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A Very Bad Year

by: William Rivers Pitt, t r u t h o u t | Columnist

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George W. Bush presided over a very bad year. (Photo: Getty Images)

There is no present or future, only the past, happening over and over again, now.
- Eugene O'Neill


    The year 2008 began on a Tuesday. Matters went downhill swiftly from there.

    On that first day of 2008, the Taliban threatened to further escalate attacks in Afghanistan, eight people died in Gaza amid the violence of the Fatah-Hamas conflict and US diplomat John Granville was murdered along with his driver in Sudan. After that first day of 2008, the price of crude oil jumped to $100 a barrel, five armed Iranian boats confronted US warships near the Strait of Hormuz and a Taliban attack upon the Serena Hotel in Kabul killed six people. The Pentagon announced they were sending an additional 3,200 marines to Afghanistan, the year's first significant stock market convulsion brought the Dow down 482 points, Barack Obama won Iowa and South Carolina, Clinton won New Hampshire and Florida and George W. Bush delivered the last State of the Union address of his presidency. Edmund Hillary died, Bobby Fischer died and Heath Ledger died. Forty American soldiers died in Iraq, seven American soldiers died in Afghanistan, and that's not nearly all that happened, but that's some of what happened in January of 2008.

    At least 43 people were killed in Baghdad when bombs exploded in two marketplaces, the US military admitted accidentally killing nine civilians south of Baghdad and George W. Bush introduced a $3.1 trillion budget on top of a near-record deficit of $410 billion. Tornados killed 57 people in the Southern US, a $158 billion economic stimulus package failed to pass a procedural vote, but a subsequent $168 billion stimulus package was successfully passed. Hamas launched 20 rockets into Israel, a suicide bomber killed 20 people at a political rally in Pakistan and a car bomb killed 25 people in Iraq. The US Congress voted in favor of granting immunity to the telecommunications companies involved in the NSA surveillance scandal, voted against letting the CIA use "waterboarding" while interrogating prisoners and voted to hold Bush administration officials Harriet Miers and Joshua Bolten in contempt regarding the fired US attorneys scandal. Obama won a bunch of states, Clinton won a bunch of other states and Ralph Nader got into the race. Roy Scheider and William F. Buckley died. Twenty-nine American soldiers died in Iraq, one American soldier died in Afghanistan, and that's not nearly all that happened, but that's some of what happened in February of 2008.

    A US submarine flipped at least one missile into Somalia, two bombs killed 54 people in Baghdad, a bomb was set off outside a US military recruiting center in Times Square and the US began talks with Iraqi officials about establishing the long-term presence of US forces in that country. New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer was implicated in the investigation of a prostitution ring and resigned his office, the US Congress failed to override Bush's veto of the anti-waterboarding legislation and Adm. William Fallon resigned as commander of the US Central Command over disagreements with the Bush administration regarding their posture towards Iran. The value of the US dollar dropped to its lowest point in 13 years, Bear Stearns received emergency funding from JPMorgan Chase and was later bought out by Chase for pennies on the dollar. Obama won some states, Clinton won some other states and McCain won enough states to become the presumed GOP nominee for president. Arthur C. Clark died, Richard Widmark died and Dith Pran died. Thirty-nine American soldiers died in Iraq, eight American soldiers died in Afghanistan and the total number of US soldiers killed in Iraq passed 4,000. That's not nearly all that happened, but that's some of what happened in March of 2008.

    A suicide bomber attacked a checkpoint in Mosul and killed seven people, the US State Department renewed their security contract with Blackwater despite several investigations into that company's involvement in the massacre of Iraqi civilians, gunmen kidnapped 42 university students in Mosul, all of whom were later released unharmed. Twenty people were killed in Sadr City clashes, rockets fell into the US Green Zone in Baghdad, two bombings in Baquba and Ramadi killed 60 people and the massive $736 million US embassy in Iraq opened for business. The Bush administration brought back the one-year Treasury note to combat the onrushing recession, real estate prices plummeted 12.7 percent and consumer confidence dropped again. Clinton won Pennsylvania but lost Mark Penn, the GOP lost Alan Keyes and John McCain kept on rolling. Charlton Heston died and Albert Hoffman died. Fifty-two American soldiers died in Iraq, five American soldiers died in Afghanistan, and that's not nearly all that happened, but that's some of what happened in April of 2008.

