"Nearly every major economic indicator has deteriorated since
you [Bush] took office in January, 2001...[and] if your economic
advisers are telling you that these deficits can be defeated through
further reductions in tax rates, then you need new advisers."--Open
Letter to President George W. Bush from 169 Economics Professors,
October 4, 2004[1]
I am overwhelmed by the deliberate messy confusion I find in
today's social and economic predicament. In particular, I am
disturbed about the proliferation of the many scientific statistical
polls/researches splashed all over the mass media. My succinct
comment to this inundation of statistical polls is that such polls
are restricting our capacity to think for ourselves and they are a
waste of economic resources.
A few days ago I came upon a statistical research dealing with
the length of Italian penises.[2] A result of this research is that
23% of Italians are not satisfied with the length of their penises;
another scientific result is the discovery of a straight correlation
between the length of the penis and the height of the individual. I
wonder if these scientific breakthroughs would have an impact on our
economic growth as people would ask for more psychological therapies
and as surgeons would devote more efforts to satisfy the whim for
longer penises for shorter people.
I am laughing, I just exchanged few e-mails with Timothy Shire,
publisher of Ensign, and in one such e-mail I nicknamed the economic
policies of the Bush administration "Bushcomics," and at the same
time Shire expressed his feeling that with Bush "the basic rules
of inquiry have been suspended."
George
Bush and Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi have been meeting
last Thursday, December 15, at the White House.
A few days ago, Bush’s friend Bernard Kerik announced the
withdrawal for his nomination to become secretary of Homeland
Security citing problems he was experiencing with his nanny[3] while
he was away to rally the troops at Ground Zero.[4] Then a few days
ago, the day after Silvio Berlusconi was not found guilty of bribing
the judiciary since the statute of limitations had run out,[5]
Berlusconi’s friend Senator Marcello Dell’ Utri was sentenced to
nine years in prison for bribing the judiciary in the same
Berlusconi’s affair.[6]
So, here we have Bush and Berlusconi together sharing their
economic policies for the world. As Berlusconi raised the concern of
the falling dollar Bush replied "The policy of my government is a
strong-dollar policy." Further, Bush added that if the world is
concerned about the American trade deficit then "people can buy
more United States products if they're worried about the trade
deficit."[7]
I continue to sarcastically laugh as I find a straight
correlation between ‘Bush and the economy’ and ‘Nero and
the burning of Rome.’
References
1. 169 Economics professors Open Letter to President George W.
Bush October 4, 2004 http://www.truthout.org/docs_04/101204I.shtml
2. Societ italiana di andrologia Maschi, il complesso immotivato
delle dimensioni December 13, 2004 Corriere della Sera http://www.corriere.it/Primo_Piano/Cronache/2004/12_Dicembre/13/sesso.shtml
3. New York Times Kerik's nanny issue his latest blemish: Bush
accepts his withdrawal; previous financial and work problems begin
to surface December 12, 2004 http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/politics/2943067
4. Buettner, Russ Now his double affair laid bare. Kerik cheated
on wife with Judith Regan and correction officer December 13, 2004,
Daily News http://stevegilliard.blogspot.com/2004/12/shenanigans.html
5. Scherer, Steve Italy's Berlusconi Acquitted of Corruption by
Court (pdf)
December 10, 2004 Bloomberg, http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000087&sid=ax3.i52YfAhA&refer=top_world_news
6. CNN International Mafia case: Berlusconi ally guilty (pdf)
December 11, 2004 http://edition.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/europe/12/11/berlusconi.ally.reut/index.html
7. Hunt, Terence Bush Pledges Strong-Dollar Policy (pdf)
December 15, 2004 AP http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/bush
Image Credits: Top picture, the base image was by Lawrence
Jackson of AP, December 20, 2004 at Executive Office building press
conference Bush and Berlusconi in the oval office by Reuters, Larry
Downing |