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The Bush Era Has Been an Eight-Year-Long Madoff-Style Ripoff

By Frank Rich, The New York Times. Posted January 12, 2009.


It will be easier for us and Obama to push for a bold agenda if we demand accountability for the robbery and theft of the Bush years.

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Three days after the world learned that $50 billion may have disappeared in Bernie Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, The Times led its front page of Dec. 14 with the revelation of another $50 billion rip-off. This time the vanished loot belonged to American taxpayers. That was our collective contribution to the $117 billion spent (as of mid-2008) on Iraq reconstruction — a sinkhole of corruption, cronyism, incompetence and outright theft that epitomized Bush management at home and abroad.

The source for this news was a near-final draft of an as-yet-unpublished 513-page federal history of this nation-building fiasco. The document was assembled by the Office of the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction — led by a Bush appointee, no less. It pinpoints, among other transgressions, a governmental Ponzi scheme concocted to bamboozle Americans into believing they were accruing steady dividends on their investment in a “new” Iraq.

The report quotes no less an authority than Colin Powell on how the scam worked. Back in 2003, Powell said, the Defense Department just “kept inventing numbers of Iraqi security forces — the number would jump 20,000 a week! ‘We now have 80,000, we now have 100,000, we now have 120,000.’ ” Those of us who questioned these astonishing numbers were dismissed as fools, much like those who begged in vain to get the Securities and Exchange Commission to challenge Madoff’s math.

What’s most remarkable about the Times article, however, is how little stir it caused. When, in 1971, The Times got its hands on the Pentagon Papers, the internal federal history of the Vietnam disaster, the revelations caused a national uproar. But after eight years of battering by Bush, the nation has been rendered half-catatonic. The Iraq Pentagon Papers sank with barely a trace.

After all, next to big-ticket administration horrors like Abu Ghraib, Guantánamo and the politicized hiring and firing at Alberto Gonzales’s Justice Department, the wreckage of Iraq reconstruction is what Ralph Kramden of “The Honeymooners” would dismiss as “a mere bag of shells.” The $50 billion also pales next to other sums that remain unaccounted for in the Bush era, from the $345 billion in lost tax revenue due to unpoliced offshore corporate tax havens to the far-from-transparent disposition of some $350 billion in Wall Street bailout money. In the old Pat Moynihan phrase, the Bush years have “defined deviancy down” in terms of how low a standard of ethical behavior we now tolerate as the norm from public officials.

Not even a good old-fashioned sex scandal could get our outrage going again. Indeed, a juicy one erupted last year in the Interior Department, where the inspector general found that officials “had used cocaine and marijuana, and had sexual relationships with oil and gas company representatives.” Two officials tasked with marketing oil on behalf of American taxpayers got so blotto at a daytime golf event sponsored by Shell that they became too incapacitated to drive and had to be put up by the oil company.

Back in the day, an oil-fueled scandal in that one department alone could mesmerize a nation and earn Warren Harding a permanent ranking among our all-time worst presidents. But while the scandals at Bush’s Interior resemble Teapot Dome — and also encompass millions of dollars in lost federal oil and gas royalties — they barely registered beyond the Beltway. Even late-night comics yawned when The Washington Post administered a coup de grâce last week, reporting that Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne spent $235,000 from taxpayers to redo his office bathroom (monogrammed towels included).


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View:
George W. Bush Presidential Library
Posted by: 1rufus1 on Jan 12, 2009 1:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With all of the graft, lies, deceit, economic catastrophe, etc., etc., and etc. during the G.W. Bush presidency, what in the world are they going to put in the George W. Bush Presidential Library when it is built? Will they tell the truth? It will be interesting. I cannot think of any great accomplishments done during the last eight years. Yes, there was a quick response to retaliate against terrorists in Afghanistan after the attacks on the World Trade Center and there hasn't been a repeat on our soil since. I will give him that one. But he used it to get us into the Iraq mess so it sort of cancels each other out. Instead of building a library full of reminders of a disastrous two terms, use the money to pay for electroshock therapy for those of us who never want to remember these last eight years again.

