Readers of the free world
Andrew Edwards
Love him or hate him, George W. Bush will be president for at least
286 more days.
For a group of Lagunans, those days will be spent reading up on
the presidents deeds, or misdeeds, depending on your political
affiliation.
The “MoveOn.org” Book Club, set for an inaugural meeting on
Tuesday, is being set up by Martha Fett, a self-described political
independent who supports John Kerry in his run to unseat the man
referred to in some circles as “Dubya.”
The club’s reading selection will focus on books written by former
Administration officials that criticize Bush’s policies. Frank
Ricchiazzi, co-chairman of the Laguna Beach Republicans, offered his
own take on the group’s choices.
“We can read as much propaganda as we want,” he said.
Fett’s club is borrowing its name from a Web-based organization
that got its start in 1998 protesting Congressional Republicans’
drive to impeach then-President Bill Clinton. During the Bush
presidency, the group established itself as a vocal critic of the
president -- particularly regarding the Iraq War -- and acquired a
share of notoriety in 2003 when submissions to anti-Bush ad contest
compared the president to Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler.
The Laguna club is not formally connected to MoveOn.org, Fett said
she asked for the group’s permission to use their name, but has not
yet heard from them.
The goal of the group Fett said, is not to create a place where
people can vent their political frustrations, but to get a sense of
what really is going on inside the Oval Office.
“The objective is knowledge. The objective is not Bush-bashing,”
Fett said.
One of the group’s members, Lindy Garber, echoed Fett’s comment.
“We just want to find out what’s going on,” she said.
A lifelong Democrat, Garber left no doubts on her personal
feelings on the president.
“I don’t think he should be in office and I think people should
know what’s going on,” Garber said.
So far about 15 people have signed up for the club. The reading
list is set to begin with Ron Suskind’s “The Price of Loyalty,” a
critical account of the administration based on former Treasury
Secretary John Snow’s experiences in the Bush cabinet. Also planned
for readings are former counter-terrorism advisor Richard Clarke’s
“Against All Enemies,” and “American Dynasty,” by Kevin Phillips,
which describes the Bush family’s rise to prominence in Machiavellian
tones.
“You look at the book review each week and it seems these books
are on the top of the best-seller list,” Fett said.
Clarke’s tome debuted on the Los Angeles Times’ bestseller list
Sunday in the number five slot, accompanied by liberal humorist Al
Franken’s “Lies and the Liars Who Tell Them” and “American Dynasty”
in the eighth and ninth spots. In the twelfth slot was “The Sorrows
of Empire,” written by Chalmers Johnson, a liberal academic who is
heavily critical of U.S. foreign policy.
The conservative fort on the list was held by Fox News commentator
Sean Hannity’s “Deliver us from Evil.”
At Laguna bookshop Latitude 33, “Against All Enemies,” is selling
out, manager Rick Tigert said, noting the anti-Bush trend runs
throughout the publishing industry.
“Every publisher has three to half a dozen anti-Bush books,”
Tigert said.
In addition to books like Clarke’s and Suskind’s, Ricchiazzi said
Laguna conservatives would be glad to offer some of their own picks.
“I’m sure they’d love Bill O’Reilly, Rush Limbaugh,” he said.
The group’s first meeting is scheduled to be a 7 p.m. discussion
on “The Price of Loyalty,” upstairs at Hennessy’s Tavern on 213 Ocean
Ave.
Republicans will be welcome, Fett said.
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