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Phantom of the Opera Cheney Emerges from His Bunker to Snarl at John Edwards
But what if the man in the corner is the actual Oz? What if the cover story is the bumbling fool, and when you pull back the curtain the actual embodiment of evil itself is staring you right in the face? This was the reaction I had when I saw just a glimpse of Dick Cheney during the Vice Presidential debate on television. The man breathes fire, as is well known, and is known to munch on a small child for breakfast each morning. His
propensity for lying needs no help from hidden earpieces; he suffers no
dry drunk anxiety, nor any lack of self-esteem from being
misunderestimated or hated by most of the world. He is not out to please
anyone, and has no stock of frat boy jokes to make reporters smile. He
knows he has access to information most people are not privy to, and
assumes he is beyond reproach in whatever he does. When he declined
service in His is the patient, curdled scowl of the PNAC, the human face of the oiligarchy whose claws are now so tightly clutching to American power. Burdened by an arrogance even he can barely stand, his annoyance is permanently etched in the crooked smirk and the Lon Chaney tilt of his head. Poor John Edwards, whose momma raised him too well, just can’t seem to bring himself to the awareness that you may have to break the rules when you find yourself face to face with Satan.
I waited in vain for Edwards to start channeling Dr. Seuss, and stand up and reveal to the world the depth of Cheney’s mendacity: “Your heart is full of unwashed socks, your soul is full of gunk, Mr. Griiiiiiiinch!” Alas, it was not to be. Not just because the format of these so-called debates--although they are marginally less straitjacketed than the presidential model--makes it impossible. If there were much to debate between the two major parties, the Commission on Presidential Debates has pretty much taken care of that. And there is also the handicap that so much of the imperial mission is common to both parties; so of course, when Cheney spat out his sideways snarl that Kerry and Edwards are “not credible on Iraq,” Edwards dutifully responded by repeating Kerry’s promise that they would “find terrorists wherever they are and kill them, before they have the chance to do harm.” Yikes. But
most of my disappointment stemmed from the growing realization that
Edwards is neither Theodore Geisel nor Boris Karloff, and expecting him
to come right out and say that Cheney is “a three decker toadstool and
sauerkraut sandwich with arsenic saauuuuuuce” may have been setting my
sights too high. For the most part, Cheney got away with it all--again.
And you couldn't help but see the outline of the script Bush was
supposed to be following the other night: keep hinting at Saddam/Al
Qaeda, keep bluffing about True, Cheney is not the entire Bush administration. Nor is any junta, not even the Bush cartel, capable of pulling all the strings necessary to keep the Empire humming. Still, ironically for the Bush crowd, cardiac patient-in-chief Cheney is its heart and soul. Americans got a glimpse inside the undisclosed location that is the mind of Dick Cheney, and a good whiff of the stench that hovers above his neocon fantasy view of the world. It should be enough to make people run for the exits. But then, it should have been enough a long time ago. Cue organ music? Writer, singer, linguist and activist Daniel Patrick Welch lives and writes in Salem, Massachusetts, with his wife, Julia Nambalirwa-Lugudde. Together they run The Greenhouse School. His website is at danielpwelch.com. |