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» You see, it works! Posted by: jstuv
» I have a few shoes to add Posted by: DJC11
Bush's greatest achievement
Posted by: Carts on Jan 12, 2009 2:03 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bush's greatest achievement was to pull off 9/11 and suck you Americans into a vortex of self-destruction

Watch "911 Loose Change"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7E3oIbO0AWE

You deserve it for all the wars and corruption America has forced onto the world

I live in Cambodia - your A class war criminals Nixon and Killinger were responsible for the rise of the Khmer Rouge

Both should have been imprisoned or better hung from the highest yardarm.

America is collapsing - the world is cheering!

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» RE: Bush's greatest achievement Posted by: weathered
Frank Rich, you & your once
Posted by: weathered on Jan 12, 2009 3:11 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
fine newspaper have had many years to confont and disclose truths that accumulated in this the darkest crime spree in America's history.

The NY Times didn't just turn their back on us as we lived and cleaned up downtown on 9/12, the paper ran the otherway and LIED and did so w/precision.


Far too little, far too late Frank. The paper will remain unforgiven. 'all the lies that are fit to print'

Lie, print, cut & paste, indeed and on purpose.

Our recollection of the wreckage these tragic events have brought created headlines that we should have seen, but didn't, just one of them should read;
"The New York Times died on 9/11
Its spirit got crushed in its own rubble."

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» Not a chance Posted by: Drclaw
» RE: Cut the "Gray Lady" some slack? Posted by: pelican beak
The Bush Family Legacy
Posted by: magistre on Jan 12, 2009 3:26 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Begins with the grandfather, Prescott Bush. This Bush not only was Hitler's middle-man in the U.S. (headed the Deutsche Bank until 1943 funneling money and "marching orders" from the controllers in this country to Hitler and was at the helm of a plot to overthrow F.D.R. and the U.S. government).
Where was the press when it should have been reminding us of the "roots" of the "family".

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» RE: The Bush Family Legacy Posted by: CosmoViking
» RE: The Bush Family Legacy Posted by: VZEQICVA
Legacy Shmegacy
Posted by: Perry Logan on Jan 12, 2009 3:42 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
George W. Bush's legacy is assured. He will be listed as the Worst President Ever™, but there will always be an asterisk next to his name--because of course, he was never elected.

How frustrating for Dubyah. All those records (record deficit, record corruption, record incompetence, record treason, etc.), and he gets snookered on a technicality!

I salute my 9/11 Truth Movement brothers and urge anyone who honest-to-God believes the most incompetent administration in history pulled off the trickiest hoax in history--and fooled everyone in the world except a few guys who got on the web--to check out their sites. Then visit my three favorite debunking sites, which will cure a normal person in minutes:

http://www.911myths.com/
http://www.debunking911.com/
http://wtc7lies.googlepages.com/home

PS: If you have time, tell me if you think my latest video is too weird.

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» Proven "theory" we call a fact, jack Posted by: godsbreath64
Shoot the messenger!
Posted by: 2thepoint on Jan 12, 2009 3:52 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Maybe the article didn't cause a ripple is because the NYT no longer has any credibility. The facts may be accurate but the messenger is rarely accurate!

The media has dug a hole for itself with the horrible and inaccurate reporting in the past few years not to mention the debacle know as election coverage!

What will stir public interest?- how fast the NYT will file for bankruptcy!

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» RE: Shoot the messenger! Posted by: skiptowne
» RE: Shoot the messenger! Posted by: luzmejor
The vice Precedant Won His War on the American Way
Posted by: godsbreath64 on Jan 12, 2009 3:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
His minion couldn't count nearly to eight, spell war or merely supervise his navel by himself.

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It wasn't a Puppet "Bush Era" It remains the FASCIST ERA
Posted by: Mister_PsyOps on Jan 12, 2009 4:00 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And the NY Times was a eager enabler and recycler of at least 1,000 establishment lies that promoted false 9/11 "war on terror" based on the flagrant coverup of 9/11 itself that even Kean and Hamilton have repudiated.

To blame an entire "era" on one stooge felon such as Bush and his BushCo lackey regime is absurd. All of a sellout organized corporate crime Washington-MSM axis is wholly complicit in the criminal acts that led America into the worst place it has been since its founding.

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Caesar77
Posted by: Caesar77 on Jan 12, 2009 5:24 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bush and his axis of evil, Cheney, Rove and Rice, have done more damage to America than Osama ben Laden and Al Qaeds could ever do.
If these evil bastards don't pay for their despicable crimes against this great nation, then we should hang our collective heads in shame.
Lets see what kind of back-bone Americans have, if any.

