Part 1 of 2: Riding his predecessor's coattails into an office that had already gone off the rails, George H.W. Bush didn’t bother asking where the brakes were. He put the pedal to the metal. He and his successors put power on a fast and dangerous track with emergency authorizations, executive orders, surveillance dragnets, corporate and banking bailouts, and forever wars, all designed to look strong on TV and in social media feeds. They used every crisis as an excuse for a procedural shortcut, and then turned every shortcut into precedent. The Oval Office became a reflex factory: act fast and first, don't apologize, and deal with governing when the cameras are gone. Hesitation is failure, restraint is bad business. In this first part of a two-part episode, we'll cover Bush 41 and Bill "Slick Willy" Clinton.