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The charming cultural decency of Bush 41

Everyone seems to have his own George H.W. Bush story. I’ll give one that gives an insight into this man’s character.

Some years ago, we were at his home in Kennebunkport after having sped across the water in his infamous speedboat for lunch (yes, with Secret Service chase boats hopelessly trying to keep up).

We were going to say our goodbyes when the former president asked me to accompany him upstairs to his simple office. He fired up his computer and entered an address. Howard Stern’s face popped up.

The president hit some commands and a page opened with a perfectly obscene pictorial about his son.

He pointed at it and then turned to me with a strained expression.

“Do people really do this to people?” he asked.

He couldn’t understand it.

He opened a second link. More of the same, aimed at someone else (maybe himself; I can’t remember). Again the sad look.

Again the question: “Why do people do this?” He opened a third one. Same question, same answer.

There were those who had accused him of being hopelessly out of touch with the common man because he allegedly wasn’t familiar with bar codes. In this sense, I suppose they were right. I was looking at a man who was innocent, to the point of ignorance, about this damaged element in the American cultural soul.

The man who could laugh at himself so publicly couldn’t understand why anyone would find such viciousness to be amusing.

This was the former leader of the free world and a warrior. He was also a husband and a father seemingly crushed by such incivility.

I thought about him while reviewing these recent quotes, from another publication. How would he have reacted to them?

• New York Times columnist Bret Stephens on Sen. Ted Cruz: “(H)e’s like a serpent covered in Vaseline. … he’s the type of man who would sell his family into slavery if that’s what it took to get elected. And that he would use said slavery as a sob story to get himself re-elected.”

• CNN host Don Lemon on Trump supporters: “We’re up against people who will lie, steal and cheat, lie to their own mother, lie to themselves about what’s right for this country, about truth and about facts.”

• On ABC’s “The View,” Joy Behar on President Trump: “(H)e realizes that women like him less than menstrual cramps,” and the women who still like him “don’t know the difference between a predator and a protector.”

• On HBO, “comedian” Sarah Silverman on Trump: “In a time … where anti-Semitic crime is up 57 percent since this douchebag has taken office, it is not lost on me that I am very lucky that I get a star and I don’t have to sew it on my clothes.”

• ABC late-night host Jimmy Kimmel: “I think there’s a compromise here, and … hear me out on this. So Kavanaugh gets confirmed to the Supreme Court. OK. Well, in return, we get to cut that pesky penis of his off in front of everyone.”

• Comedian and Viceland host Tom Arnold on Twitter: “Alcoholism stunts your emotional growth so if you start drinking alcoholically as a teenager you stay a teenager emotionally until you deal with it. Explains a lot about Brett Kavanaugh. From his combative behavior yesterday to his unusual bond with teenage girls basketball teams.”

I didn’t know the president well, though I always considered him one of the most decent men this country has produced in my lifetime.

I’m glad I told him so directly. I never saw him again, so I don’t know to what degree he tuned in to that world of such human depravity.

I hope he didn’t.

I hope President George H.W. Bush remained hopelessly naive.

Bozell is president of the Media Research Center.

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