We have a calling from beyond the stars

George W. Bush begins Chapter Two
We have a calling from beyond the stars
Fri Jan 21, 2005 02:59
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"We have a calling from beyond the stars to stand for freedom"
http://www.brunei-online.com/bb/fri/jan21w17.htm

WASHINGTON (AP) - On the brink of a second term in turbulent times, George W. Bush begins Chapter Two of his presidency with a call "from beyond the stars" to stand steadfastly for the cause of freedom around the world.

The nation faces unsettling threats from terrorists and anxiety about the steady uptick of US deaths in Iraq. There are worries about Social Security's future and stress over the pricetag of medical care and a slow job market. Inaugurations, though, are a time to talk about hope. "The survival of liberty in our land increasingly depends on the success of liberty in other lands," Bush was telling inauguration watchers in this country and across the globe. "The best hope for peace in our world is the expansion of freedom in all the world."

More than a half million people were gathering in the snowy capital in near-freezing temperatures for the swearing-in at the West Front of the Capitol and the traditional parade down Pennsylvania Avenue. Snipers were dispatched to rooftops and bomb-sniffing dogs into the streets. Miles of metal barricades gave a fortress-like feel to the city.

Bush was beginning Inauguration Day at a worship service at St. John's Episcopal Church near the White House. At noon (1700 GMT), when he places his hand on a family Bible and recites the 35-word oath of office, he will become the 16th second-term president.

The event was to be witnessed by Bush's father, the former President George H. W. Bush, and his mother, Barbara Bush, along with a host of distinguished guests that included former presidents Carter and Clinton and their wives. The two George Bushes - who playfully call each other "41" and "43" in honour of their place in the lineup of US presidents - are only the second father-son presidential team. They follow John Adams and John Quincy Adams, who each served one term.

The younger Bush, 58, summed up his inaugural message with one word: "Freedom. This is a cause that unites our country and gives hope to the world," he said Wednesday evening just before red, white, blue and gold fireworks showered the dark sky over the National Mall.

Then, reaching to his religious faith, Bush continued: "We have a calling from beyond the stars to stand for freedom, and America will always be faithful to that cause."

Not everybody was cheering four more years of Bush.

Some anti-Bu...es took vacations to get away from the inaugural hoopla while others flocked to Washington to give the president a symbolic snub. They planned to turn their backs on the president as his motorcade rolls down Pennsylvania Avenue.
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A party that's beyond belief
Newsday, NY - 22 hours ago
... "We have a calling from beyond the stars to stand for freedom, and America will always be faithful to that cause," he said to the shivering crowd, again ...

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"We have a calling from beyond the stars to stand for freedom"

January 20, 2005 = WASHINGTON

The Party of God is now fully in charge of the City of Earthly Advantage, and the faith-based finger-pointing has only begun.

It's another four years for a leader who considers himself as God's own prophet, a man who says he can't even imagine someone serving in the White House "without a relationship with the Lord." Like it or not, we have a president who just convinced half a nation that Republicans and Republicans alone have a clear-channel, exclusive pipeline to God.

And he's not stopping now.

Even yesterday, George W. Bush stood at dusk on the Ellipse between the White House and the Washington Monument, and he previewed an inaugural address studded with allusions to the divine.

"We have a calling from beyond the stars to stand for freedom, and America will always be faithful to that cause," he said to the shivering crowd, again invoking the Almighty in support of worldly political goals.

It's the same thing that the Rev. Jerry Falwell was driving during last year's campaign. Jesus, Falwell was certain, had officially endorsed Bush.

"For conservative people of faith," the politically powerful reverend said, "voting for principle this year means voting for the re-election of George W. Bush. The alternative, in my mind, is simply unthinkable."

Here's a little more: "I believe it is the responsibility of every political conservative, every evangelical Christian, every pro-life Catholic, every traditional Jew, every Reagan Democrat and everyone in between to get serious about re-electing President Bush."

Get used to it. And don't think it didn't help Bush.

He's a president who doesn't just wear his religion on his sleeve. He stuffs some in his boots, puts more in his pockets and always has extra to spare.

But as his big day arrives - his first clean-shot inaugural, the swearing-in outside the Capitol, the big parade to the White House - a vicious wind is blowing up Pennsylvania Avenue. Snow and ice are everywhere. You have any idea what slush like this can do to a pair of Tony Lamas?

Maybe that's what the Democrats meant when they said Bush would get four more years "when hell freezes over." Looking around this locked-down capital yesterday - well, who could say it hadn't?

David Domke is a professor from the University of Washington. He's been busy counting all the times Bush has been mentioning a higher power in the speeches he gives. It was 10 in his first inaugural address and another 14 in his three State of the Unions for a first-term average of six references per speech. That easily beats Ronald Reagan's 4.75. Even Jimmy Carter, famous for his piety, managed only two mentions of God in four trips to the big podium. Franklin Delano Roosevelt at 1.69 and Lyndon Johnson at 1.50 bring up the rear among God-citing modern presidents.

But it isn't just the numbers, Domke says. There's something different about the way Bush cites God.

"It's one thing to state that there is a God and that Americans should listen to Him, which is what presidents have generally done," Domke said. "In contrast, Bush speaks as if he knows exactly what God wants."

And the confidence that brings may be part of the problem here as this second term begins.

But that'll have to wait one more day. Last night, the Bushes, George and Laura, were busy dancin' with the ones that brung 'em here: Three candlelight dinners for donors who contributed $100,000 or more for the inauguration and then Texas State Society's "Black Tie and Boots Ball."

All of it is following a sprinkled-with-religion Bush-populism theme, geared to the kind of populists who believe in giving money to Big Oil, Big Pharma, Big Defense - not taking money away from them.

But while the tanked-up donors had their inaugural fun around town, a scarier presentation was under way on Ninth Street at the Renaissance Washington Hotel. It was the Republican National Committee having its 2005 Winter Meeting.

The star of that show was Ken Mehlman. It was Mehlman who ran the Bush-Cheney re-election campaign, and yesterday he got his earthly reward, the party chairmanship.

To repeated thunders of applause, Mehlman vowed to round up enough gun owners, right-to-lifers and religious conservatives to create "a durable majority" that will keep Republicans in power for decades and decades to come.

"We can deepen the GOP by identifying and turning out Americans who vote for president but who often miss off-year elections and agree with our work on behalf of a culture of life, our promoting marriage, and a belief in our Second Amendment heritage," Mehlman said.

Say amen to that.

If this doesn't scare you, nothing will.

Email: henican@newsday.com 
http://www.newsday.com/news/columnists/ny-nyhen204120288jan20,0,7905746.column?coll=ny-news-columnists
 

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