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<A HREF="http://www.realchange.org/bushjr.htm">George W. Bush, Jr. - The Dark
Side</A>
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Bush Jr.'s Skeleton Closet


Click on the allegation of your choice:

-- His "young and irresponsible" behavior: sex, drugs and (gasp!) rock
and roll?

-- Thin skinned: Tries to censor his critics

-- Funeralgate: Lying under oath? Bush & staff stop investigation of
contributors huge funeral home company.

-- Character: Spoiled rich kid living off his family's name and
reputation

-- What Did YOU Do in the War, Daddy?

-- Made millions on insider business deals, for little work
-- -- Deal #1. Personal Profits from Failing Oil Companies
-- -- -- -- Easy Money From Odd Sources
-- -- -- -- A Surprise Deal From Bahrain
-- -- -- -- Access to the President and National Security Adviser for
his foreign business partner
-- -- Deal #2. Selling Oil Stocks Just Before Iraq Invaded: lucky guess
or illegal insider trading?
-- -- Deal #3. A Big Slice of a Baseball Team
-- -- -- -- Hypocrisy: using government coercion to make his private
fortune
-- Texas government corruption: State $$ for campaign funders & business
cronies

-- Quotes
-- Sources


Quotes

"There ought to be limits to freedom. We're aware of this site, and this
guy is just a garbage man, that's all he is." -- George Jr., discussing
a web site that parodies him
"[Bush Jr. hired a private detective to] determine what his opponents or
the press could find on him [and] isn't terribly thrilled [with the
results.] We're not talking about anything that would get him a spot on
Jerry Springer, no handcuffs or dwarf orgies, but he was a handsome,
rich playboy and lived that life." -- unnamed insider, quoted on MSNBC.

"It's not the governor's role to decide who goes to heaven. I believe
that God decides who goes to heaven, not George W. Bush." -- George W.
Bush, in the Houston Chronicle.

"I didn't -- I swear I didn't -- get into politics to feather my nest or
feather my friends' nests." -- Bush Jr., in the Houston Chronicle

"I propose that every city have a telephone number 119 -- for dyslexics
who have an emergency." -- George Junior

"I hope to show Hispanics that Republicans do have a heart, but I also
want to send a message to people from around the country as to how to
pick up the Hispanic vote" -- George Junior

"He told me his brother (Texas Gov. George W. Bush) said he could kick
my butt, and I said I haven't met a Texan yet that can shame me." --
Minnesota Governor, Navy Seal, and professional wrestler Jesse Ventura,
quoting Florida Governor Jeb Bush.

"When George moved back to Midland [after college], he bummed an office,
he bummed golf clubs, bummed shoes. You were lucky if you saw him in a
clean shirt." -- Tom Craddick, ranking Republican in the Texas House of
Representatives and longtime friend of Bush's.

"It's hard to usher in the responsibility era if you behave
irresponsibly." -- Junior, aiming at Clinton but backfiring.

"When it is all said and done, I will have made more money than I ever
dreamed I would make." -- Bush, in the Forth Worth Star-Telegram,
describing his Texas Rangers business deal.


Quote Sources



His Character: The Prodigal Son

George W. Bush, Jr. is touted as the savior of the Republican Party by
the national press, because he pulls votes from minority voters and has
his dad's name and fundraising connections to run on. But before we
anoint him as the next president, let's look at what he's done with his
life. In a nutshell, Junior
1) grew up as a very rich child of powerful parents,
2) partied from high school until he was 40,
3) made millions off of sweet insider business deals from political
allies of his dad, who happened to be the President,
and 4) got elected governor of Texas mostly because of his name.
Bush Junior has done some good work as governor of Texas. He has crossed
the partisan divide, reached out to minorities, and tackled at least one
tough, thankless issue (school financing; his plan was voted down in the
legislature.)

But 4 years -- even 4 good ones -- is a pretty short resume for the
leader of the free world. No one doubts Bill Clinton's ability to handle
punishment and come back for more. But Bush Junior's stamina and
attention span are very real concerns. Furthermore, Bush's term as
governor has also been markedly corrupt, although possibly in legal
ways. What we mean is, he has taken millions in campaign contributions
from certain big businessmen -- many of whom were in on the insider
business deals that made him rich -- and those same businessman have
received billions in sweet deals from the Texas state government during
Bush's term.

Specifics: Like Al Gore, Bush Jr. attended Eastern elitist schools, in
this case Andover Prep, and Yale. According to a Newsweek profile, he
"went to Yale but seems to have majored in drinking at the Deke House."
He joined the secretive "Skull and Bones" club in 1968, as any good
conspiracy buff can tell you.

His business career was marked by mediocrity or failure which
nonetheless resulted in him getting lots of money from his father's
political allies. And his political career has been handed to him on a
platter by his famous name, and by his dad's cronies.

