17okt00 'The scandal no one cares about
Before he became governor of Texas, George W. Bush allegedly engaged in some questionable stock and real estate transactions. But mainstream media don't seem to care. By Eric Alterman MSNBC CONTRIBUTOR Oct. 16 — The Whitewater scandal has plagued Bill Clinton and obsessed pundits since minute one of his presidency. Al Gore’s frequent exaggerations have inspired enough newspaper stories to fell a thousand forests. Even Hillary Clinton’s commodity trades, which evidenced no apparent wrongdoing and were made by someone who had never run for public office at the time the story arose, were treated as front-page news for weeks. But when a major story breaks that indicates that George W. Bush’s fortune appears to have been constructed on a foundation shakier than anything anyone in Arkansas or the Gore campaign could even have imagined, the media says, "No thanks." If a candidate’s credibility falls in a bunch of shady Texas business deals and no one bothers to look into it, did it really happen? I’M NOT TALKING about Bush’s abysmal record as governor of Texas, where he presided over a steady worsening of the environment and intervened to prevent the state from participating in the CHIP program for children without health care, simultaneously offering generous tax breaks to the wealthy and the oil and gas industry. Those issues, consistently covered, have failed to impress. Perhaps they are too large and too serious. During prosperous times, we prefer our elections to be about kisses and sighs. But everyone, anytime, loves a scandal. And George W. Bush, the failed oil man and successful stadium-builder, looks to be sitting on top of more than his fair share. But where is the New York Times famed Whitewater reporter, Jeff Gerth? Where’s the whole Washington Post special investigations unit? Where is the scandal-mongering Matt Drudge and the Fox factory philandering patrol? Has the media bias that has tilted toward Bush during this entire election cycle silenced newsgatherers on exactly the kind of red-meat story from which they could not remove their fangs during the Clinton presidency? The circumstantial evidence sure looks damning. Here are the facts as we now know them,
thanks to Talk Magazine and the Center for Public Integrity. They are,
I warn in advance, complicated and multi-faceted. Taken together, they
appear to add up to a business ethos that makes Whitewater look like
a Girl Scout cookie sale. All of them deserve, at minimum, a much closer
look. The first discovery of authors Bill Minutaglio and Nancy Beiles
relates to W’s late filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission
of trades he made between 1986 and 1989 of shares of stock in Harken
Energy Corporation, one of his oil companies. Bush managed to escape
SEC sanction despite the fact that he failed to comply with the deadlines
written into law. Because of his tardiness in meeting the regulations,
Bush was able to conceal the fact that he was buying and selling hundreds
of thousands of shares of stock. Because Bush was a director of the
company, this information was something that all shareholders were entitled
to know. Such knowledge is crucial to the fair and open functioning
of the marketplace. While others who have acted similarly have been
hit with fines in the thousands of dollars, and on rare occasion, jail.
But Bush got away without a scratch. The SEC never even raised the issue.
MISLEADING REGULATORS A TEXAS LAND GRAB A state judge eventually ruled that the amount paid to the local homeowners had been well under market value and a bit more was paid in a settlement. But Bush apparently didn’t care. The team got its new stadium and he walked away with $15 million in his pocket. The entire seamy story, however, as the authors point out, gives the lie to Bush’s boast that he wants to "do everything I can to defend the power of private property and private property rights."' ------------ George W. op video terwijl hij
handelt in drugs?
'At the beginning of this article we outlined briefly how a tail number in Barry Seal's [smokkelde drugs voor de CIA] papers started this investigation. It actually began when author [ex-CIA agent] Terry Reed announced at a Los Angeles public gathering in July, 1999 that a video tape might surface during the 2000 Presidential campaign "showing George W and Jeb arriving at Tamiami Airport in 1985 to pick up two kilos of cocaine for a party. Said Reed, "They flew in on a King Air 200." Subsequent statements made by [de inmiddels vermoorde] Barry Seal and recorded in Reed's 1995 book Compromisedrecount how Seal bragged about how he had video of "the Bush boys" doing coke. Other witnesses located by both writers of this story, who were in relevant official positions in 1985, have confirmed that the described Tamiami sting took place. All, in fear for their lives, have refused to go on the record.' ------------ Kritische site over W. Bush: inclusief meer details over de in het MSNBC-artikel beschreven materie. ------------ |