Home  >  Community  >  The Vendio Round Table  >  Carlyle Group Surfaces Again


<< previous topic post new topic post reply next topic >>
 Antiquary
 
posted on August 6, 2002 05:59:59 AM new
Interesting how it's so interwoven with Bush family history. But the column referenced below also provides good information about Bush's involvement with Caterair. Why do you suppose he would make so much effort to expunge this incident from his biography?


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A48301-2002Aug6.html

 
 Antiquary
 
posted on August 6, 2002 06:27:15 AM new
LOL! I found the answer to my question in this editorial from the NY Times. Changing history or removing history is now policy with the executive branch apparently. I seem to recall prior incidents with this administration.



The Memory Hole
By PAUL KRUGMAN


Winston Smith, the protagonist of George Orwell's "Nineteen Eighty-Four," was a rewrite man. His job was to destroy documents that could undermine the government's pretense of infallibility, and replace them with altered versions.
Lately, Winston Smith has gone to Washington. I'm sure that lots of history is being falsified as you read this — there are several three-letter agencies I don't trust at all — but two cases involving the federal budget caught my eye.

First is the "Chicago line." Shortly after Sept. 11, George W. Bush told his budget director that the only valid reasons to break his pledge not to run budget deficits would be if the country experienced recession, war or national emergency. "Lucky me," he said. "I hit the trifecta."
When I first reported this remark, angry readers accused me of inventing it. Mr. Bush, they said, is a decent man who would never imply that the nation's woes had taken him off the hook, let alone make a joke out of it.

Soon afterward, the trifecta story became part of Mr. Bush's standard stump speech. It always gets a roar of appreciative laughter from Republican audiences.
So what's the Chicago line? In his speeches, Mr. Bush claims to have laid out the criteria for running a deficit when visiting Chicago during the 2000 campaign. But there's no evidence that he said anything of the sort during the campaign, in Chicago or anywhere else; certainly none of the reporters who were with him can remember it. (The New Republic, which has tracked the claim, titled one of its pieces "Stop him before he lies again." In fact, during the campaign his budget promises were unqualified, for good reason. If he had conceded that future surpluses were not guaranteed, voters might have wondered whether it was wise to lock in a 10-year tax cut.

About that 10-year tax cut: It basically takes place in two phases. Phase I, which has mainly happened already, is a smallish tax cut for the middle class. Phase II, which won't be completed until 2010, is a considerably larger cut that goes mostly to the richest 1 percent of taxpayers.
That two-phase structure offers substantial opportunities for misdirection. If someone suggests reconsidering future tax cuts, the administration can accuse him of wanting to raise taxes in a recession — implying, falsely, that he wants to reverse Phase I rather than simply call off Phase II. On the other hand, if someone says that tax cuts have worsened the budget picture, the administration can say that tax cuts explain only 15 percent of the move into deficit. This sounds definitive, but in fact it refers only to the impact of Phase I on this year's budget; by the administration's own estimates, 40 percent of the $4 trillion deterioration in the 10-year outlook is due to tax cuts.

There is, however, an art to this sort of deception: you have to imply the falsehood without actually saying it outright. Last month the Office of Management and Budget got sloppy: it issued a press release stating flatly that tax cuts were responsible for only 15 percent of the 10-year deterioration. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities noticed, and I reported it here.

Now for the fun part. The O.M.B. reacted angrily, and published a letter in The Times attacking me. It attributed the misstatement to "error," and declared that it had been "retracted." Was it?
It depends on what you mean by the word "retract." As far as anyone knows, O.M.B. didn't issue a revised statement conceding that it had misinformed reporters and giving the right numbers. It simply threw the embarrassing document down the memory hole. As Brendan Nyhan pointed out in Salon, if you go to the O.M.B.'s Web site now you find a press release dated July 12 that is not the release actually handed out on that date. There is no indication that anything has been changed, but the bullet point on sources of the deficit is gone.
Every government tries to make excuses for its past errors, but I don't think any previous U.S. administration has been this brazen about rewriting history to make itself look good. For this kind of thing to happen you have to have politicians who have no qualms about playing Big Brother; officials whose partisan loyalty trumps their professional scruples; and a press corps that, with some honorable exceptions, lets the people in power get away with it.
Lucky us: we hit the trifecta.




.....I'm not sure what caused the winking similie to appear in the reprint but it is ironically appropriate.





[ edited by Antiquary on Aug 6, 2002 06:30 AM ]
 
 Helenjw
 
posted on August 6, 2002 09:38:20 AM new


Stop Him Before He Lies Again

From New Republic article.

"Bush claimed there was enough money to continue paying down the debt, fund any additional spending needs that might arise, and still afford his tax cut; Gore claimed there wasn't. Gore was right. Bush's budget forecasts were a tapestry of rosy predictions, accounting gimmicks, and outright falsehoods that were already unraveling well before September 11. (Remember the trillion-dollar contingency fund that Bush was promising little more than one year ago? Us neither.) This is why Bush insists on reciting his fraudulent "war, recession, or national emergency" story at every possible opportunity--it gets him off the hook for the mountain of economic dishonesty he shoveled in order to pass the tax cut. And it's why as long as he keeps telling the story, we'll keep pointing out that it is almost certainly a lie."




 
 kraftdinner
 
posted on August 6, 2002 11:29:14 AM new
Thanks for the links Antiquary & Helen. I'm still reading...


 
 Dejapooh
 
posted on August 7, 2002 11:00:54 AM new
Try

GWBUSH.com

Good Clean Fun, at you know who's expense...

 
 antiquary
 
posted on August 7, 2002 02:17:41 PM new

There are a lot of good sites from which to choose. It's becoming more difficult though to distinguish the satirical from the factual information.

This is a good site:

http://www.presidentmoron.com/

 
 snowyegret
 
posted on August 7, 2002 02:35:02 PM new
That's a funny site, but sad. The quote from Kennedy on the front page shows how far we've backed up. But what should we expect with CEOs as our fearless leaders? (Which is ironic as the stock market tanks as Bush talks
You have the right to an informed opinion
-Harlan Ellison
 
 antiquary
 
posted on August 8, 2002 11:47:05 AM new
I'm hopeful that we have enough members of the house and senate whose minds and souls are independent of the corporate dole that they'll help steer us back to some semblance of integrity once again.

http://boxer.senate.gov/newsroom/200207/20020716_enron.html

 
 
<< previous topic post new topic post reply next topic >>

Jump to

All content © 1998-2024  Vendio all rights reserved. Vendio Services, Inc.™, Simply Powerful eCommerce, Smart Services for Smart Sellers, Buy Anywhere. Sell Anywhere. Start Here.™ and The Complete Auction Management Solution™ are trademarks of Vendio. Auction slogans and artwork are copyrights © of their respective owners. Vendio accepts no liability for the views or information presented here.

The Vendio free online store builder is easy to use and includes a free shopping cart to help you can get started in minutes!