Incurious George

George W. Bush's Medieval Presidency

The LA Times on Sunday ran an article by Neal Gabler which opens:

It should have been an embarrassing admission for him and a flabbergasting one for us: President Bush told Fox News recently that he only "glanced" at newspaper headlines, rarely reading stories, and that for his real news hits, he relied on briefings from acolytes who, he said flippantly, "probably read the news themselves." He rationalized his indifference by claiming he needed "objective" information. Even allowing for the president's contempt for the press, it was a peculiar comment, and it prompted the New York Times to call him "one of the most incurious men ever to occupy the White House."
But in citing this as a personal deficiency or even as political grandstanding, critics may have missed the larger point. Incuriosity seems characteristic of the entire Bush administration. More, it seems central to its very operation. The administration seems indifferent to data, impervious to competing viewpoints and ideas. Policy is not adjusted to facts; facts are adjusted to policy. The result is what may be the nation's first medieval presidency — one in which reality is ignored for the administration's own prevailing vision. And just as in medieval days, this willful ignorance can lead to terrible consequences.
Posted by Donald Douglas at October 6, 2003 10:29 AM
Comments

For more on the topic of uncurious or incurious George W. Bush, see http://www.uncuriousgeorge.org/.

Posted by: Joel Rubinstein at February 24, 2004 02:25 AM

For more on the topic of uncurious or incurious George W. Bush, see http://www.uncuriousgeorge.org/.

Posted by: Joel Rubinstein at February 24, 2004 02:31 AM
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