    The Fed auctioned off $24.12 billion in Treasury securities to try and blunt the impact of the subprime mortgage crisis, crude oil futures reached $130 for the first time in history, US home prices dropped 14.1 percent and the US Congress approved a $300 billion loan to help homeowners avoid foreclosure. Cyclone Nargis killed nearly 30,000 people in Burma, dozens were killed and wounded in Iraq during fighting between Iraqi militias and US forces, suicide bombers killed dozens more in and around Baghdad and an independent investigation into Pentagon spending on Iraq contracts found that 95 percent of the billions of dollars spent could not be accounted for. Obama won some states, Clinton won some other states and the Democratic primary season inched closer to a final conclusion. Willis Lamb and Sydney Pollack died. Nineteen American soldiers died in Iraq, 17 American soldiers died in Afghanistan, and that's not nearly all that happened, but that's some of what happened in May of 2008.

    A suicide bomber killed eight people outside the Danish embassy in Pakistan, US forces accidentally killed ten Pakistani soldiers in an airstrike, two bombs killed 12 people at a train station in Algeria and a car bomb killed 51 people at a bus station in Baghdad. Wachovia fired its CEO over the subprime crisis, AIG fired its CEO over the subprime crisis, General Motors announced the closing of several factories and the elimination of 10,000 jobs, two Bear Stearns executives were arrested on criminal charges and the price of a barrel of crude oil spiked $11 in one day. A bill to lower greenhouse gas emissions died in Congress after being successfully filibustered by Senate Republicans, and flooding in Wisconsin, Indiana and Iowa killed ten people. Clinton officially conceded defeat, making Obama the presumptive Democratic nominee for president. Bo Diddley died, Tim Russert died and George Carlin died. Twenty-nine American soldiers died in Iraq, 28 American soldiers died in Afghanistan, and that's not nearly all that happened, but that's some of what happened in June of 2008.

    Starbucks closed 600 coffee shops in the US, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke assured Congress that neither Fannie May nor Freddie Mac were in danger of failing and GOP Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska was indicted. The Pentagon extended the 24th Marine Expeditionary Force's tour of duty in Afghanistan, an explosion near the Red Mosque in Pakistan killed ten people, a car bomb killed 41 people outside the Indian embassy in Afghanistan, another suicide bomber killed 18 people near a Pakistani police station, a suicide bomber killed 35 people in Baquba and Iran test-fired nine long- and medium-range missiles. A global study of coral reefs determined that one-third of the world's coral-building species faced extinction, wildfires in California forced 10,000 people to evacuate and George W. Bush lifted the ban on offshore oil drilling. Jesse Helms died, Tony Snow died and Estelle Getty died. Thirteen American soldiers died in Iraq, 20 American soldiers died in Afghanistan, and that's not nearly all that happened, but that's some of what happened in July of 2008.

    US unemployment rose to 5.7 percent, the highest level in four years, 12 people were killed when a minibus exploded in Baghdad and 21 street cleaners were killed by an explosion in Somalia. The Georgia-Ossetia conflict erupted, thousands of civilians were killed and GOP presidential candidate John McCain declared all Americans to be Georgians. Taliban fighters forced the retreat of Pakistani soldiers from the Afghan border and later attacked a US base in the Khost province. The US inked a missile shield deal with Poland, causing Russia to declare Poland a "legitimate military target" that had "opened itself to a nuclear strike." Conservative columnist Robert Novak retired, former Democratic Senator and vice-presidential candidate John Edwards admitted to cheating on his cancer-stricken wife, the Democratic National Convention nominated Barack Obama for president and GOP presidential candidate John McCain chose Sarah Palin to be his running mate. Bernie Mac and Isaac Hayes died. Twenty-three American soldiers died in Iraq, 22 American soldiers died in Afghanistan, and that's not nearly all that happened, but that's some of what happened in August of 2008.