Bill Kristol, conservative pundit and Dan Quayle's former chief of
staff, says "The Bush network is the only genuine network in the
Republican Party. It is the establishment." Junior and Jeb Bush
(recently elected in Florida) are first brothers to be simultaneous
governors since the Rockefellers.

To give you an idea of how rarefied his upbringing was, George Junior
had an argument with his mom at one point about whether non-Christians
could go to Heaven. (Barbara Bush felt they could; George didn't.) To
settle the dispute, they phoned up Billy Graham on the spot. (He sided
with Junior, but warned him not to play God.).)


Thin skinned: Bush tries to stifle his critics

One sign that Bush may not be ready for prime time is that he can't
handle criticism, and tries to silence his critics using his power and
money. At the very least, this shows he doesn't understand big-league
politics and may not be tough enough to handle more serious opponents,
such as hostile foreign countries and terrorists. At worst, it may be a
sign of Nixon-like paranoia; that president's thin-skin started out with
similar small potatos and grew to bring down his presidency amid
enemies' lists, illegal break-ins of his opponent's offices, and forcing
the IRS to audit his enemies.
Bush can't blame this on his staff, either; when asked about one
critical web site, he told the press "There ought to be limits to
freedom. We're aware of this site, and this guy is just a garbage man,
that's all he is."

As governor of Texas, for example, Bush Junior has sent the state police
to arrest peaceful demonstrators outside the governors mansion. While
previous governors allowed peaceful pickets on the public sidewalk
outside the mansion, Bush has claimed that they are blocking public
access, and had them arrested. Not all protestors, either -- just the
ones he doesn't want the press to see.

Bush also can't stand criticism on the Internet. His campaign quietly --
and probably illegally -- bought up over 200 anti-Bush domain names
including "bushsucks.com", "bushbites.com", and "bushblows.com" over a
year ago. If you type in any of these URLs, you end up at Bush's
official web site. His campaign refuses to say whether this means that
they admit that he bites, blows and sucks. (Maybe he used to be a White
House intern?)

If you wanted to set up one of those sites, breathe easy because many
good names are still available. The Bush camp somehow neglected to
purchase "bushisaprick.com", "bushisweak.com", or
"bushsucksdonkeydicks.com", so $70 makes them yours.

Even worse, Bush and his high-priced lawyers have tried twice to shut
down a web site -- www.gwbush.com -- that parodies the Bush campaign, in
particular his "no comment" answers on drug use in his past. You will
recall that Bush has said it doesn't matter what he did "in his youth,"
because the question is "have you grown up" and "have you learned from
your mistakes." The parody site presents a new program called "Amnesty
2000", in which Bush "proposes" pardoning all drug convicts who have
"grown up."

The Bush campaign filed one complaint about the site in April 1999,
after which the parody site's owners changed it to look less like the
real Bush site. That wasn't good enough though, and Bush lawyers filed
against the site again in May 1999. So far, it remains in business.
Sources


Funeralgate: Lying Under Oath? Bush & Co. Squelch Investigation of
Contributor's Funeral Homes

Texas' state commission on funeral homes (the TFSC) started an
investigation of SCI, the world's largest funeral home company (with
3,442 homes, plus 433 cemeteries) after complaints that unlicensed
apprenctices were embalming corpses at 2 SCI embalming centers. The
commission visited a couple of these, and ended up fining SCI $450,000.
But SCI has very powerful friends. They gave governor Bush $35,000 in
the last election and $10K in 1994, gave $100,000 to the George Bush,
Sr. library, and hired the ex-president to give a speech last year for
$70,000. They also spread money around the Texas legislature and the
Texas Attorney General's office.

The commission continued its investigation. So SCI's boss, Robert
Waltrip, called the funeral commission's chairman and told him to "back
off." If not, Waltrip said, "I'm going to take this to the governor."

Still, the investigation continued. So Waltrip and his lawyer/lobbyist,
Johnnie B. Rogers, went to the governor's office and dropped off a
letter demanding a halt to the investigation. Rogers told Newsweek that
he and Waltrip were ushered in to see Joe Allbaugh, Bush's chief of
staff (who is now Bush's campaign manager.) Rogers goes on to say that
Bush Jr. popped his head in and said to Waltrip, "Hey, Bobby, are those
people still messing with you?" Waltrip said yeah. Then the governor
turned to Rogers and said, "Hey, Johnnie B. Are you taking care of him?"
Rogers said "I'm doing my best, Governor."

The problem for Bush is that he swore under oath, in a July 20th 1999
affidavit, that he "had no conversations with [SCI] officials, agents,
or represenatives concerning the investigation or any dispute arising
from it." If Rogers is telling the truth, than Bush Jr. lied directly
under oath. He filed the affidavit in an attempt to avoid testifying in
a whistleblower lawsuit concerning this investigation and it's alleged
squashing by Bush's administration.

