-Caveat Lector-

Give 'em heck!  Fax and phone numbers for comments to Bush's attorney listed
below.  Bush refuses to acknowledge his cocaine use.  With proper promotion
this could have far reaching effects towards ending the drug war but I bet
it
wasn't crack.  I am forwarding this separately to my partial list of
national and Bay area media.  Please forward to relevant lists that you may
be on that are not shown above.

-----Original Message-----

Date: Thursday, May 20, 1999 8:06 AM
Subject: GEORGE W. BUSH JR. LASHES OUT AT PARODY WEBSITE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 20, 1999

GEORGE W. BUSH JR. LASHES OUT AT PARODY WEBSITE
Bush learns about internet a moment too late

Contact: Ray Thomas (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED])
         Zack Exley (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED])
         Bush attorney Benjamin Ginsberg
           (202-457-6405, fax 202-457-6315)
URLs:    http://www.gwbush.com/, http://rtmark.com/gwbush.com,
           http://www.georgewbush.com
         Bush letter to F.E.C., etc.: http://rtmark.com/bush.html

Each week, thousands of people seeking information on probable Republican
presidential candidate George W. Bush, Jr. type "gwbush" into their web
browsers
and end up at http://www.gwbush.com/.

Bush has tried hard for weeks to shut down the rogue site, which parodies
Bush's
official http://www.georgewbush.com/ and discusses his past cocaine use, as
well
as parodying U.S. politics in general. Bush's legal efforts began April 14
with
a cease-and-desist letter claiming that gwbush.com violated copyright laws.
Shortly thereafter, on May 10, Time Magazine reported that the Bush campaign
had
just purchased sixty additional domain names, including bushbites.com and
bushsux.org, in an apparent attempt at damage control. Bush's most recent
effort
is a complaint filed with the Federal Election Commission that may have
widespread implications for free speech on the internet.

gwbush.com is owned by Zack Exley, a Boston computer consultant. Most of the
content on the website was provided by RTMARK, a group that specializes in
calling attention to corporate subversion of the U.S. political and
electoral
process. gwbush.com is listed as an unofficial Bush campaign site in Yahoo!
and
elsewhere.

Bush's latest legal effort against gwbush.com, a complaint filed May 3 with
the
Federal Elections Commission, asserts that Exley has violated election laws
by
not registering as a political committee, and urges that the site's "fair
market
value" puts the endeavor well over the $1000 threshold that defines a
political
committee under election law. (At one point, Bush's counsel had asked Exley
at
what price he would sell his domains, which also include gwbush.org and
gbush.org; Exley quoted $350,000.)

The F.E.C. case may set a legal precedent in the area of internet speech in
electoral campaigns. One F.E.C. employee, who preferred not to be
identified,
said the commission has recently established a "special inquiry committee"
to
discuss possible regulation of sites such as gwbush.com.

"George W. Bush Jr. apparently thinks small-time folk should have to
register
with the government before exercising free speech on the internet," said
Rita
Mae Rakoczi, a lawyer and RTMARK representative. "The implications of such a
precedent could be quite serious."

RTMARK and Mr. Exley represent the unlikely kind of collaboration the
internet
makes possible. Mr. Exley is a computer consultant to the Boston financial
sector, and describes himself as "a Christian who loathes hypocrisy." RTMARK
is
primarily devoted to anti-corporate activism, and counts the very companies
that
Mr. Exley works for as some of its targets.

By reserving the domain names, Exley initially hoped to sell them back to
the
Bush camp for a small profit. That changed, however, when he read news
articles
that discussed Bush's refusal to deny past cocaine use. His interest in the
matter has since escalated into something of a crusade. "Bush won't deny he
used
cocaine, yet hundreds of thousands of people are serving very long sentences
for
equivalent or lesser crimes, including many in Texas [where Bush is
governor].
Clinton just got away with perjury while a hundred people are in jail for
that
crime. Do we want our children to learn that a crime is only a crime if you
don't have power?"

Exley first invited RTMARK to provide content for gwbush.com after hearing
about
their "franchise" program, in which the group provides a tailor-made
thematic
website to anyone with an appropriate domain. According to RTMARK
spokesperson
Ray Thomas, "Bush himself was originally a secondary issue for us.  We just
wanted to use gwbush.com as a platform to make various points about how
corporations have subverted and sabotaged the political and electoral
process,
and hoped it could illustrate the low level to which campaigning has sunk.
The
more Bush has tried to get in our way, however, the more we've chosen to
make
the site a direct attack on his 'stealth' presidential campaign, and the
worse
that makes it for Bush." (RTMARK's first version of gwbush.com is now
archived
at http://rtmark.com/gwbush.com/.)

While the controversy surrounding http://www.gwbush.com/ represents the
first
time RTMARK has been drawn into political conflict, clumsy legal actions are
nothing new to RTMARK. In April of last year, for example, Geffen and BMG
Music
wrote RTMARK and Illegal Art letters demanding they cease distribution of
Deconstructing Beck, a CD of music made entirely from samples of Beck
recordings. Those letters (posted at http://rtmark.com/lawletters.html)
helped
RTMARK draw widespread attention to issues of fair use and copyright law
with
what had begun as an obscure release with a very limited audience.

The full text of the Bush lawyer's letter to the F.E.C., his
cease-and-desist
letter, and other materials can be found at http://rtmark.com/bush.html. The
pages of http://www.gwbush.com/ that deal specifically with Bush's cocaine
use
can be found at http://www.gwbush.com/bushpramnesty.html and
http://www.gwbush.com/bushq3.html. For more on Bush's domain-name buying
frenzy,
see http://biz.yahoo.com/rf/990513/bn8.html.


RTMARK (http://rtmark.com/) uses its limited liability as a corporation to
sponsor the sabotage of mass-produced products. One of RTMARK's ultimate
aims is
to eliminate the principle of limited liability. Occasionally, as with
http://www.gwbush.com/, RTMARK participates in advocacy directly related to
issues of corporate abuses of the political process.

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