| George
Cannot-Tell-the-Truth Bush-- The Whitehouse's Worst Liar Ever
By Jackson Thoreau
OpEdNews.Com
- I recently celebrated my 45th
birthday on the same day that John F. Kennedy presumably would have
turned 87 had an assassin’s or assassins’ bullets not tragically
ended his life way too soon at age 46.
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- My family left our toy-littered,
roach-infested, two-bedroom, $1,000-a-month castle – hey, we do have
a scenic view from our balcony of some pine trees that block the
parking lot - in the Washington, D.C., area to spend my birthday at
Berkeley Springs, W.V. It’s a relaxing, artsy spa town not unlike
Hot Springs, Ark., where George Washington and others visited more
than 200 years before.
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- Despite my attempts to clear my mind of
things political for a day, it did not work. There were actually fewer
pro-Bush stickers and other material displayed in this small West
Virginia town than I expected. Some vehicles even bore Kerry stickers.
But when we came upon a small natural spring hole designated as
Washington’s 18th century bathtub, I had to remark to my
son, “This was where a much better president than our current one
went to take a bath a long time ago. A loooonnnnggg time ago.”
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- “What’s a president?” he asked,
in the automatic questioning mode of an inquisitive four-year-old.
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- I thought for a moment. “It’s
someone who leads the country and lives in that big White House we saw
in Washington.”
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- He stared at the spring, obviously with
other things on his mind than presidents. “Can I take a bath here,
too?”
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- As my son and his younger sister played
in an adjacent larger spring, I couldn’t help but compare the
“cannot-tell-a-lie” reputation of the country’s first president
to the “cannot-tell-a-true-statement” philosophy of the current
one.
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- And I’m not alone in believing that
Bush is the biggest liar who has occupied the White House, if not
all-time, then in modern times.
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- Princeton University professor and New
York Times columnist Paul Krugman, who was once a junior economics
staffer in the Reagan administration, is among the leading voices
detailing the daily lies of the Bush administration. Here is one
excerpt from a 2002 Krugman column: “The Bush administration lies a
lot….He is as slippery and evasive as any politician in
memory…..The recent spate of articles about administration
dishonesty mainly reflects the campaign to sell war with Iraq. But the
habit itself goes all the way back to the 2000 campaign, and is
manifest on a wide range of issues. High points would include the plan
for partial privatization of Social Security, with its 2-1=4
arithmetic; the claim that a tax cut that delivers 40 percent or more
of its benefits to the richest 1 percent was aimed at the middle
class; the claim that there were 60 lines of stem cells available for
research; the promise to include limits on carbon dioxide in an
environmental plan.”
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- Krugman also noted that “Bush ran
as a moderate, a ‘uniter, not a divider.’ The Economist
endorsed him back in 2000 because it saw him as the candidate better
able to transcend partisanship; now the magazine describes him as the
‘partisan-in-chief.’”
A 2003 Washington Monthly survey of conservative and
progressive pundits and journalists concluded that Bush is a bigger
liar than Reagan, Bush Sr., and Clinton. Among Bush’s lies they
chose was announcing the U.S. had found weapons of mass destruction in
Iraq in May 2003, saying his tax cuts would give middle-class
Americans more than $1,000 each when the super wealthy’s cuts were
factored in to that equation and average payers barely got $200,
saying he’d “been to war” when he used his family connections to
get into the National Guard during the Vietnam War and went AWOL
during more than a year, and promising to expand AmeriCorps in his
2002 State of the Union speech before cutting that program’s budget.
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- The Washington Post's
political beat reporter Dana Milbank, who takes on Democratic
politicians as voraciously as Republicans, wrote that Bush’s
"rhetoric has taken some flights of fancy." To show you how
vindictive and petty the Bush clan is, Milbank became the target of a
White House smear campaign for that relatively light criticism. Even
the conservative Wall Street Journal reported that "senior
[Bush] officials have referred repeatedly to intelligence…..that
remains largely unverified." Even Paul
Sperry, Washington bureau chief for the more
conservative WorldNetDaily.com, wrote in 2003 that Bush lied
about the threat of Iraq before that invasion.
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- Politicians, including former Nixon
aide John Dean and Sen. Harry Reid, a Democrat from Nevada who has
supported Bush on many issues, have publicly called him a
"liar." In Reid’s case, he made the statement in 2002
after Bush approved Nevada's Yucca Mountain as the site for long-term
disposal of tons of radioactive nuclear waste. During the 2000
campaign, Bush, who shows little evidence of having even a superficial
interest in science, had said he would base such a decision on
"sound science, not politics." Other individuals and groups
– from celebrated writer E.L. Doctorow and The Nation’s
David Corn to Bushlies.net and MoveOn.org – have
documented many more lies.
