Guest guest Posted August 14, 2002 Report Share Posted August 14, 2002 All The King's Horses By William Rivers Pitt t r u t h o u t | Opinion Wednesday, 14 August, 2002 My last column in this space was entitled 'Bush the Idiot or Bush the Fiend.' It wondered, in short, whether George W. Bush was a dullard or a despot. I received a great deal of mail in response to this piece. Some believed him a fool, and others a criminal. The great majority of respondents, however, delineated a third prospect that is far more likely, one that I failed to mention. It seems most people believe Bush has as much control over the ways and means of governing as a potted plant has control over the ways and means of the sun. A little analysis of the situation demonstrates that the majority of those who wrote me regarding this third option are absolutely correct. We could freeze George W. Bush in carbonite like Han Solo, hang him on a wall like a tapestry, and the machinery of his administration would hum along with nary a hiccup. Ergo, attacking George W. Bush for his policies and politics is about as useful as attacking the aforementioned potted plant because it is too hot outside. One has no say regarding the other. There is no question that his administration must be reined in and brought to heel for the sake of our economy, our environment, our safety and our democracy. Attacking Bush himself, however, will yield nothing in the end. One must look elsewhere to find the power. In finding it, one must locate the soft spots. Let us look first to those within his administration who are clearly and actively rowing the oars on this ship of state. Richard " Dick " Cheney As a Wyoming Congressman, Dick Cheney voted against the Clean Water Act, against any sanctions for air polluters, against the Head Start program, and against anything having to do with affirmative action. Ten different times he voted against economic sanctions to be imposed upon apartheid-era South Africa, and was one of only two who voted against a resolution demanding the release of Nelson Mandela. When questioned by the press about his voting record during the 2000 campaign, Cheney said, " The American people want to hear about the future, not the past. " The media said, " Yes, sir, " and proceeded to fulminate about the proper pronunciation of his last name. As Secretary of Defense during the first Bush administration, Cheney stomped all over the freedom of the press during the Gulf War. A Time Magazine photojournalist named Warren Bocxe was detained by American forces on Cheney's orders for 30 hours for violating the unprecedented restrictions that were placed upon the media during that conflict. During the war, Cheney vastly overstated the accuracy of American missile strikes when presenting 'information' to the media, and went out of his way to cover up deadly mistakes. David Hackworth, a former Army colonel who reported on the war for Newsweek, said in the aftermath, " The American people did not get the truth. " In the interim between his Bush gigs, Cheney became CEO of Halliburton Petroleum Corporation. During his five years there, Halliburton feasted upon the American corporate welfare system, gathering nearly $2 billion in taxpayer-funded loans from the government - in the five years before his arrival, Halliburton only got $100 million in government loans. Cheney secured $2.3 billion in government contracts while in charge, double the amount Halliburton had before he came aboard. Also during Cheney's time, Halliburton turned a tidy sum through sales to Iraq, earning $23.8 million. Technically, Halliburton did not violate the sanctions against Iraq because it used European subsidiaries to do the deal. Unfortunately for anyone with money in the stock market generally, or anyone holding Halliburton stock specifically, Cheney seems to have been better at locking up journalists than running a business. While CEO, Cheney oversaw the purchase of Dresser Industries by Halliburton, despite the fact that Dresser had 292,000 claims for asbestos-caused health problems pending against it. Cheney badly underestimated the liability of these claims, and Halliburton stock got clobbered soon after the merger. The SEC is currently investigating Cheney and Halliburton for overstating its profitability by $100 million, an action familiar to the executives of WorldCom and Enron. The accounting firm that approved this book-cooking, incidentally, was Arthur Andersen. John Ashcroft Ashcroft was controversial from the word " go. " He was nominated for the position of Attorney General, the most powerful law enforcement position in the country, despite a voting record and pattern of action during his time in the Senate that is truly chilling when one considers our current situation. In his six years as a Senator, Ashcroft introduced or sponsored seven different constitutional amendments, including one in 1996 that would have made it laughably easy to amend the constitution. Given his efforts to undermine the separation of church and state while a