This editorial appeared in The Miami Herald.
That was quite a performance by President Bush on Monday, delivering what he called the "ultimate exit interview." The president was alternately charming, somber, playful and defiant – just as he has been throughout his eight years as commander in chief. With less than a week to go as president, Mr. Bush deserved the stage, the attention and a chance to offer a final report on his achievements and failures.
The only problem was, President Bush offered more wishful thinking than thoughtful reflection, more spin than truth. History will be the judge of whether he got things right, Mr. Bush said. This is true. A starting point for those historians will be to understand that Mr. Bush's imprint on some policies has been so profound that the mere mention of certain words conjures up powerful, deeply disturbing emotions.
For example:
Katrina
Abu Ghraib
Guantánamo
Weapons of mass destruction
Waterboarding
Domestic spying
Rendition
Historians aren't likely to sugar-coat what these words have come to symbolize. Just as the words "Watergate" and "Monica Lewinsky" have come to stand for the wrongs of former presidents Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton, respectively, so, too, will Mr. Bush carry his own rich lexicon into history.
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