Addicted To Bush 2 !link! May 2026

We became addicted to the outrage. We needed the caricature of the dim-witted Texan to define our own intelligence. We needed the "Decider" to justify our own political nihilism. We weren't just watching news; we were mainlining a narrative. Here is where the addiction turned toxic. We built an entire media ecosystem designed to feed this habit. MSNBC and Fox News stopped reporting on the Bush administration and started reacting to it 24/7.

We were addicted to the drama of the man. And now, with the benefit of hindsight, we need to examine what that addiction did to our political nervous system. Every addiction starts with a hook. For Bush, that hook was 9/11.

Until we learn to tolerate the boredom of normal politics, we will never truly be sober. We will simply be waiting for the next cowboy to come riding over the hill, ready to give us another fix. addicted to bush 2

Whether we loved him or hated him, we couldn’t look away. In the recovery rooms of political discourse, we’re finally admitting the truth: The 43rd President wasn’t just a leader; he was a fix. He was the 24-hour news cycle’s cocaine, the comedian’s free base, and the pundit’s opioid all rolled into a pair of ill-fitting cowboy boots.

Suddenly, politics felt boring. We needed another hit. We needed the next villain. We needed the next "You’re doing a heck of a job, Brownie." We had been trained to consume politics as a spectacle of personality, not a process of policy. Recovery is hard. Look at the political landscape today. The names have changed, but the addiction remains. We still chase the high of the 24-hour scandal. We still crave the villain. We still confuse volume for virtue. We became addicted to the outrage

The Bush era taught us that we can survive a terrible addiction. But it also taught us that we will claw our way back to the dealer the moment things get quiet.

In the months following the attacks, the nation needed a certain kind of high: decisive, simplistic, and visceral. Bush provided "The Axis of Evil," "Mission Accomplished," and the thrill of hunting for WMDs. It was a raw, emotional power trip. For a moment, the fuzzy ambiguity of the 90s vanished. You were either with us or against the terrorists. We weren't just watching news; we were mainlining

When everything is a crisis, nothing is a crisis. We forgot how to live at a baseline level of political sobriety. Then came November 4, 2008. The drug was gone. The "W." era ended. And the nation went into immediate withdrawal.

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