Barbara Bush's Remarks Very Revealing
Barbara Bush said the Katrina refugees didn't have it so bad
because, heck, they were poor to begin with. "What I'm hearing,
which is sort of scary, is they all want to stay in Texas," she
was quoted as saying in an interview on National Public Radio.
"And so many of the people in the arena here, you know, were
underprivileged anyway, so this is working very well for them."
Mother's remark puts silver foot in Bush's mouth
by John Kass
http://philadelphians2.50megs.com/barbara.html
posted at:
http://www.apfn.org/APFN/KATRINA.HTM
Barbara Bush-Audio
http://www.apfn.org/audio/bb.mp3
"And so many of the people in the arena here, you know, were
underprivileged anyway so this (she chuckled)--this is working
very well for them.
http://www.apfn.org/audio/bb.mp3
http://www.apfn.org/APFN/KATRINA.HTM
I was all set to defend President Bush as a guy who really
doesn't want poor black people in Louisiana and Mississippi to
die of starvation and disease, no matter what the Democrats say.
But then Barbara Bush, the president's mom, went and dusted off
the Bush family silver foot Monday. And she used it.
While touring the Houston Astrodome, where thousands of
Hurricane Katrina refugees have been huddling, Barbara Bush said
they didn't have it so bad because, heck, they were poor to
begin with.
"What I'm hearing, which is sort of scary, is they all want to
stay in Texas," she was quoted as saying in an interview on
National Public Radio.
Thousands of hurricane refugees were sitting on or near their
green army cots, perhaps thinking of lunch, presumably waiting
to be fed something hearty.
Anything but cake.
"Everyone is so overwhelmed by the hospitality," Barbara Bush
said. And here comes the fastball over the middle of the
Democratic plate:
"And so many of the people in the arena here, you know, were
underprivileged anyway, so this is working very well for them."
At least she didn't ask them to sing and dance. But I'm sure
it's working out very well for them. How often does something
nice like a hurricane come by and change your life so you can
hang out with thousands of others in the Astrodome and have
Barbara Bush say it wasn't so bad, because you were poor anyway?
By my calculations, Barb's foot is about a 10 1/2 EE, but by the
time you read this on Wednesday, after Leno and Letterman get
through with her, she'll have an EEEE at least. There should be
some back teeth stuck to the pinky toe when the surgeon general
finally pulls it out.
You've got to figure that somewhere, former Texas Democratic
Gov. Ann Richards is smiling. It was Richards, or perhaps one of
her pointy-headed ghostwriters, who came up with the devastating
line about former President George H.W. Bush.
Richards said the former president couldn't be blamed for his
misstatements, because he was born with a silver foot in his
mouth. Now it turns out Barbara was in charge of the silver. She
polished it up good and shiny. And in political terms, she put
her foot in her son's mouth and knocked loose a few teeth.
I'm sure Barbara won't be able to fix things up just by bringing
a lime Jell-O mold (with floating chunks of pineapple) over to
the White House at suppertime.
"Son?"
"What, Ma?"
"I'm sorry what I said about those people. However, I did make
Jell-O to cheer you up."
"With the chunks?"
Most of us have moms, but if we're lucky, they never made Jell-O
with or without the hideous chunks. But most of us don't have
moms who could start a war with China or overturn the
Republican's Southern Strategy with a few choice words, like
Barbara Bush just did.
Please don't get it into your head that my constant exposure to
people in the mainstream media--many of whom are still peeved
that Al Gore isn't president--has changed my political views. It
hasn't.
But what Barbara Bush said can't be ignored. She's the former
first lady, the current first grandmother, and she's no
political cream puff.
Even though she's got that soft white hair and those crinkly
blue eyes, she also has that deadly string of pearls and
probably rattled them at Laura Bush when they first met, and
Laura got flustered and blurted out that her two hobbies were
reading and smoking.
Who wouldn't get flustered? I'm scared of her, too, and I've
only seen her on TV.
Like the president, my mom's a Republican, so I called to warn
her about what Barbara Bush said.
"No!" she said. "That can't be true."
I could hear her fingers typing on her laptop, frantically
trying to get to The National Review Online, where she could
find ammunition to refute such a heinous story created by the
liberal mainstream media.
But it is true and she knows it now, and I had to remind her of
something that all reporters and editors remind their families,
particularly moms: Don't talk to reporters, ever.
It has nothing to do with journalists thinking we're famous or
popular or that anyone cares what we say. It does have to do,
however, with the ancient fear held by most humans (except for
the Jerry Springer set) that anything our moms say may be
embarrassing, that the women who brought us into the world can
take us out of it with one foolish statement, a la Barbara Bush.
And, besides, we're reporters. We know what we're like.
So, what did I say about reporters?
"Never to talk to them, ever?" said my mom, who was a reporter
once, but repeated this to humor me.
Exactly.
Copyright © 2005, Chicago Tribune
http://philadelphians2.50megs.com/barbara.html