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Something in the Water???
Posted by: Purple Girl on Jan 12, 2009 6:13 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We've all heard the claims of Flouride being a mental debilitator and being used by the Nazi's to dumb down the citizens. Well we've had flourinated water for decades.
What also has recently been discussed is that Smoking may actually keep the Brain circuits working at a higher speed due to the effects of Nicotine. Funny how somking has been the focus of Gov't, yet air & water pollution have been of little concern for th elast few decades.
Another study suggested that Pot actually decreased the possilbity of developing alzheimers. so has it been the cigarette & Pot smokers who have been screaming about the Bush admins Numerous crimes because they are the only ones who's brains still function at normal levels?
Honestly It has been amazing the Group think that has griped (and ripped) our country for Decades. Did they increase the % of flouride when Ronny took office?
Perhaps we are just coming out of a induced Catonic state imposed by our Nazi Regime who call themselves the Neo Cons.
On ething we must all accept is that many of the 'Cheeto Eating conspiracy theroists' have been right the entire time. maybe MSM should begin searching their sites to figure out what they should actually be investigating, Instead of wasteing our time (and brain power) or Blag/Burris and Caroline. the MSM have been accomplices in this Dumbing Down of the American Public. Try a little real investigative reporting and then your newspapers and cable shows appeal may increase.Otherwise kiss your Jobs good bye.Opinions are like Assholes, MSM, everyones got one.Show US something we've never seen.

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» RE: Something in the Water??? Posted by: WingedGryphon
» RE: Something in the Water??? Posted by: luzmejor
"The Adults are in Charge"
Posted by: xvictor on Jan 12, 2009 6:13 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The rallying cry of the neocons once Bush was installed as president was that "the adults are in charge". They had effectively perverted the phrase by inserting terms such as lying, stealing, cheating, and obfuscating as part of the "adult" definition.

So after someone utters "the adults are in charge", do not be impressed and hang on to your wallet and common sense!!!

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It's crowning acheivement, over $700 billion
Posted by: sonofloud on Jan 12, 2009 6:14 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
in corporate welfare which the democrats supported more than the republicans.
Bush did steal from us for 8 years, with the democrats help.

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This comment has been removed from the site due to non-compliance with AlterNet's community policies.
Gee, thanks NY Times
Posted by: CosmoViking on Jan 12, 2009 6:35 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's really great that you write articles like this now that Bush and Cheney are leaving.

I am not the least bit pissed off that your shitty Establishment rag has aided and abetted this criminal administration and David Rockefeller's CFR in spreading their corporate greed-fest of invasion, for-profit war, mass killing of innocents and dumping the worst food franchises on the planet in the middle of the Arab world (their cooking is really awesome by the way). Crimes one and all.

I am so happy that on every issue of your debt ridden and editorially bankrupt paper, there still appears the quote "all the news that's fit to print".

Well done. The people have not been let down by the scribes you send to take dictation by Hermann Goring's, errm sorry, Dick Cheney's hand while getting freebees from KBR and Raytheon.

Yeah, all in all, I'm real happy with this piece and the timing of it. Just great journalism. I am feeling good about being a citizen of the western world.

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» RE: Gee, thanks NY Times Posted by: Quannah
» RE: Gee, thanks NY Times Posted by: CosmoViking
» RE: Gee, thanks NY Times Posted by: Quannah
(New York) Times have Changed
Posted by: ProgressiveManiac on Jan 12, 2009 6:50 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But after eight years of battering by Bush, the nation has been rendered half-catatonic. The Iraq Pentagon Papers sank with barely a trace.

What is surprising is that New York Times can say something like this with no sense of irony, as if they have nothing at all to do with this apparent complacency. How can the public get enraged about something if the media never tells them about it?

When the Pentagon Papers appeared, the New York Times published them in serial form. NBC, CBS and ABC talked about them any time you turned on the news. Local papers wrote editorials. It was impossible for a citizen not to have some familiarity with the Pentagon Papers.

How does that compare with the media today?

