By Lisa Fabrizio on 1.14.09 @ 6:07AM
One can be reasonably sure that his exit will be marked by a
graciousness usually absent in political circles.
Friends, Americans, conservatives; lend me your ears. I come to
praise George W. Bush, not to bury him; I'll leave that to our
famously unbiased media. Now that the eight years of his
presidency have come to an end, there will surely be endless
shovels of dirt dumped on the legacy of our 43rd president, some
even heaved by our brethren on the right; but not here. I come
instead not to speak specifically of his accomplishments or his
errors, but of the man himself.
One can be reasonably sure that his exit, like his controversial
entrance, will be marked by a graciousness usually absent in
political circles. We can also be pretty certain that his
departure will not feature the ransacking of the Oval Office and
Air Force One, or the sophomoric removal of the "O's" from White
House keyboards. If, as has been the case for his entire
presidency, he is true to his word, he will be as magnanimous to
his successor as he was to his predecessor; notwithstanding the
disrespect he received at the hands of both.
In his last press conference on Monday he said that when he
leaves Washington he'll be "getting off the stage," because there
should only be "one person in the klieg lights at a time." Would
that all former presidents had made and kept this same pledge;
especially those of the Democratic stripe. Love him or hate him,
you can't help but think that despite a rambunctious youth, this
man was raised right.
Although some of his actions upset conservatives, as he departs
the Beltway for his beloved Texas ranch, we can and should admire
the aspects of his character that not only saw the nation through
the dark days after 9/11, but restored a measure of dignity to
what had been an Office marred Impeachment and irresponsibility.
The foremost of his virtues and the one that evokes the most
hatred from those on the left is that he remains true to the
courage of his convictions; not an easy task in these days of
moral relativism. When he stated that there is good and evil in
the world, and that Americans have always given their lives in
defense of the good, he reopened a page of Americanism not seen
since the days of Ronald Reagan.
Of course, some saw this dogged determination as hubris and
decried his unwillingness to "admit mistakes." But this only
pointed to his gift of good judgment. George W. Bush is one of
the few powerful men in the world to recognize that homicidal
brutes like those in Al Qaeda must be met not only with force of
arms, but a steadfast resolve equal to or greater than their own.
All the spinning in the world by his enemies cannot change the
fact that this is what has kept our country safe from attack
these last seven years.
And yes, he truly is a compassionate conservative. Unlike
politicians who can turn on the tears on cue, George W. Bush
could truly get misty at a T-Ball game on the White House lawn or
at a press conference with "Snowflake" babies; those born from
embryos that would otherwise have been destroyed or used for
research. And who can forget one of the most emotional of all the
scenes immediately following the carnage of 9/11, when President
Bush returned to his seat after delivering his beautiful remarks
in the National Cathedral, and embraced his visibly-shaken
father.
This is a man who endured countless savage attacks on himself and
those of his administration, and spoke not one bitter word in
return. A man who, in stark contrast to his predecessor, cared
not a whit about public opinion when it came to our national
defense, trusting instead that future historians will do what
their current counterparts refuse; to treat him fairly.
So this is the message to our liberal friends in the media: you
didn't beat this president, he beat you. You and your allies in
Washington failed time and again to take this good man down.
Indeed, he was elected and re-elected despite your historic
efforts to the contrary.
And this is his legacy: that this man did precisely what the
President of the United States is sworn to do. He and the troops
who fought so bravely under him for eight long years have
defended this still-great country of ours against one of the most
pernicious enemies mankind has ever seen, and equally important,
he kept alive the idea that America is and can still be, a force
for good in the world.