In the latest development, Bush himself has admitted that he spoke with
Waltrip and Rogers, but denies that it was anything substantial. Bush
told the Associated Press that ``It's a 20-second conversation. I had no
substantive conversation with the guy. Twenty seconds. That's hardly
enough time to even say hello, much less sit down and have a substantive
discussion. All I know is it lasted no time. And that hardly constitutes
a serious discussion. I did not have any knowledge at all of Waltrip's
problem with this case.''

Of course, nothing Bush says here contradicts what Rogers said. In fact,
his careful construction of this and other phrases for reporters -- such
as "When I was young and irresponsible, I was really young and
irresponsible.", and his evasion about whether Jews can go to heaven --
are incredibly similar to Bill Clinton's weaseling about dope, the
draft, what "is" is, etc.

Whatever Bush said out loud, Waltrip's complaints to the governor got
quick results. Eliza May -- the investigator for the funeral services
commission -- says that after Waltrip visited the governor, she received
phone calls from three senior Bush aides asking if she could wrap up her
proble quickly. She says she was also summoned to another meeting in
Allbaugh's office, one month after the first one, and found Waltrip
already there. The governor's top aide, she says, demanded that she turn
over a list of all of the documents that she needed "to close the SCI
investigation."

Since then, investigator Eliza May has been fired, 6 or 10 staff members
on the commission have been fired or resigned and not been replaced, and
the Texas legislature -- led by members receiving substantial
contributions from SCI -- passed a bill to reorganize the agency and
remove it's head. On August 16, 199, Bush ordered his Comptroller to
take over the agency and run it. May -- who, it should be noted, is a
Democrat and was even state Democratic Treasurer at one point -- has
filed a whistleblower lawsuit alleging she was fired because she
persisted with the investigation.

Bush simply didn't show up for his scheduled deposition on July 1st in
the case. (He isn't a defendant in the case, because Governors are
immune from lawsuits in Texas, but is being called as a material
witness.) He filed his affidavit on July 20th to indicate that he had
nothing to add. A hearing is scheduled on August 30th to determine if
that is the case. Since he admitted in the press that he did meet with
Waltrip and Rogers, May has filed a contempt of court motion with the
court as well.

Sources


Corruption in Texas Government; State $ to Big Contributors

Bush's administration has been marked by the large amounts of state
controlled money flowing to men who have either contributed large
amounts to Bush's campaign, or who have made Junior personally rich
through sweet insider business deals, or both.
For example, the University of Texas' Investment Management Company
(UTIMCO) invests $1.7 billion of state money. Bush's cronies dominate
this board, and in return investment funds controlled by these very
cronies or their friends have received $457 million of that investment
pool. There may even be more, but this obscure group -- created under
Bush -- cloaks its operations in a thick veil of secrecy.

UTIMCO's chairman, Tom Hicks, now owns the Texas Rangers; his purchase
of the team made Governor Bush a very rich man. Furthermore, Hicks and
his brother gave $146,000 to the Bush campaign. In return, $252 million
of the invested money went to funds run by Hicks' business associates or
friends, according to the Houston Chronicle. Hicks even insisted that
UTIMCO increase by $10 million an investment with a fund that he had an
indirect financial interest in, but UTIMCO staff halted funding after
they discovered the conflict.

In another example, Larry Paul Manley, Bush's director of the Department
of Housing until he resigned in January 1999, is under police
investigation for steering federal tax credits to cronies. Texas' top
auditor discovered in 1997 that 60% of department contracts went to
Manley's former colleagues at local savings and loans, but refused to
make the findings public until long after the criminal probes began.

Another key player in the Bush world is Richard Rainwater, the
billionaire Texas investor who made Bush Jr.'s original involvement in
the Texas Rangers deal possible. That's the deal that made Jr. rich, of
course. Bush had several other personal investments in Rainwater
controlled companies. But Rainwater has received much from Bush and the
state of Texas' treasury, too.

For example, the state teacher retirement fund sold three office
buildings to Rainwater's real estate company at bargain prices, and
without bids in 2 of the cases. The fund invested $90 million in the
Frost Bank Plaza in Austin, and sold it to Rainwater's Crescent Real
Estate for $35 million. Bush signed a law that will give his former
baseball team co-owners -- including Rainwater -- a $10 million bonus
payment when a new Dallas arena is built. Bush also proposed a cap on
business real estate taxes that would have saved Rainwater millions on
his various properties (but it lost in the legislature). And UTIMCO,
described above, has invested $20 million in Rainwater companies.

Bush may or may not have violated state ethics laws with all of this big
money backscratching, but there is no doubt that he and these
businessman are operating corruptly -- funneling large amounts of state
money to the businessmen's companies, and large amounts of their
personal and business money into George Bush Jr.'s pocket and political
campaigns.

Sources


Avoided the Vietnam War


Just like Dan Quayle and Steve Forbes, two other politically-connected
rich kids, Bush Junior joined his home state's National Guard. It's not
clear how he got past the waiting list, but his dad was a U.S.
Congressman at the time, and his grandfather was a famous U.S. Senator.