    The Republican National Convention nominated John McCain and Sarah Palin for president and vice president and Jack Abramoff was sentenced to four years in prison for his role in the US lobbying scandal. The US economy lost 84,000 jobs, the US government took Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac into conservatorship, Washington Mutual fired its CEO over the subprime mortgage crisis and HP announced they were eliminating nearly 25,000 jobs. In the space of 48 hours, AIG asked the US government for a $40 billion loan to save it from collapse, Bank of America bought Merrill Lynch, Citibank acquired Wachovia, Lehman Brothers filed Chapter 11 and the Dow dropped more than 500 points. The US government loaned AIG more than $80 billion, a car bomb in northern Pakistan killed more than 30 people, video surfaced implicating the US military in the bombing deaths of more than 90 civilians in Afghanistan, a car bomb killed 32 people in Iraq, five explosions in India killed 30 people, the Marriott Hotel in Pakistan was bombed and Hurricane Ike made its deadly landfall in Texas. David Foster Wallace and Paul Newman died. Twenty-five American soldiers died in Iraq, 27 American soldiers died in Afghanistan, and that's not nearly all that happened, but that's some of what happened in September of 2008.

    The Senate approved a massive $700 billion bailout plan aimed at salvaging the American economy, Bush signed it, the Dow dropped 800 points in its single largest loss on record and retail sales plummeted for the third straight month. A senior British military commander was quoted as saying that victory in Afghanistan would be impossible to achieve, a suicide bomber killed 27 people in Pakistan, a suicide bomber killed 25 people in Sri Lanka, the Taliban executed 30 people they had kidnapped in Afghanistan, a series of bomb blasts killed 66 people and wounded nearly 500 in India, North Korea threatened to turn South Korea into "debris" and US forces attacked a civilian building in Syria. The NSA was accused of listening in on thousands of telephone conversations between Americans at home and Americans abroad, including conversations between US soldiers serving overseas and their families and two white supremacists were arrested for plotting to assassinate Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama. Tony Hillerman and Studs Terkel died. Fourteen American soldiers died in Iraq, 16 American soldiers died in Afghanistan, and that's not nearly all that happened, but that's some of what happened in October of 2008.

    The Alaskan legislature concluded that Gov. Sarah Palin acted improperly in the "Troopergate" scandal, which mattered little after the McCain/Palin GOP presidential ticket was soundly thrashed at the polls by the Democratic presidential ticket of Barack Obama and Joe Biden. The passage of Proposition 8 ended same-sex marriages in California and inspired protests by millions of people in 300 cities. An anonymous hold by a GOP senator disrupted the mandated oversight of the $700 billion bailout deal, an explosion on a Minibus killed 11 people in Russia, five Guantanamo detainees were ordered released by a US judge and terrorist attacks in Mumbai, India's financial heartland, killed hundreds of people. Unemployment levels in the US reached their highest level in 14 years, a second bailout of AIG cost taxpayers an additional $150 billion, retail chain Circuit City filed for Chapter 11 and the euro zone entered the first official recession in its history. Citigroup announced the elimination of 75,000 jobs and got $32 billion from the US government, Pepsi announced 3,000 layoffs and representatives from the "Big Three" automakers began pushing for a bailout of their crippled industry. Two people were shot to death in a Toys 'R Us in California and a Wal-Mart employee was trampled to death in New York on the first official day of the Christmas shopping season. Michael Crichton and Mitch Mitchell died. Seventeen American soldiers died in Iraq, one American soldier died in Afghanistan, and that's not nearly all that happened, but that's some of what happened in November of 2008.

