December 04, 2003
"The Turkey Was for the Centerpiece...."
According to the Washington Post, the turkey platter that George Bush showed off to soldiers during his hit-and-run photo op in Baghdad on Thanksgiving was a decoration, not intended to be served or eaten.
In the most widely published image from his Thanksgiving day trip to Baghdad, the beaming president is wearing an Army workout jacket and surrounded by soldiers as he cradles a huge platter laden with a golden-brown turkey.The bird is so perfect it looks as if it came from a food magazine, with bunches of grapes and other trimmings completing a Norman Rockwell image that evokes bounty and security in one of the most dangerous parts of the world.
But as a small sign of the many ways the White House maximized the impact of the 21/2-hour stop at the Baghdad airport, administration officials said yesterday that Bush picked up a decoration, not a serving plate.
Officials said they did not know the turkey would be there or that Bush would pick it up. A contractor had roasted and primped the turkey to adorn the buffet line, while the 600 soldiers were served from cafeteria-style steam trays, the officials said. They said the bird was not placed there in anticipation of Bush's stealthy visit, and military sources said a trophy turkey is a standard feature of holiday chow lines.
Deeper in the article are choice paragraphs that reveal perhaps too much about the patronizing contempt for the American public held by Bush's handlers:
White House officials do not deny that they craft elaborate events to showcase Bush, but they maintain that these events are designed to accurately dramatize his policies and to convey qualities about him that are real."This was effective, because it captured something about the president that people know is true, that he really cares about the soldiers and gets emotional when he sees them," Mary Matalin, a former administration official, said about the trip to Baghdad. "You have to figure out how to capture the Bush we know, even if it doesn't come through in a speech situation or a press conference. He regularly rejects anything that is not him."
To tell the truth, we need to lie. Isn't that rather like destroying the village in order to save it?
(via Talking Points Memo)
Posted by abostick at December 4, 2003 11:31 AMSo, what does this say about the concept of a Jewish centerpiece (i.e., one that is edible) versus a non-edible centerpiece? Oh, I would love to share that story with my mom!
Posted by: Debbie Notkin at December 4, 2003 02:14 PMEveryone is making such a big stink about the President and the turkey. But any thinking person who looked at that turkey and considered the number of soldiers at the dinner would easily deduce that the turkey was not going to be carved up and eaten. By the way, there are other pictures of Bush serving troops from serving trays with turkey already cut.
The real story here is that Bush flew half way around the world to spend Thanksgiving with the troops instead of his family. Regardless of the motive the media and others want to project onto Bush, I'm sure it meant a lot to the troops.
Posted by: Anonymous Coward at December 5, 2003 10:21 PM