Instead of going to Vietnam, he flew cool jet planes around Texas,
valiantly defending us against the Mexican air force. His political
connections got him a sweet deal -- they not only got him into the
National Guard, and got him the last (rare) training slot for pilots
despite the fact that he scored the lowest allowable score - 25/100 - on
a pilot's aptitude test, but he was assigned to fly an older plane (the
F102) which was being phased out at the time, which meant that he had no
chance at all of going to Vietnam.

On this issue, too, Bush has weaseled in a manner eerily reminiscent of
Bill Clinton. He claims that he joined the guard to fly planes, just
like his dad. But George Bush, Senior, a genuine war hero, joined the
Navy, not the National Guard. Both the Navy and Air Force had plenty of
openings when Bush Jr. joined, but he chose the stateside Guard.
Furthermore, his enlistment form had a check box to indicate whether you
volunteered to go the Vietnam or not. His was checked NO, but now he
claims that the clerks there often filled that part out and checked NO
for you. Once he joined, Bush was promoted to First Lieutenant in just 4
months, a very short time, and was given several months off to work on a
political campaign. He was also released 6 months early to work on
another campaign.


Insider Business Deals

Bush Jr. has made a lot of money off of three business deals. In each
one, his contribution is hard to perceive, yet he walked off with
hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars in deals arranged by his
father's political cronies. The deals were
1. the sale of Junior's struggling oil company,
2. Junior's sale of oil stock just before the Gulf War, and
3. getting a cheap slice of the Texas Rangers baseball team, which he
recently sold for a huge profit (he paid $600,000, and sold for $14
million).
The general pattern here is just as important as the details. Bush did
no work in his business career that can clearly be called "excellent" or
even "solid." The money he made is tangential to his efforts at best --
the oil companies lost a great deal of money during his tenure, and the
Rangers cut a lot of corners -- which makes the cronyism that much more
suspicious.

It's not just that one or two of Bush's deals look funky; every major
business deal he has been involved with included wealthy supporters of
his father, and many of those investors later received favorable
treatment from either the federal government under Bush, Sr. or the
current Texas administration of Junior.
Deal #1: The Oil Business: Rewarded for Losing Money

Like his dad, Junior struck out in Texas and founded an oil company,
Arbusto Energy, Inc., with $20,000 of his own money. (Arbusto is the
Spanish word for bush.) The company foundered in the early 1980s when
oil prices dropped (and his dad was Vice President.)
The 50 investors, who were "mainly friends of my uncle" in Junior's own
words, put in $4.7 million and lost most of it. Junior claims that
investors "did pretty good," but Bush family friend Russell Reynolds
told the Dallas Morning News: "The bottom line was there were problems,
and it didn't work out very well. I think we got maybe 20 cents on the
dollar."

As Arbusto neared collapse, Spectrum 7 Energy Corporation bought it in
September 1984. Despite his poor track record, the owners made Bush, Jr.
the president and gave him 13.6% of the parent company's stock.

Spectrum 7 was a small oil firm owned by two staunch Reagan/Bush Sr.
supporters -- William DeWitt and Mercer Reynolds. These two were also
owners of the Texas Rangers and allowed Bush Jr. to purchase a chunk of
the team cheaply; he later sold it for over 24 times what he paid.

Within two years of purchasing Arbusto and making Bush Jr. president,
Spectrum 7 was itself in trouble; it lost $400,000 in its last 6 months
of operation. That ended in 1986, when Harken Energy Corporation bought
Spectrum 7's 180-well operation.

Junior got $227,000 worth of Harken stock, and a lot more. He was named
to the board of directors, made $80,000 to $100,000 a year well into the
1990s as a "consultant" to Harken, and was allowed to buy Harken stock
at 40% below face value.

He also borrowed $180,375 from Harken at very low rates; the company's
1989 and 1990 SEC filings said it "forgave" $341,000 in loans to
unspecified executives.

So what did Junior do for all this money? It's hard to say exactly, but
things happened for Harken after Junior came on board:
it got a $25 million stock offering from an unusual bank with CIA ties,
it won a surprise exclusive drilling contract with Bahrain, a small
Mideast country, and
an Arab member of its Board of Directors was invited to White House
policy meetings with President George Bush and National Security Adviser
Brent Scowcroft.


Easy Money From Odd Sources


The firm's $25 million stock offering was underwritten by Stephens,
Inc., an Arkansas bank whose head, Jackson Stephens, was on President
Bush's "Team 100." (That was a group of 249 rich persons who gave at
least $100,000 each to his presidential campaign committee). Stephens
placed the offering with the London subsidiary of Union Bank of
Switzerland, which (according to the Wall Street Journal) was not known
as an investor in small American companies.

Union Bank did have other connections; it was a joint-venture partner
with the notorious BCCI in a Geneva-based bank, and was involved in a
scandal surrounding the Nugan Hand Bank, a CIA operation in Australia
whose executives were advised by William Quasha, the father of Harken's
chairman (Alan Quasha.) Union Bank was also involved in scandals
surrounding Panamanian money laundering by BCCI, and Ferdinand Marcos'
movement of 325 tons of gold out of the Phillipines.

