Scott McClellan: The Gift that Keeps on Giving

I didn't think I'd ever say this, but - thank God for Scott McClellan. With Thursday's Olbermann interview, tomorrow's Russert interview, and a spate of op-eds in the middle keeping this story alive, McClellan's book is the gift that keeps on giving. The more the media's Republican lens is on George W. Bush, the better off we'll be come November, and perhaps just as importantly, the Republican Party's reaction to the book is giving the mainstream media new insight into how the Bushies' minds work. Although it's nothing new to those of in the Netroots, a spate of quotes from folks like Mary Matalin and Bernard Kerik are making headlines by showing just how low the Republican elites can sink, valuing loyalty over corruption and honesty.

What first struck me when this book came out was not its "shocking" content, but White House Press Secretary Dana Perino's reaction: "Scott, we now know, is disgruntled about his experience at the White House." Perino seems to be saying there is only one possible explanation for criticism from a former employee: they're disgruntled. It is absolutely impossible for someone to work with Bush and Co. and have any real complaints; things here are so wonderful that if you're not in bliss the whole time, there's something wrong with you. Criticism is never based on truth; the only possible logical explanation is a lack of gruntle. Right... let that speak not to the fact that these people were blinders, but to just how big those blinders are.

Of course, you expect that kind of a reaction from the White House itself; they have to defend themselves. So maybe Perino gets a pass this time. With a paycheck and job description like hers, she hardly reveals the typical Republican mindset. We can get a better handle on the party by looking to folks without current official ties - folks like Bernard Kerik, who sent out an e-mail this week calling McClellan's truth tourettes, "DISLOYAL, SICKENING AND DESPICABLE DISLOYAL, SICKENING AND DESPICABLE."

It's typical of Kerik, he of nanny trouble, abuse of power, conspiracy, mail fraud, wire fraud and tax fraud fame, to value loyalty (to Giuliani, to Bush, to I'm guessing Spiro Agnew) more than ethics or truth. Mary Matalin, who's under indictment for absolutely nothing, joined him, saying of McClellan's loyalty: "This will stand as the epitome, the ultimate breach of that code of honor."

So honor, apparently, does not mean fighting for the weak, telling the truth, exposing hypocrisy, bringing down the corrupt, or even keeping your zipper zipped. No, to these people, honor is sticking with the guy who put you on TV, no matter what sacrifices that entails. We haven't heard word one attacking McClellan's actual points, only his loyalty, which is why these people are unfit to run for even county dogcatcher.

But that is not to say Scott McClellan actually has honor. There is one Republican I do agree with: Bob Dole, who e-mailed McClellan to say, "There are miserable creatures like you in every administration who don't have the guts to speak up or quit if there are disagreements with the boss or colleagues."

McClellan is helping us from a PR perspective, and his effect on the media and campaign may help to prevent the future from being as bad as the present. This is a good thing - but the fact of the matter is, he could have helped us keep the present from getting as bad as it is. If McClellan were just now seeing the light, I would welcome his conversion and not cry "Too little, too late!" But this is not a recent conversion. He has been shopping this book since January 2007, and was appalled at some of these abuses of power while still in the White House. There's no honor in unfailing loyalty, but there's also no honor in sitting on the truth until you can cash in, allowing the administration to keep killing for that much longer. Dole says he won't read the book, not for his anger at betrayal but for his anger at hypocrisy. That, I can respect: "If all these awful things were happening, and perhaps some may have been, you should have spoken up publicly like a man, or quit your cushy, high-profile job."

McClellan, like 98% of Bush's second term staff, has little honor, but we should still be thankful for him. He has brought the nuts out of the woodwork, and the louder our alarm clock, the faster this nation will wake up.

And with that, we turn back for more of the RBC and campaign 2008.

Update [2008-5-31 17:16:24 by Transplanted Texan]: RandomNonviolence has a compelling comment about those who place a high value on loyalty.



Display:


Re: Scott McClellan: The Gift that Keeps on Giving (none / 0)

the irony about Perino's quote is that it isn't until people are disgruntled with this admin. that they finally start telling the truth.

It's the ones who aren't disgruntled you can't trust or believe.


by Juno on Sat May 31, 2008 at 04:44:58 PM EST

Re: Scott McClellan: The Gift that Keeps on Giving (none / 0)

I think the word disgruntled is more an accusation of ego and hurt feelings than one of having problems with policy or politics.