    GOP Sen. Saxby Chambliss won re-election, O.J. Simpson was sentenced to prison and Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich was arrested for his role in a vast pay-for-play bribery scheme involving, among other things, the open Senate seat recently vacated by president-elect Obama. The Tribune Company filed for Chapter 11, Sony announced the elimination of 8,000 jobs and the closure of 10 percent of its manufacturing facilities, the "Big Three" automotive industry bailout staggered to and fro in Washington, hundreds of thousands in New England lost electrical power for more than a week after a massive ice storm struck the region and the US consumer price index fell to its lowest point since the Great Depression. A suicide bomber killed ten people in Afghanistan, a bomb in Pakistan killed 17 people and rioters turned Athens into a war zone. A suicide bomber killed 48 people in Iraq, four Royal Marines were killed in Afghanistan, Pakistan deployed thousands of troops along the Indian border amid rising tensions after the Mumbai attacks, Israel launched a massive attack against Hamas and an Iraqi journalist threw his shoes at George W. Bush. Odetta died, Bettie Page died, Deep Throat died, Harold Pinter died, Eartha Kitt died and Freddie Hubbard died. Twelve American soldiers died in Iraq, three American soldiers died in Afghanistan, and that's not nearly all that happened, but that's some of what happened in December of 2008.

    Happy New Year. Who else needs a drink?

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William Rivers Pitt is a New York Times and internationally bestselling author of two books: "War on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You to Know" and "The Greatest Sedition Is Silence." His newest book, "House of Ill Repute: Reflections on War, Lies, and America's Ravaged Reputation," is now available from PoliPointPress.

Comments

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There are a few people in

There are a few people in this nation whose vision of our past, present, and future inform my sense of where this nation is and where it is going and you Mr. Pitts are definately on my top list. I raise a toast to you. The other three are Chalmer Johnson who informs me of the military, Noam Chomsky who informs me of the overall culture, Robert Perry who tells me where we have been, and people like Michelle Goldberg who give me a sense of the use of religion and power in the future. Religion coupled with power and spread through the world as pretense creatnig murder, rape, war, and the rest and gets my top vote for the specific cultural cancer which must be reassessed and evaluated. Many now know the sins of the past which have greatly distorted the Pentagon and CIA. Culture needs new memes if we are to survive either as the living or the dead, for the dead cannot remember if there is noone left to remember. I had hoped that my joy of having Obama elected would last but the past is still with us wrecking havoc. Until we go back to the past and remember this past ( Iran Contras etc.) we will forever be a lost nation. Personally, on this New Years Eve, I am toasting myself for having had to put up with this nonsense of a world gone mad since birth and somehow still living life in the midst of so much suffering and fear. Don't despair. As Walter Benjamin, the Jew informed me - " there is a messiah behind every door" - lets find this door together, all of us, in 2009. Thanks Mr. Pitts.

"Citibank acquired

"Citibank acquired Wachovia" Actually, Wells Fargo acquired Wachovia, which is trivial, but small errors make the rest of the facts suspect.

I liked the part with the

I liked the part with the shoes.

What happened to Bernie

What happened to Bernie Madoff?

hey, this is a litany of

hey, this is a litany of woes. all factually correct but also incomplete. how about some of the highlights...i know there were some. its amazing that you don't even mention the historic and amazing election that took place in november. and the response from all over the world.... yes, i agree things are very very bad. but we also have an opportunity to recreate our world so that we don't leave such a mess for our children. that takes more than politics...it takes vision and will. do we have what it takes?

Is that all that's troubling

Is that all that's troubling you, Bucky?? Well walk with your head up, your nose clean and Never Give Up That Ship!!