That wasn't the only financing connection Junior brought; after the
company won its Bahrain deal (see next item), the billionaire Bass
brothers of Texas offered to underwrite the drilling operation. Robert
Bass is also a member of Bush's Team 100, and he and his kin gave
$226,000 to Bush Senior between 1988 and 1992.


The Bahrain Contract


In January 1990, Harken was chosen out of the blue by the small Mideast
country Bahrain for an exclusive offshore oil drilling contract. They
beat out Amoco, an experienced and major international conglomerate,
despite having no offshore oil drilling experience at all. As of March
1995, the most recent report we could find, they had found no oil.

Junior has denied that he was involved in the deal, and even told the
Wall Street Journal that he opposed it. But a company insider told
Mother Jones Magazine "Like any member of the board, he was thrilled.
His attitude was 'Holy shit, what a great deal!'"

If he did oppose it, he wasn't much of a consultant. Charles Strain, an
energy company analyst in Houston, told Mother Jones: "Harken is not
hard to understand -- it's easy. The company has only one real asset --
its Bahrain contract. If that field turns out to be dry, Harken's stock
is worth, at the most, 25 cents a share. If they hit it big over there,
the stock could be worth $30 to $40 dollars a share." As of December
1998, Harken Energy Corp. (HEC on Amex) is trading at $2.69 a share.


Access to the President For Bush's Foreign Business Partner


The most troubling thing that happened to Harken after it bought George
Bush Junior in, was that one of its Board of Directors members was
suddenly admitted to the highest levels of United States foreign policy
meetings. These were not Clintonesque meet-and-greet fundraisers, but
actual working policy meetings during a critical period.

After the Harken-Bahrain deal was signed, Talat Othman was added to a
group of Arabs who met with George Bush and National Security Adviser
Brent Scowcroft three times in 1990 -- once just two days after Iraq
invaded Kuwait.

Othman was the representative of Sheikh Abdullah Bakhsh, who purchased
10% of Harken stock and had several ties to the infamous BCCI bank.
Bakhsh was a co-investor in Saudi Arabia with alleged BCCI front man
Ghaith Pharaon. Bakhsh's banker, Khalid bin Mahfouz, was another BCCI
figure and head of the largest bank in Saudi Arabia. Sheikh Kalifah, the
prime minister of Bahrain, was a BCCI shareholder and played the key
role in selecting Harken for the oil contract.

This is the crowd that gained entry to the President and the National
Security Adviser of the United States after George Junior made his deal
with Harken.


Deal #2: Selling Oil Stock Just Before Iraq Invaded

George Bush, Junior sold 60% of his stock in Harken Oil in June, 1990
for $848,560. That was brilliant timing; in August, Iraq invaded Kuwait
and Harken's stock dropped 25%. Soon after, a big quarterly loss caused
it to drop further.
A secret State Deparment memo in May of that year had warned that Saddam
was out of control, and listed options for responding to him, including
an oil ban that might affect US oil prices.

We can't be sure that the President or an aide mentioned these
developments to his son, or that Harken's representative who was
admitted to meetings with the President picked up something and reported
back to Junior. But it is the simplest and most logical explanation. The
Bushes acknowledge that George Senior and his sons consult on political
strategy and other matters constantly.

Furthermore, Harken's internal financial advisers at Smith Barney had
issued a report in May warning of the company's deteriorating finances.
Harken owed more than $150 million to banks and other creditors at the
time. George Bush, Jr. was a member of the board and also of Harken's
restructuring committee, which met in May and worked directly with the
Smith Barney consultants. He must have known of these warnings.

These are pretty clear-cut indications of illegal insider trading. The
Securities and Exchange Commission, controlled at the time by President
George Bush, investigated but chose not to press charges.

Junior also violated another SEC rule explicitly. He was required to
register his sale as an insider trade by July 10, 1990, but didn't until
March 1991, after the Gulf War was over. He was not punished or cited.
Deal #3: A Big Slice of the Texas Rangers for a Little Money (and a Big
Profit)


The third unusually easy deal for George Bush Junior was his involvement
in the Texas Rangers baseball team. In a nutshell, he was offered a
piece of this valuable franchise for only $600,000, by supporters of his
dad who also bailed out his failing oil company. He recently sold his
stake for $14 million to a Texas millionaire with lots of businesses
regulated by Bush Junior's administration. "When all it is all said and
done, I will have made more money than I ever dreamed I would make,"
Bush told the Forth Worth Star-Telegram.