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Presidential restitution law
Posted by: zooeyhall on Jan 12, 2009 6:58 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Of course you know that Bush is already lining-up all those $75,000 speaking engagements, probably starting the day after the inaugural. And of course the huge corporate contributions to the "Bush Presidential Library", to which the Bush faithfull--you know, that idiotic 20% in the polls who say Bush is doing a great job--will all make pilgrimage to.

Remember, this is just what Saint Ronnie Reagan did as soon as he was out of the Oval Office.

There should be a "Presidential Restitution Law", similar to the law that keeps convicted felons from profiting from their crimes. The laws that keep convicts from selling book and tv movie rights, or that if they do the money goes to recompensate the victims of the crime.
I can think of some things that Bush should recompensate--Iraq war veterans, Guantanamo prisoners, Iraq reconstruction.

Isn't there SOME sort of legal recourse that could be used to keep Bush from raking in the dough and crying all the way to the bank?

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» RE: Presidential restitution law Posted by: MausMasher54
Perceptions
Posted by: ProgressiveManiac on Jan 12, 2009 6:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Barack Obama said. “I would not want my first term consumed by what was perceived on the part of Republicans as a partisan witch hunt, because I think we’ve got too many problems we’ve got to solve.”

I am left wondering why no Republican politician ever seems to worry about being perceived as being on a partisan witch hunt. In fact I wonder why they don't seem to worry about being perceived as always being on a partisan witch hunt.

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» RE: Perceptions Posted by: VZEQICVA
It's worse than you think.
Posted by: monkeywrench on Jan 12, 2009 8:10 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From the article:
"But after eight years of battering by Bush, the nation has been rendered half-catatonic. The Iraq Pentagon Papers sank with barely a trace."
. . . . .

It has not been just "battering by Bush" that has put America into a coma. Another reason for the catatonia, maybe the major reason, is the dumbing down of America resulting from a relentless barrage of pop culture crap that has infected the airwaves, and a "news" media that has substituted gossip about that crap for actual news reporting. Enhancing this movement is the expansion into content of advertising techniques designed to subliminally shape human emotions and opinions. These techniques have been perfected over the last 50 years and should not be taken lightly.

I will grant, however, that some of those who actually care about truth in the news have had to stifle themselves. The same corporations who benefit from war and other forms of Bush administration corporate welfare also own the major "news" outlets and dictate what is broadcast. Reporters who attempt to tell the truth soon find themselves out of a job –– or worse.

The result is a population with far too many who not only are being denied the truth, but who have been robbed of the desire to seek the truth. This is a "mission accomplished" that does not begin or end with the Bush administration but is orchestrated by the shadow corporate government and is something that Obama's administration will have to contend with – if they choose to.

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why no prosecution of bush crimes?
Posted by: Levon on Jan 12, 2009 8:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
cause a lot of dems are complicit and if the facts ever got out not just a number of bush heads would be implicated. at a time when our country needed a loyal opposition more than ever the dems just rolled up and folded over and over even when they knew perfectly well what was going on... and obama is more than happy to let that sleeping dog lie cause, lord knows, he doesn't want to em-bare-ass his collegues in the house and senate.

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NY TIMES AND ALL THE REST
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Jan 12, 2009 8:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've read newspapers all my life as did my parents. Since Bush became president I noticed that gradually they contained very little news that was important to us. The truly blatant omission was the War in Iraq which should have been and should still be page one. It is the custom of every civilized nation to acknowledge its military. We failed miserably to the point of embarassment. Absolute nonsense on page one and military casualties on page seven. War is an 'in your face' event. The same applies to television. In general the administration has gotten a pass from the media for eight years. They chose not to keep us informed and one by one they go by the wayside. It's not complicated, but it is a shame. Thanks, ANNA

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Warren G Harding and George W. Bush
Posted by: US Citizen on Jan 12, 2009 9:17 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The parallels between Warren G Harding and George W. Bush have always seemed striking. The people of Marion, Ohio must be celebrating, because they are no longer the home of the worst, most corrupt, President ever.

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Madoff benefitted from 28 years of ENRONOMICS, not just 8.
Posted by: Wayne Etheridge on Jan 12, 2009 9:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Oh, and a very nicey nice Congress to keep it going !

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THANK YOU, FRANK RICH!
Posted by: Quannah on Jan 12, 2009 9:32 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As someone who read almost every one of Frank Rich's Sunday columns in the NYT from the time Bush took over our government, I can say that there hasn't been another columnist who was more critical of the Bush Junta.