This sounds like a

This sounds like a modernized version of DanteΒ΄s Inferno. And this year we are going to be hit in the face with the "real" or "pragmatist" Obama who will usher in new untold horrors of additional karma for our nation with his bootlicking policies in favor of Israel... pass the bottle, Will, forget the glass!!...

ah'come on!-- as the 2004

ah'come on!-- as the 2004 Dallas radio host said: 'the war in Iraq has been good for Texas' and might add the rich aquiring more wealth as it is redistributed away from everyone else. That is all that counts and the past 8 years have been the BEST.

Certainly some good things

Certainly some good things must have happened last year. Perhaps if we spend as much time searching for small victories as we do for large defeats, we will have more inspiration to continue "fighting the good fight," as opposed to contine being incredibly knowledgeable about how we are being defeated.

Thanks for the cheering up,

Thanks for the cheering up, WP - but ya forgot THE most important event of the entire year: Brittany. Is. Back.

Thanks Pitt. Yes - some

Thanks Pitt. Yes - some good stuff happened. The rich got richer. Billion dollar bailouts for the corpo class. Err,,, ummm. The peasants did not revolt. The end of days did not happen and the loud barking of my dog deterred terrorists from attacking the neighborhood. I also don't have as much cash in my 401k to fret about. My home value decreased 20% but my property taxes went up in dollars per k and in real dollars - go figure. That means I don't have as much cash inmy checking account to worry about either. Gas is really affordable now. But I don't have a job to go to yet. I have lots of stuff though. But the best thing, the very bestest thing that happened, is that Obama was ELECTED to be the leader of our country. It is certainly refreshing to see a president take office after winning an election. For the first time in 8 years I feel some hope for the future. Happy new year all!

You know no matter how we

You know no matter how we look at this year, 2008, so much was just plain old bad. Mr. Pitt, in his bleak depiction of things, really gives us the reason we should still have hope and I think it's clear to everyone how much we need to change our priorities as individuals and as a nation. Arrogance, entitlement, a legal system that has run amuck, are just a few more examples of things that need to change. Personally, life for me this year changed after the sudden death of my dear brother. At 53 years old, he decided to call it quits. He has inspired his family to push on and push through and believe that there is hope. But again thank you Mr. Pitt for calling 2008(the spade) a spade.

I don't know, my hope is

I don't know, my hope is Obama will bring the change he talks about bringing. He will definitely get his chance. However, if he turns out to be nothing but the same version of what passes for leadership in our country, I see only one solution to finally getting the change and that is by the people taking it. And by taking it I mean "taking it to the streets". Forcing our collective will on the government may become the only way we will finally get a government that is truly by, for and of the people.

Change means forced

Change means forced restructering the Wall Street Banks and AIG. If it's good enough for Detroit, it's good enough for Wall Street. Change means having a new Fed chair that's not in the pocket of the wealthy, how about Joseph Stiglitz? He has a noble prize, Larry Summers has his fingerprints all over deregulation, say Gram, Leach Bliley, 1999. Change means having Detroit make cars and trucks that people will buy in five years. These cars are not in the deal now. Giving Detroit a hundred billion on restructuring is throwing the money away unless they can reestablish market share. Change is serious energy reform. The worthless Cap and Trade is as wrong as Nuclear power. Change means new systems of energy, all possible but backed by few lobbists. Change means informed citizens. Change means taking on Congress for the will of the people. As long as we continue to bailout a broken financial system, play games with energy, play politics with massive donars to both parties, nothing really will have changed and our golden opportunity will have passed and the curse to our children and grandchildren will damn them to a world none of us can imagine. We have an opportunity now but the visionaries are still in the wilderness. I have little faith in Obama, his picks are poor, he has to prove to me he will make the right changes. I do have faith in the people who hoped so much for Obama. Keep your hopes alive, it's time for phase two, pass the laws we need to move forward and fix our problems or Asia rules the century and we become the beggars suffocated by a hundred years of debt paying off the Financial house of cards.

Looks like I picked the

Looks like I picked the wrong year to quit sniffing glue...