Bush was allowed to buy 1.8% of the team for $600,000 of borrowed money,
and was even made one of the two general managers. His qualifications
for partial ownership? Several years working at failing oil companies,
and his political connections through his father. It's hard to be sure,
but we're guessing that latter was probably more important.
Junior tripled his investment, like the other owners, with the help of
massive government intervention and subsidies. But his real wealth came
from simply being given 10% of the team as a "bonus" for "putting
together the investment team."
Even if he really had done that work, it's an absurd bonus ($12.2
million), but the fact is that he didn't add much. Cincinatti financier
William DeWitt brought Bush in, not vice versa, shortly after George
Bush Sr. was elected president. (DeWitt had also invested in Junior's
oil companies.). The only investor Bush actually brought in was Roland
Betts, a Yale fraternity brother, and that wasn't good enough.

Under Junior's management, the deal was about to fall apart until
baseball commissioner Peter Uebberoth brought in another investment
group led by Fort Worth Billionaire Richard Rainwater and Dallas
investor "Rusty" Rose. Since the deal, both men have profited greatly
from business with the Texas administration of George Bush, Jr. Rose
personally invested $3.2 million and became the other general manager of
the team. Under the team partnership agreement, Bush Junior couldn't
take any "material actions" wihtout Rose's prior approval. There was
also a method for removing Junior as a general partner, but no way to
remove Rose. Yet Rose's "bonus" for his role in setting up the deal was
less than half of Junior's.

What kind of owners would approve such a big payoff to Bush? In addition
to Rose and Rainwater, men with business pending before Texas
government, the owners included William DeWitt and Mercer Reynolds,
major contributors to President Bush who had also purchased Junior's
failing oil company through their Spectrum 7 Energy company.

If this deal doesn't smell bad enough already, consider Bush's blatant
hypocrisy. The main value of the team is its new stadium (ranked by
Financial World as the most profitable in baseball) and 300 acres of
vacant land the team owns between the stadium and 6 Flags of Texas,
which is next door.



Putting Tax Money into Bush's Pocket
The hypocritical part is, the private owners of this very valuable land
didn't want to sell. Bush and his partners gave them only a lowball
offer, and when it was rejected they arranged for a new government
agency (the Arlington Sports Facility Development Authority, or ASFDA)
to condemn it for them.

The agency foreclosed the land and paid the owners a very low price,
later judged by a jury to be only 1/6th of its actual value. The agency
also floated bonds, guaranteed and repaid by taxpayers, to finance the
purchase. This amounted to a $135 million subsidy for Bush and partners,
compared with the $80 million they paid for the franchise. Since they
recently sold the entire franchise for $250 million, it's easy to see
whose money Bush and friends pocketed.

The next time Junior talks about tax cuts, remember this: Arlinton had
to impose a new 1/2 cent sales tax just to pay for the subsidy Bush and
his partners received.

To add insult to injury, Bush and his partners continue to stiff the
taxpayers for $7.5 million they owe under the terms of the agreement. It
held that the team would pay all expenses over $135 million. The
original owners of just 13 of the acres sued the City of Arlington,
saying that the ASFDA had not paid a fair price for the land. The jury
awarded them $7.5 million, but even though the project exceeded the $135
million limit, the partners have refused to pay. Given their huge
taxpayer subsidy and $170 million profits, it seems absurdly selfish.

George Bush, Jr. has said in campaign speeches "I will do everything I
can to defend the power of private property and private property rights
when I am the governor of this state." Apparently this deal was not
covered by that statement, since he wasn't governor yet.

He claims that he "wasn't aware of the details" of the land
condemnations, even though he was the team's managing general partner
and has bragged about personally getting the stadium built. But he told
the Fort Worth Star-Telegram in October 1990 that "The idea of making a
land play, absolutely, to plunk the field down in the middle of a big
piece of land, that's kind of always been the strategy."

And the key to their land play was always the strong arm of government.
A memo from Arlington real estate broker Mike Reilly to Rangers
President Tom Schieffer dated October 26, 1990 - the day before Bush's
comment about the land play - said "In this particular situation our
first offer should be our final offer ... If this fails, we will
probably have to initiate condemnation proceedings after the bond
election passes."

On the first day of the 1993 campaign, Bush said "The best way to
allocate resources in our society is through the marketplace. Not
through a governing elite." Not through a private sports team buying in
the President's son cheap, and then getting the government to hand them
extremely valuable land.


Party Hearty: Sex, Drugs, And Rock 'N Roll?

For almost half his life, Junior was distinguished mainly by his hearty
appetite for partying. A Newsweek profile by Evan Thomas, describing his
college years, says he "seems to have majored in beer drinking at the
Deke House." After he formed his first company (which failed), Thomas
writes, "By his own account, Bush spent a lot of time in bars, trying to
sort out who he was. He had a kind of ragged nervous energy in that
period, and he could be a bully."
The Bush family spin is that the governor quit drinking cold turkey on
his 40th birthday, straightened out by the love of a good woman (his
wife, Laura.) They even pull out their secret weapon, lovable Barbara
Bush, with anecdotes about what a rascal little George Junior was.

