I don’t think Rove was a racist either. I see Rove as an amoral opportunist who was willing to use other people’s racism if it helped get his candidate elected.
Bush’s flaw on the subject was that he didn’t see racism as a problem that he needed to address. He probably felt that as long as he wasn’t personally racist, he didn’t have a duty to do anything about the existence of racism in general. Which arguably is an acceptable attitude for the average citizen but is unacceptable for a President.
To tie this back into what Kanye originally said, I don’t think he despises poor people, he just doesn’t care what happens to them or anyone else not like him is station.
Yeah, I don’t think it rises to hatred or even contempt. It was sheer indifference – almost an obliviousness to their very existence. His entire life has taken place within an isolated bubble of aristocratic privilege and entitlement. In his universe, poor people are only there to wash the dishes and drive his limos. They are beneath notice. They aren’t real. The only real people are other rich people.
While I don’t believe Bush is racist, I do believe he is gullible enough to swallow a denial from one of his trusted henchmen when, and if, he ever asked him about this incident. This is after all a guy who tricked himself into believing a lot of things during his administration, in spite of much evidence contradicting many of said things.
Actually, I read somewhere (I think it might have been Game Change or something, but maybe not. One of the insider political books) that the plane picture was Rove’s idea because he actually thought it would make W looked caring and involved. It did just the opposite, obviously, but it was a posed photo, not something the media did to him.
I would add that he never suffered any real consequences of his bad behavior when he was growing up (getting off a drunk driving charge, using cocaine, bailed out from bankruptcy, etc.). You can blame president Bush II for the misery he brought upon himself and the nation, but you can’t discount the fact that his parents, and to a lesser extent, his friends were unwilling to let him suffer the consequences for his bad choices. He then surrounded himself with people who were willing to maintain that illusion not only for him, but themselves on a national scale.
It’s like Nixon in a dry frat house without the paranoia.
I wonder if Bush I and Barbara are haunted by this. Not that it really matters, I guess.