Yes, 2008 was surely our

Yes, 2008 was surely our annis horribilis(sp?), and we have been dragged down in the dirt by our elected embezzlers. We also got a smart and humane man elected to take over from Chimpy McBush and his coterie of criminals. We will have change, and we will rise again, as soon as we recover from the global depression into which this Republican administration has shepherded us. But we will rise, we will recover, we will once again be proud of our leadership.

The most tragic thing that

The most tragic thing that happened in our family last year was the blinding of our beloved son in Baghdad while serving as a medic. As a result I have been a bit oblivious to the above mentioned woes in the world in 2008. Shocking to admit. The one thing standing for good that I had once clung to, Christianity, has taken a hard hit with me over the past several years. So much of the evil done in the name and face of religion has given me a sort of pity for Christ, what with all the pain and suffering brought about by evoking his good name. That said, I have left my formal LDS religion behind as I watched its members enthusiastically embrace and support the obvious corruptions of our government, this horrific war, and then put all those nearly 100 millions of dollars to defeat - not poverty, not starvation in homeless children - but that evil of all evils, gay marriage. Get thee behind me, Christianity.

It's time some magazine came

It's time some magazine came up with a "Worst Man of the Year" cover. We all know who that would be, but he would be vying for it with a million others. William, thank you for stating the list I have been gathering in my head for eight long, wait, there are still 18 days left, feels like years. Our nightmare is not over. It is going to take a while to recover from the economic devastation, the contract on the middle class, and Bush's World War III.

Ny heart goes out to those

Ny heart goes out to those of you who....had a son blinded in Iraq...and lost your brother to suicide.

There are only seventeen

There are only seventeen days left until Zippy the Pinhead officially leaves the White House for good. I won't feel at ease until they've checked to see that he's actually gone and that he didn't light any fuses or push any red buttons on his way out. Fifteen rounds with Ali in his prime could not be half as punishing as these last eight years have been. A drink you ask? How 'bout we lock ourselves in the distillery for a month or so?

The nightmare of

The nightmare of unemployment, no health insurance, foreclosure, and a new generation of war vets on the streets homeless will not end on Jan. 20, 2009. This country has a few weeks left of the first openly Fascist co-dictatorship in our history: Bush/Cheney. Unlike Franco or Salazar, they aren't in power until their deaths, but like Pinochet, eventually leaving office because an election and the Constitution call for their end to power. The Constitution: it's a wonder it still exists, as these two traitorous gangsters did all they could to shred the most most important civil liberties guaranteed by it: the right to habeas corpus and privacy. The Repugnantcan right is already planning to torpedo any progressive legislation in the Senate and House, and with Pelosi and Reid as those responsible to garner the votes for passage of these bills, I'm a bit pessimistic. Obama will have to use all his executive order powers to undue much of what Bush/Cheney have done. I'd rather see the democratic process work out in the halls of Congress, but Repugnantcans aren't about to roll over and play dead, and will continue to do all they can for their base: the haves and have mores, and the religious Christianist right. Many on that side might have abandoned Bush/Cheney during this past election cycle, but they aren't about to give up on the aim of enriching the rich and taking from the poor and middle class to do so.

I have very limited hopes

I have very limited hopes that human behavior will really change on any fundamental level. Kids still play and worship violent video games; football and other essentially violent competitive sports are worshipped universally and are the basis of multimillion dollar industries when they are really little more than ersatz "war"; 'businessmen" still feel it right, proper and appropriate to profit off of poor or vulnerable people and to lie cheat, manipulate an d steal; guns, missiles, bombs and weapons are still manufactured; boxing, ultimate fighting and the like are still promoted, encouraged allowed and televised; and crime, theft, muggings, carjackings, robberies, home invasions, rapes and murders continue unabated. Maybe some day we will make the connection and clearly see that ALL of these things are interconnected and stop feeding into the whole loop, but I'm not holding my breath. War is terrible, violence begets more violence, and hatred, dishonesty, fighting and tyranny are all things we can do without.