Keith,
POTUS has little to do with security. That's the job of the Secret
Service. They are the ones who decide all questions of security. They still
sting from the shot that nearly ended Reagan's life.
I rather suspect that the Service had the screaming meanies when the
footman incident came to light. (How did he do at Wimbledon?) The problem in any
democracy is properly torelate necessary security measures to our open
society.
The Secret Service is practically maniacal about the President's safety.
They even weld the manhole covers shut along a local route ofa
Presidential motorcade. I am sure that Presidents get fed up with it. But, was
it Kennedy who said that a determined assassin will kill a President no matter
the SS precautions?
When the footman incident came to light it is probable that the SS
ordered Bush home, which maneuver was out of the question.
An American problem is that the President is both Head of State and top
politician. Embedded in oneperson is the politician who can be trashed,
and the symbol of the US who should berevered for any criticism is
criticism of the US. Gets a bit schizophrenic at times. You'll notice that
rarely is there direct criticism of the President. It's usually the
"Administration" that is at fault.
Next year, it will not be the President, but Bush the politician who will
be the target.
In the UK it's "The King is dead, long live the King" and a meeting of
the majority party to appoint a new Prime Minister (or chuck the old one out)!
The Parliamentary systemleads to the sparklingly courteous insults at
Question Time - something unknown in the American system (except from the comics
on late night TV).
Harry
Henry George School of Social Science
of Los Angeles
Box 655 Tujunga
CA 91042 Tel: 818
352-4141--Fax: 818 353-2242 http://haledward.home.comcast.net
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Keith
HudsonSent: Thursday, November 20, 2003 12:03 PMTo:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: [Futurework] The bogus
footman
Here's a bit of fun that must have frightened George Bush to
bits. Perhaps this explains why Bush was looking bad-tempered so often during
his visit to the Queen. The bogus footman could easily have assassinated Bush in
his bed! Read on (from the BBC website): Queen
wins ban on 'footman' article The Queen has won a High Court order
blocking a newspaper from revealing more details about the Royal Household.
The Daily Mirror's Ryan Parry got a job in September as a footman at
Buckingham Palace using a false reference. His identity was revealed by
the paper the same day US President George Bush arrived in the UK for a state
visit. The Royal Household, which accuses Mr Parry of breaching a
confidentiality agreement, was granted an injunction until 1630 GMT on Monday.
It had earlier said it would sue both Mr Parry and the paper.
The revelations in the Mirror put pressure on the government, Buckingham
Palace and Scotland Yard, which has spent £5m and put more than 5,000 police on
the capital's streets for Mr Bush's visit. Had I been a terrorist
intent on assassinating the Queen or American president George Bush, I could
have done so with absolute ease Ryan Parry Daily Mirror reporter
A Buckingham Palace spokeswoman said: "We sought this injunction in
order to protect personal privacy and we are satisfied with the progress made
this afternoon." A White House spokesman told the BBC on Wednesday that
despite the security breach at the palace, "the White House still has confidence
in British security". The Daily Mirror story included pictures by
photographer Phil Harris from inside the palace of the bedroom used by Mr Bush
and his wife, The Belgian Suite. There were also pictures of the Queen's
breakfast table and the Duke of York's room. Mr Parry wrote: "Had I been
a terrorist intent on assassinating the Queen or American president George Bush,
I could have done so with absolute ease. "Indeed, this morning I would
have been serving breakfast to key members of his government, including National
Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice and US Secretary of State Colin Powell.
"Such is the shocking incompetence at the heart of the biggest security
operation ever in Britain." In August, Mr Parry responded to a job
advertisement on a recruitment page of the Buckingham Palace official website.
On his CV, he left out any mention of his journalistic career and
included one fake reference and a real one, the newspaper claimed.
Mirror editor Piers Morgan said the paper used "very basic subterfuge
and got incredible access". "To our surprise and then mounting horror we
discovered that our man with no training, no experience at all, no real vetting
was in very close proximity to the most important people in our country,