But the explosive element here is not booze. It's sex, drugs and
hypocrisy. Frankly, it doesn't bother us if candidates have partied,
even a lot. Who wants a bunch of namby-pamby boy scouts running the
country? But George Bush Jr. makes a big point of travelling around the
country and lecturing students on staying celibate, sober and drug free.
He does not permit the option of partying hard until you're 40 and then
stopping.


No Handcuffs or Dwarf Orgies

Junior is so worried about his past that he hired a private detective to
investigate himself. (I guess he can't remember what he did at those
parties, which tells you something right there.)
According to an unnamed insider quoted on MSNBC, Bush "isn't terribly
thrilled" about what they found, though no one is spilling the details
(yet). "No handcuffs or dwarf orgies, but he was a handsome, rich
playboy and lived that life," the insider said.

Sex: Bush volunteers to reporters that he has been faithful to his wife.
However, he was married at 31 and makes no claim of virginity before
that point, even as he lectures the youth of today to remain celibate. A
Clinton aide who was in Bush's class at Yale has already warned him that
"People who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones."

Drugs: No one is speaking for the record, and there is no solid proof
that we know of, but there are consistent rumors of Bush not only
smoking pot but snorting cocaine during his partying heyday in the
1970s. Bush does not deny any of this. When Newsweek asked "If you're
asked specifically about marijuana or cocaine, what's the answer?" and
Bush replied "I will say what I did as a youth is irrelevant to this
campaign. What is relevant is, have you grown up, and I have."

Bush has continued to repeat this line, and his other catch phrase "When
I was young and irresponsible, I was really young and irresponsible."
But increasingly voters and his opponents are not accepting these
evasions. So, under persistent questioning, Bush has now given a little
detail. Junior was asked by the Dallas Morning News about the standard
FBI background check, used in the Clinton administration, which asks
whether potential White House employees have used drugs in the last 7
years. He said “As I understand it, the current form asks the question,
‘Did somebody use drugs within the last seven years?’ and I will be glad
to answer that question, and the answer is ‘No.’ " That's a relief,
however it totally undercuts his reason for not answering the general
question, that he was going to avoid any details. How about 7-10 years
ago? How about 10-15? There are many people in Texas jails currently
serving jail time for possession of drugs 10 years ago. Does Bush think
he is better than these people? Or just luckier? Or just richer?

Rock and Roll: Bush keeps a picture of himself with two members of ZZ
Top, but does not play the song "Tube Steak Boogie" during his celibacy
lectures. We have found no evidence to support the the most explosive
allegation so far; that Bush played air guitar to a Foghat record at a
party in the late 1970s. But he won't deny it, either.

When pressed on the hypocrisy issue, he speaks to hypocritical baby
boomer parents everywhere: "If I were you, I wouldn't tell your kids
that you smoked pot unless you want 'em to smoke pot. I think it's
important for leaders, and parents, not to send mixed signals. I don't
want some kid saying, 'Well, Governor Bush tried it.'"

It's amazing enough that he openly defends hypocrisy, but his own
signals are very mixed. When allowed to imply that he is just another
manly, hard-drinking rapscallion, Bush seizes the opportunity. "When I
was young and irresponsible, I was really young and irresponsible," he
often says. He even hints at pot smoking, as in the above quote, and why
not? Everyone from his likely opponent Al Gore to Newt Gingrich has
admitted smoking pot.

But Junior wants it both ways. When the deadly rumor of cocaine use
surfaces, he retreats to his high-minded rhetoric about not giving mixed
messages. If he thinks he can skate to the presidency without either his
right-wing foes or embittered Clintonistas pushing his past into the
limelight, then he really IS on drugs.


Sources

The Bush Watch (web site), an opinionated, well-researched and
reasonably fair (though blatantly liberal) anti-Bush site.
http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/3750/bush.htm
"The Sons Also Rise", by Evan Thomas, Newsweek, November 16, 1998 p44-8

"Like Most, I'm Amazed" (Bush interview with Howard Fineman), Newsweek,
November 16, 1998

"Another Bush Contemplates Run for Presidency", by Sue Anne Pressley
(Washington Post news service), San Francisco Chronicle, May 12, 1997
pA5

"The Bush Brothers", by Howard Fineman, Newsweek, November 2, 1998
p30-33


Quote Sources

"dwarf orgies": "George W. Bush, the dirt digger" by Jeannette Walls,
MSNBC's "The Scoop" gossip column.