The Wayward Episcopalian
by Transplanted Texan on Sat May 31, 2008 at 04:47:29 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Scott McClellan: The Gift that Keeps on Giving (none / 0)

I've always felt it's a strange defense because employees are more likely to lie or otherwise behave badly on behalf of a boss/company in order to keep his/her job when things are going well, so I've always felt that, if you want the truth, find a disgruntled employee who's been fired and has nothing left to lose.


by Juno on Sat May 31, 2008 at 04:50:19 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Scott McClellan: The Gift that Keeps on Giving (none / 0)

The defense is that if you have a personal problem with your ex-boss, you're not likely to tell the unvarnished truth, you're likely to lie and make it even worse. I'm more inclined to agree with you, but there is a certain logic to the position. I just have to laugh at Perino because it was the instant default defense, no other possible explanation: if you have problems with our policy, it has to be because you don't like us on the personal level, not because you actually gave intellectual thought to the issues and have a real problem. Impossible.


The Wayward Episcopalian
by Transplanted Texan on Sat May 31, 2008 at 04:53:55 PM EST
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Re: Scott McClellan: The Gift that Keeps on Giving (none / 0)

Bingo.


by sweet potato pie on Sat May 31, 2008 at 04:48:06 PM EST
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Re: Scott McClellan: The Gift that Keeps on Giving (none / 0)

what happened to the stop snitching campaign , scott didn't get the meme


Educated in a small town Taught to fear Jesus in a small town Used to daydream in that small town Another born romantic that's me.
by lori on Sat May 31, 2008 at 04:48:55 PM EST

Complicit media (none / 0)

Let's see how much coverage there is regarding the kowtowing media, who McClellan blames almost as much as the propagandists in the Bush regime.

I bet not that much.


by Sieglinde on Sat May 31, 2008 at 04:57:53 PM EST

Re: Complicit media (none / 0)

Thereisnospoon had a good diary about that yesterday.

http://www.mydd.com/story/2008/5/30/1624 44/418


The Wayward Episcopalian
by Transplanted Texan on Sat May 31, 2008 at 04:59:32 PM EST
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Re: Complicit media (none / 0)

The media are more to blame.


by Juno on Sat May 31, 2008 at 05:09:42 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Complicit media (none / 0)

You have a point.  If they had done their job, Americans wouldn't have been that gung-ho about supporting the war.  And perhaps the Bush administration wouldn't have been THAT brazen to lie about everything.


by Sieglinde on Sat May 31, 2008 at 05:14:18 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Complicit media (2.00 / 1)

If they'd done their job, we wouldn't have HAD a Bush Administration.

Besides, I KNOW Bush and Cheney are depraved, sociopathological men who had a personal agenda of hijacking the US Gov't. for personal power and gain.

I expected very bad things from them. I got what I expected.

I expect the press to be the watchdog and speak truth to power and hold powerful feet to the fire and be adversarial to ANY sitting administration.

I did not get anything close to what I expected from the press. Still don't.

Nothing will cause a democracy to crumble faster than a compliant, absent press.  


by Juno on Sat May 31, 2008 at 05:18:45 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Complicit media (2.00 / 1)

"Nothing will cause a democracy to crumble faster than a compliant, absent press."

Deserves 10 mojos, if I could.


by Sieglinde on Sat May 31, 2008 at 05:32:15 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Complicit media (none / 0)

Now if only the complicit media would get over themselves.  Yes, you screwed up badly.  Yes, you helped the Bushies bring about their goal of fomenting a Middle-East war.

Now, make up for your mistakes by taking McClellan's admissions and carrying them forward.  Scottie blurted that Bush, himself, had been the one that authorized the leak of Valerie Plame's CIA association.  This is unquestionably treason and grounds for impeachment.

The complicit media, rather than obsessing on their grave mistakes, should be taking this admission and pursue it to its logical and rightful conclusions.  


by pascal1947 on Sun Jun 01, 2008 at 12:28:34 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Sympathy for the Devil? (2.00 / 1)

While I can't have too much sympathy for McClellan given the horrible things that he said about people in exactly the same situation he's in now, I can have a tiny bit of sympathy.

Consider that he's a relatively junior guy who's given a powerful, exciting job by a President that he's a passionate believer in. We now know that the Bush White House was in the grip of strong "groupthink" where only the most strong willed could maintain any objectivity. If the White House's insanity could destroy the judgement of generals and admirals with decades of experience, what chance did a junior nobody have?

In addition, the Bush gang is notoriously vindictive in retaliating against anyone who's even slightly "disloyal" so even if McClellen had any doubts, he'd have a very strong reason to suppress them. And since McClellan was quite publicly used to attack people that were "disloyal" it would be even more difficult for him to admit even to himself that he was "disloyal".

I've had friends in similar situations, where groups of people go collectively insane, and it can take years to recover and regain some objectivity.

