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Bush*Nazi connection featured in NY Times #1 bestseller
How'd we miss this one? The #1 NY times non-fiction bestseller, American
Dynasty, extensively documents the Bush families connections to IG Farben,
Hitler, Standard Oil and the entire US military industrial complex. And it's
written by a former GOP strategist. -RL

http://www.motherjones.com/arts/books/2004/01/12_103.html

Onetime GOP strategist Kevin Phillips takes on a world he knows well:
Aristocracy, fortune, and the politics of deceit in the House of Bush

Reviewed By Douglas Brinkley

January/February 2004 Issue

American Dynasty
By Kevin Phillips
Viking. 331 pages. .95.


Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money & Power

E-mail the editor


Over the past year a cottage industry of anti-Bush diatribes has exploded
onto the best-seller list. Many have unforgettable titles like Molly Ivins'
Bushwhacked or Hunter S. Thompson's Kingdom of Fear or Al Franken's Lies
(And the Lying Liars Who Tell Them). These books are brimming with nasty
one-liners and parlor jokes portraying George W. Bush as a dangerous dunce,
an aristocratic oil brat unfit for the Oval Office. The Bush Cabinet fares
no better: Vice President Dick Cheney, for example, has been characterized
as an utterly corrupt stalking horse for Halliburton, while Secretary of
Defense Donald Rumsfeld has become Dr. Strangelove incarnate.

Given this left-liberal publishing phenomenon, where evil Bushies lurk
around every civic bend dismantling our constitutional rights, it is with
welcome relief that political commentator and one-time GOP strategist Kevin
Phillips has stepped into the fray. Unlike the recent spate of anti-Bush
books, Phillips' American Dynasty -- an erudite manifesto on the dangers of
cronyism, hereditary privilege, "paper entrepreneurialism," and tax
shelters -- is devastating due to its analytical fair-mindedness.
Essentially, he traces how four generations of Bushes corrupted U.S. foreign
policy through international business ventures that benefited the family.
The most recent two George Bushes aren't evil people, Phillips argues, just
greedy and ambitious Ivy League Texans. The Bush family has brought the
American political system to a "perilous state," he believes, due to their
cunning brand of petro-politics. "The family's ties to oil date back to Ohio
steelmaker Samuel Bush's relationship to Standard Oil a century ago, while
its ultimately dynastic connection to Enron spanned the first national Bush
administration, the six years of George W. Bush's governorship of Texas, and
the first year of his Washington incumbency," he writes. "No other
presidential family has made such prolonged efforts on behalf of a single
corporation."

With great skill, Phillips illuminates how the "Bush Dynasty" has long used
such old-boy organizations as Yale's Skull and Bones, the CIA, Dillon Read,
and most recently the Carlyle Group to further its main objective:
political-economic power. He delineates the family's ethically questionable
dealings with such companies as Enron, Zapata Petroleum, and Halliburton. We
even learn that Prescott Bush, George H.W.'s father and a U.S. senator from
Connecticut, had investment dealings with Nazi Germany in the 1930s while
working for the banking firm Brown Brothers Harriman.

A major motif that Phillips develops throughout American Dynasty is the
influence of Texas machismo on modern political culture. In his view, the
Lone Star State has "an ego to match its acreage." Phillips sees the
Dallas-Houston-Waco-Austin- Midland way of doing things as detrimental --
even menacing -- to the world at large. Cleverly, the Bush Dynasty, with its
deep New England roots, shifted its operations to Texas after World War II
to a land where the law could be more easily manipulated, he claims. Instead
of sipping sherry at the Century Club in New York, the Bushes, by the time
the Astrodome was built in the mid-1960s, were plopping their cowboy boots
on the velvet sofas at the Petroleum Club in Houston. Phillips, however,
makes clear that the genius behind the Bush Dynasty is its ability to be
from both the Permian Basin and Wall Street. He quotes University of
Pennsylvania professor John J. DiIulio -- who had been the director of the
White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives -- as deeming
this dynastic synergy the rise of "Mayberry Machiavellianism."

There is nothing new about Texans rising to the top in American politics.
Dwight Eisenhower hailed from Denison and Lyndon Johnson from Stonewall, and
Phillips has no beef with either of them. Neither of these national leaders,
however, was a religious fundamentalist like George W. Bush. It's the
certitude of our current president's born-againism that disturbs Phillips
the most. Somehow his descriptions of oil greed or CIA intrigue or Beltway
manipulation are less alarmist than the long chapter devoted to Bush's
evangelism. "George W. Bush's early emergence in national politics, between
1986 and 1994, tapped religious forces akin to those promoting Ariel Sharon
and Benjamin Netanyahu in Israel and fueling the rise of Islamic parties in
Pakistan, Turkey, and elsewhere," Phillips writes. While this assertion may
not be provable, Phillips does a credible job of connecting Protestant
fundamentalism in Dixie with similar movements in the Middle East and East
Asia. His expos� on the history of Armageddon as an influential concept in
American foreign policy is simultaneously humorous and scary.


Most of American Dynasty is not based on primary research. Phillips borrows
ideas throughout the book -- always with scrupulous accreditation -- from
dozens of secondary sources. He relies, at times quite heavily, on two
workmanlike books from the 1980s: Nicholas King's George Bush: A Biography
and Fitzhugh Green's George Bush: An Intimate Portrait. In graceful original
prose, he incorporates geopolitical notions first explored by New York Times
columnist Paul Krugman, historian Daniel Yergin in his magisterial book The
Prize, and Seymour Hersh in the New Yorker. But the syn- thesis is pure
Phillips: He is a deep thinker extraordinaire, who does a masterful job of
connecting the military-industrial dots right up to the conduct of the Iraq
War and the postwar reconstruction.

While his subheads and chapter titles are too cutesy for my liking -- e.g.,
"Indiana Bush and the Axis of Evil," "The Not-Quite Royal Family," and
"George H.W. Bush: Man in the Brooks Brothers Trench Coat? -- Phillips has,
nonetheless, created a searing indictment of the Bush Dynasty. In American
Dynasty, he has provided an informed, nigh-genetic basis for understanding
our current president.  What do you think?

Douglas Brinkley is director of the Eisenhower Center for American Studies
and professor of history at the University of New Orleans.


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www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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