"feather my nest": "Business associates profit during Bush's term as
governor" by R. G. Ratcliffe, Houston Chronicle, August 16, 1998 pA1

Jesse Ventura: "Ventura a star pupil with media, colleagues at
governor's school", by Bill Salisbury, Houston Chronicle, November 13,
1998

Gingrich: "Governor did not influence Gingrich decision, aide says", by
Ken Herman, Austin American-Statesman, November 9, 1998

"Who goes to heaven":"Bush fields questions about faith upon return from
trip to Israel" by Clay Robison, The Houston Chronicle, December 3, 1998


Dirty shirts: "Another Bush Contemplates Run for Presidency", by Sue
Anne Pressley (Washington Post news service), San Francisco Chronicle,
May 12, 1997

Responsibility era: "'I have to perform,' he says," by Kenneth Walsh, U.
S. News and World Report, November 16, 1998

"More money than I ever dreamed": quoted in "The Governor's Sweetheart
Deal", by Robert Bryce, The Texas Observer, January 30, 1998


Thin Skin Sources


"Bush Criticizes Web Site as Malicious", by Wayne Slater, Dallas Morning
News, May 22, 1999

"Governor Rips Web Site Parody", Associated Press, May 21, 1999

"Bush Campaign Tries to Limit Internet Attacks", by Alan Elsner, Reuters
News Serviec (on Yahoo! web site), May 19, 1999

"4 protesters arrested at Governor 's Mansion" by R.G. RATCLIFFE,
Houston Chronicle, April 20, 1999 Section A Page 13 Metfront. 3 STAR
edition

"Activists to challenge policy against protest gatherings near the
Governor's Mansion", by Jay Root, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, May 25, 1999

Funeralgate Sources

"The Funeral Home Flap: Trouble for a Texas Mortician with links to the
Bush Family", by Michael Isikoff, Newsweek, August 16, 1999
"Bush Affidavit Refuted", by Janet Elliot, Law News Network, August 16,
1999

"Funeral company hopeful after takeover " By Juan B. Elizondo Jr.,
Austin American-Statesman, Wednesday, August 18, 1999

"Governor's role questioned in funeral agency oversight: Bush's office
rejects call for legislative control", By George Kuempel , The Dallas
Morning News, August 8, 1999

"Bush Watch Special: Dubya and The Gravedigger", by Jerry Politex, The
Bush Watch Website (ongoing)

Scandal Timeline, Austin Chronicle, ongoing


Insider Deal Sources

"Business associates profit during Bush's term as governor" by R. G.
Ratcliffe, Houston Chronicle, August 16, 1998 pA1
"How Bush REALLY Made His Millions", by Jerry Politex, The Bush Watch
Web Site, ongoing

"Who is David Edwards?", by Micah Morrison, The Wall Street Journal,
March 1, 1995

"The Governor's Sweetheart Deal", by Robert Bryce, The Texas Observer,
January 30, 1998

"Bush's Big Score", by Robert Bryce, The Dallas Observer, February 9,
1998

"Bush's Free Ride", by Stuart Eskenazi, Dallas Observer, October 29,
1998

"Good Connections: Family Ties helped fund oil venture that began Bush's
business career", by Richard Oppel Jr. and George Kuemple, Dallas
Morning News, November 16, 1998

"Whitewashing the Bush Boys", by Stephen Pizzo, Mother Jones,
March-April 1994

"Family Value$", by Stephen Pizzo, Mother Jones, September-October 1992

"Diamond Brilliance: Bush mastered art of he deal in building his
baseball fortune", by R. G. Ratcliffe, Houston Chronicle, August 16,
1998 pA19

"The Family that Preys Together", by Jack Colhoun, "Covert Action
Quarterly, #41, Summer 1992

"Downloading the Bush Files", by Michael King, Texas Observer, November
1998


Corruption Sources


"Business associates profit during Bush's term as governor" by R. G.
Ratcliffe, Houston Chronicle, August 16, 1998 pA1

"Secrecy Cloaks $1.7 billion in UT Investments: Board puts money in
funds run by trustees, friends of trustees", by R.G. Ratliffe, The
Houston Chronicle, March 20, 1999

"How Bush REALLY Made His Millions", by Jerry Politex, The Bush Watch
Web Site, ongoing

"Who is David Edwards?", by Micah Morrison, The Wall Street Journal,
March 1, 1995

"The Governor's Sweetheart Deal", by Robert Bryce, The Texas Observer,
January 30, 1998

"Bush's Big Score", by Robert Bryce, The Dallas Observer, February 9,
1998

"Downloading the Bush Files", by Michael King, Texas Observer, November
1998

"Richard Rainwater: The invisible man behind one of the year's biggest
deals", by John Morthland, Texas Monthly, September 1996

"Auditor Withheld Findings on State Housing Agency", by Craig Flournoy,
Dallas Morning News, February 18, 1999

"Capitol Report: Housing Officials Under Fire", Austin American
Statesman, February 3, 1999


Sex, Drugs and Rock 'N Roll Sources


"George W. Bush, the dirt digger" by Jeannette Walls, MSNBC's "The
Scoop" gossip column.



GOP insiders have privately confirmed to The Skeleton Closet that Bush
hired the private detective, and that he was a very sexy and highly
sexed bachelor.



"Bush, looking at D.C., sees a 'sullied process'", Austin
American-Statesman, September 16, 1998

"The Sons Also Rise", by Evan Thomas, Newsweek, November 16, 1998 p44-8

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