Given all of this, I can certainly believe that it took him a quite a while to recover from the experience and get enough perspective to write a book about it. And I do have to give him credit for not only coming clean, but doing so in writing, on a scale that guarantees that he's going to suffer brutal personal attacks and ensure that he'll probably never get another job from the gang that provided his entire career. That requires some cojones.

Sure, it would be good if Republicans could come clean while they still were in power, rather than later, when it has much less impact. But I believe that it's never too late to make a difference, and it's certainly better for McClellan to have confessed his sins now than never. Who knows, perhaps the voting public will eventually learn that there's a pattern...


by laird on Sat May 31, 2008 at 05:09:27 PM EST

Re: Sympathy for the Devil? (none / 0)

Eloquently put. You inspired me to tone down the rhetoric from "no honor" to "little honor."


The Wayward Episcopalian
by Transplanted Texan on Sat May 31, 2008 at 05:11:50 PM EST
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Re: Sympathy for the Devil? (none / 0)

Not me.


by Juno on Sat May 31, 2008 at 05:16:01 PM EST
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Re: Sympathy for the Devil? (none / 0)

McClellan deserves no credit here.  That's a form of Stockholm Syndrome.

If he hadn't been treated by these lunatics as he had, he would not have written this book and would have remained silent forever.

He's a scoundrel and a coward.  Don't give someone credit for doing what they should have done all along and behaving as people should normally.


by Juno on Sat May 31, 2008 at 05:15:29 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Sympathy for the Devil? (none / 0)

Coward, seems that way. Scoundrel, only through guilt by association.


The Wayward Episcopalian
by Transplanted Texan on Sat May 31, 2008 at 05:17:35 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Conservative Values (2.00 / 2)

Richard Shweder and Alan Fiske have found five main moral "themes" that guide human beings:

  • Oppose harm
  • Support fairness
  • Support community (or group loyalty)
  • Support authority
  • Support purity

The Bush administration skips right over the first two and emphasizes group loyalty, obedience to authority, and purity. Loyalty to others and obedience to legitimate authority are useful for maintaining a community and societal structures. And purity helps prevent the spread of disease. But taken to extremes, these can lead to things like Nazi fascism and the Holocaust. And, of course, in our society, to the Iraq War, cronyism and corruption, and the trashing of anyone who doesn't completely agree with President Bush.

The response to Scott McClellan is a classic case of ferociously insisting on loyalty and obedience to authority. I hope that conservatives will begin to see how overzealous adherence to these values leads to the breaking of other important moral values: not harming others and being fair.


John McCain wants to make abortion illegal
by RandomNonviolence on Sat May 31, 2008 at 05:10:15 PM EST

Re: Conservative Values (none / 0)

I linked to this comment from the main entry.


The Wayward Episcopalian
by Transplanted Texan on Sat May 31, 2008 at 05:16:50 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Conservative Values (none / 0)

Thanks.


John McCain wants to make abortion illegal
by RandomNonviolence on Sat May 31, 2008 at 06:33:19 PM EST
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Re: Scott McClellan: The Gift that Keeps on Giving (none / 0)

This admin. should be on their knees thanking God they've gotten away with all of their crimes, which is shocking enough, instead of spending energy trying once again to discredit someone.

And how creepy is it that a lifelong worm like George W. Bush can even inspire this kind of loyalty in so many people????  I've never understood that. The guy is a creep and always has been one.


by Juno on Sat May 31, 2008 at 05:12:09 PM EST

Re: Scott McClellan: The Gift that Keeps on Giving (none / 0)

Same way as Lyndon Johnson - a personal touch, wonderful charm, and a dose of intimidation. When you're in his presence, everything else you thought you knew melts away. Or so I've gathered, I've not met the man and don't particularly care to.


The Wayward Episcopalian
by Transplanted Texan on Sat May 31, 2008 at 05:14:42 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Scott McClellan: The Gift that Keeps on Giving (none / 0)

I'm sorry, but I've never understood all the talk about Bush being a good guy.  He's always struck me as being a very mean person, a "country club shit" I call his type.

It's something that has always perplexed me.


by Juno on Sat May 31, 2008 at 05:26:17 PM EST
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Re: Scott McClellan: The Gift that Keeps on Giving (none / 0)

Being personable and being good aren't always related. :(


The Wayward Episcopalian
by Transplanted Texan on Sat May 31, 2008 at 06:02:01 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Scott McClellan and Dole (none / 0)

Way too much credit to Bob Dole- where was he when the administration sent thousands to their untimely death? And he is an injured veteran at that!


by RAULC on Sat May 31, 2008 at 05:13:51 PM EST


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