just politics. Throughout the western world new systems have risen up whose job is to constantly record and monitor the present - and then compare that to the recorded past. The aim is to discover patterns, coincidences and correlations, and from that find ways of stopping change. Keeping things the same.

We can't properly see what is happening because these systems are operating in very different areas - from consumerism, to the management of your own body, to predicting future crimes, and even trying to stabilise the global financial system - as well as in politics.

But taken together the cumulative effect is that of a giant refrigerator that freezes us, and those who govern us, into a state of immobility, perpetually repeating the past and terrified of change and the future.


We've built a system that selects non-human candidates. It requires minimal aptitudes that are actively destructive to society, at any level.
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Re: George W. Bush to write biography of George H. W. Bush

Postby RocketMan » Thu Jul 31, 2014 12:07 pm

Wombaticus Rex » Thu Jul 31, 2014 6:02 pm wrote:Personally, I think the man is motherfucking idiot, but that's only because he looted our Treasury to finance two failed wars. I'm sure he was really good with inter-office memos, though. Hennessy is right that the liberal press were reduced to cheap shot and caricature, but that's a credit to how totally domestic dissent was marginalized in 2000-2004, a process that started under Clinton in response to the NAFTA/WTO protest explosions.

It's funny what a bubble the author of that piece is in: GWB was decisive because he had no time for / interest in the details that would help him understand the potential consequences of his actions.

You know: leadership, maaaaaan.


Anybody can make fucking decisions. I don't get this DECIDER crap. Even enormous ones. It's just picking from a selection, like one does a praline from a box of goddamn chocolates. It's how the options are moulded where the magic is. I have no doubt that Dubya is a helluva decider.
Last edited by Wombaticus Rex on Thu Jul 31, 2014 12:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: George W. Bush to "write" biography of George H. W. Bush

Postby Gashweir » Thu Jul 31, 2014 1:01 pm

I still doubt that he really is that smart, despite the hagiography by Mr. Hennessy. However, even if he is, like, really really smart, he is severely lacking in wisdom, common sense, and empathy, and his presidency was a disaster. Exhibit 1 is the complete hash that he and his administration made of post Saddam Iraq, despite the repeated warnings of subject matter experts who saw and were vocal about the impending sectarian conflict, the strengthening of Iran's influence in Iraq, and all the other missteps related to Iraq, as well as every policy decision his administration took. Abstinence based AIDS prevention policy, economic policy, No Child Left Behind, I could go on and on. Either he wasn't smart enough to look beyond the narrow focus of his ideology, or simply didn't care about outcomes.

If George Bush really is that smart, then intelligence is hugely overrated.
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