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- The
lies of Bush Jr. are so numerous they not only fill countless articles
and columns, but several books. I contributed to one, Big Bush Lies,
a 270-pp. collection of essays from academics, legal experts,
financial leaders, activists, and journalists. Published by RiverWood
Books of Ashland, Ore., and edited by BushWatch.com founder
Jerry “Politex” Barrett, Big Bush Lies is the most recent
of such books, reaching bookstores in June 2004. I believe it’s also
the most complete and meticulously documented collection, covering
Iraq, foreign policy, national security, the environment, healthcare,
religion, education, women and minority policies, drunk driving, the
National Guard, and other topics in separate chapters. But then, I
have to admit to being a bit biased – at least I admit it, unlike
Bush & Co.
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- The book covers not just the
aforementioned lies, but ones many people seem to forget, ones that
occurred before he took the White House amid lies that he actually won
that election and he and Dick Cheney actually lived in different
states. The lie that Bush won in 2000 has been covered in many places;
for the latter more obscure lie, on Election Day 2000, Cheney still
owned his home in the exclusive Dallas suburb of Highland Park, had a
Texas driver’s license, listed himself as a Texas resident on
income-tax returns, and worked most recently as CEO of oil company
Halliburton’s Dallas office. Cheney got around the Constitution’s
12th Amendment, which states that the president and vice
president have to reside from different states or forfeit that
state’s electoral votes, merely by switching his voter registration
to Wyoming, where he once lived, in July 2000. He continued to live in
the Dallas area; I observed television news reports recording Cheney
coming out of his Texas home several times after Nov. 7, 2000.
Furthermore, Cheney did not sell his $2.2 million, 4,700-square-foot
home until Nov. 30, 2000, well after the election, to Dianne T. Cash,
a wealthy Republican Party and high society donor, Dallas County
records showed. Cash owned another $2.4 million, 6,400-square-foot
home in Highland Park at the same time. From Sept. 2000 until Jan.
2001, Cash gave a whopping $204,433 to national Republican
organizations, in addition to buying Cheney’s house, according to
federal records.
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- Another lie told by Bush that you
probably haven’t heard showed that his falsehood record extended
beyond his years in the White House. Several family members of African
American James Byrd, who was murdered in 1998 by three white men who
chained him to a truck and dragged him to death in Jasper, Tx., said
Bush lied when he told Salon.com that he called family members
to offer condolences as Texas governor. Family members said none of
them received a phone call from Bush, that Bush declined to attend
Byrd's funeral, and he only met with one family member after much
public pressure.
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- Such deceit goes beyond a few simple
misstatements or stretching the truth done by most politicians. With
Bush and other administration officials, lying has become a
long-documented pattern, a policy as sure as tax cuts for the rich,
blood for oil, and world domination.
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- Conservatives like to harp on
Clinton’s “Big Lie” that he had sex with a woman who was not his
wife; beyond the fact that Republicans, including many of the same
ones who condemned Clinton like impeachment committee members Henry
Hyde and Bob Barr, have lied about extramarital affairs, Clinton’s
lie killed no one. The lies that Bush and others told to con us into
invading Iraq have resulted in thousands of deaths and probably
permanent damage to the country’s international reputation. Bush
continues to lie to this day about the threat that Iraq posed before
our invasion, despite evidence to the contrary from the CIA and other
sources that Hussein was contained and did not have weapons of mass
destruction, as the U.S., Israel, and many other countries have.
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- Americans today are bigger targets for
the growing number of terrorists because of the lies of Bush & Co.
We are not safer because of those lies.
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- If Clinton got impeached by the
Republican-controlled U.S. House over a lie that killed no one, Bush
should get banished from the country for life for his lies. But that
won’t happen because Republican hypocrites control Congress. Such is
among the many problems when Americans allow one party to dominate our
political functions.
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- I’m old enough to clearly remember
the lies of Reagan and Bush Sr., many of which were more “honest”
lies – if there is such a thing - than the present filth emanating
from the White House. Reagan Iran-Contra player Oliver North was
honest enough to admit he lied to Congress during that scandal.
Today’s Bush administration not only refuses to admit its lies but
spins them around as a positive course for our nation and world. John
Dean, White House counsel under Nixon, wrote in 2003 that Bush’s
lies “are almost
never justifiable….They are typically of the most serious kind –
lies that misinform the public in such a way as to disrupt the proper
functioning of the democratic process.”
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- I lived through Nixon and Reagan and
Bush Sr., and I’m sure I’ll live through Bush Jr., even if he
steals another election.
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- But I refuse to observe the lies told
by Bush and not raise my voice against them. I refuse to go along with
this policy. I will risk being branded unpatriotic and worse by
Bush-supporting liars and hypocrites.
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- The future of my kids playing in the
tub where the president who reportedly could not tell a lie bathed
depends on it.
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- Jackson Thoreau is a
Washington, D.C.-area journalist/writer. The latest book to which he
contributed, Big Bush Lies, is available from RiverWood Books
of Ashland, Ore., at http://www.riverwoodbooks.com/books/Big-Bush-Lies.html.
- He
can be contacted at jacksonthor@yahoo.com or jacksonthor@justice.com.
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