Senator, the intentions behind this last attempted amendment are clear. Another of his proffered constitutional amendments sought to destroy a woman's reproductive rights, even in cases of rape or incest. Ashcroft the Missouri Senator opposed the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, designed to protect workers from discrimination based upon race. He opposed the Hate Crimes Prevention Act. He opposed the federal ban on assault weapons like the AK-47. He voted against clean water protections, and sponsored legislation to limit Clinton administration restrictions on greenhouse emissions. Ashcroft the Missouri Attorney General and Governor opposed school desegregation ordered by the federal courts, going so far as to oppose a voluntary desegregation plan in St. Louis. These last facts jibe disturbingly with the fact that Ashcroft publicly praised Southern Partisan Magazine, a publication that has espoused the belief that slavery was beneficial to slaves. As Dick Cheney said during the 2000 campaign, the past is prologue. History has swept John Ashcroft along with the rest of us in the aftermath of September 11th, and has left our essential constitutional protections in the hands of a man who is far outside the American mainstream. Since 9/11, Ashcroft has helped to craft the PATRIOT Anti-Terrorism bill which sailed through a timorous Congress that feared its mail. That Act allowed virtually unchecked surveillance of any American citizen suspected of terrorist activities, and allows the FBI to investigate on a whim any political or religious group for the same reasons. In the first draft of the Act, Ashcroft erased Habeas Corpus, the beating heart of our system of laws and civil protections. That action was later corrected, but the fact that it happened in the first place speaks volumes about a man who spent a great deal of time while a Senator trying to rewrite the constitution. More recently, Ashcroft put forth a program called TIPS - Terrorist Information and Prevention Service - that would involve mail carriers, meter readers, cable installers and any other manner of individuals who perform services within private homes spying on fellow citizens. Ashcroft believed this network of informants would keep terrorism at bay; critics saw a homegrown network that would report any manner of perceived wrongdoing through the prying eyes of citizen spies. Though Ashcroft denied that a database would be created to capture any and all allegations against American citizens in perpetuity, it stands to reason that local FBI offices would hold on to reports of allegations - including the raft of false accusations that would inevitably come - as a matter of course. So many people were outraged by the TIPS Program that it died a swift death - or did it? A reporter from Salon who signed up for the program on the day it was announced called the TIPS Hotline recently to see about his application. His call was routed, not to the FBI, but to the Fox television program " America's Most Wanted. " Fox has denied any associations with TIPS. There are, literally, legions of people like this populating the ranks of the Bush administration at this very moment. I could spend another 3,000 words describing the career record and mindset of Undersecretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, a truly frightening individual. I could spend another 3,000 words describing Richard Perle, a man who has carried the nickname " The Prince of Darkness " for thirty years in Washington, a man who pulls all the strings on Wolfowitz. These men are avowed war-hawks to a degree that is terrifying, and they are calling the shots along with Cheney and Ashcroft. Do a Google.com search using their names and see for yourself. There is another 10,000 words in the corporate sponsorship standing behind Bush: Arthur Andersen, Enron and Citigroup appear on the list of the top 15 donors to his 2000 campaign, and that is but the tip of the iceberg. My readers are smarter than I am. I had it in the back of my head to mention the puppet-like nature of George W. Bush, but I did not do so in my last article. The good readers of Truthout called me on it, and rightly so. In the very near future, I will dedicate a few thousand words to Messrs. Wolfowitz and Perle, and to some other nefarious interests who happen to be running the show at the moment. In the meantime, let us remember the potted plant named George W. Bush. It is not in control of the events that surround it, and yet it is an evil weed. If it is to be removed from our garden, the roots must be pulled up from the darkness that protects them. A plant will wither without nourishment; Bush will wither when those who run his administration become check-mated and exposed. Basically, we're talking about gardening. ------- William Rivers Pitt is a teacher from Boston, MA. His new book, 'The Greatest Sedition is Silence,' will be published soon by Pluto Press. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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