Thank you, Mr. Rich, for reminding me EVERY SUNDAY of the crimes and lies and malfeasance of the Bush Junta!

Thank you, Mr. Rich, for writing a book outlining all of the crimes and lies and malfeasance, The Greatest Story Ever Sold.

Thank you, Mr. Rich, for not caving in while all the other columnists were writing fluff pieces and cheerleading for Bush and Cheney and Rummy and Wolfie... thank you for telling me the truth about these criminals!

The NYT failed the American people for the last eight years. Horribly. Miserably. But Frank Rich did not fail the American people. He and Paul Krugman stood for the truth.

And for those of you who want to criticize Frank Rich, I suggest you go to the NYT website and look through the archives. Pick any Sunday over the past 8 years. Any Sunday. And read Rich's column. Then tell me of ANYONE in the MSM who was more truthful about the crimes of the Bush Junta!

THANK YOU, FRANK RICH.

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» RE: THANK YOU, FRANK RICH! Posted by: VZEQICVA
NYT Light
Posted by: D. Shenary on Jan 12, 2009 12:30 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Frank Rich has shown great courage along with a few others in reporting some of the crimes and malfeasance of the Bush Crime Family. Only a few brave souls have had the courage to raise questions regarding the crime of the century and that is of coarse the events of 911 and the US government’s involvement in that crime. Has the NYT muzzled Frank Rich on this issue? The failure of MSM to research the crime of the century will forever be remembered as the death of a truly free press and the building of a corporate/political propaganda machine.

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Now you want to tell us............
Posted by: Spiritgirl on Jan 12, 2009 12:38 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Like many of the now infamous tell all's about the Bush years, now you want to inform us of the all-too-obvious! As a journalist your job was not to beat the drums of these ill-conceived wars, but to actually print why they should have been necessary!

I am soooooo disgusted by many of you "celebrity" journalists and "supposedly news" papers, mainly because you showed your yellow stripe precisely when you were needed - to inform the American people of not just why we should go to war, but the true cost in lives on all sides, monetary, not to mention the real reason:OIL! Loyalty to this nation, and it's people was never a consideration! It is a travesty that this has happened, but as Americans we are owed not just an explanation of the lies, but some justice for the over 4,000 dead Americans, the hundreds of thousand of dead Afghani's and Iraqi's, the reputation of America, and the invasion of other sovereign nations for lies, deceit, and misappropriations of taxpayer money!

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This alone is worth the Nobel prize
Posted by: amacd on Jan 12, 2009 7:23 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All the way back in 2001 at the beginning of the Bush regime, George Akerlof, the U.S. Nobel laureate in economics, said of the Bush administration's policies ---

"These are not normal government policies. What we have here is a form of looting."

Bush likes to say things like, "Well, history may record that I ...."

Bush's real legacy?

I like this one, which I think I wrote in 2003 or 2004:

"Bush ------ the stench of crimes against humanity combined with outright theft ---- all gift wrapped in evangelical and patriotic BS."

Or this:

"The ‘Bush Doctrine’ is very similar to the ‘Gen. Ripper Doctrine’ (from “Dr. Strangelove”), but Ripper is a more sympathetic charter, since his launch of pre-emptive nuclear war was at least not to cover-up his own massive thievery from his own air base."

Now Frank Rich has got me going on all my wonderful memories from the 8 beautiful Bush/Cheney years --- and the NYTimes' gutless, complicit coverage of our favorite war criminal.

Stop me or I'll keep going:

Ridding the world of the ‘Axis of Fanatics’: ---- Elite fundamentalist nuts like Bush, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Benjamin Netanyahu

Where is a PR whore readily acknowledged as a PR whore??

Bush --- the “Emperor of Freedom”

Bush’s misplaced American Dream of Empire

Nervous Bipartisan Whores are running to jump out windows in Congress

As Tom Jefferson said, “The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with blood”, and a good start would be cutting down the Bush that is strangling its roots.

The NYTimes should change its tag line from “All the news that’s fit to print” to “The ENRON of Journalism”

NY Times --- "All the news that’s OK'd by the ruling elite not to 'black out'"

NY Times --- A ‘brand’ you can trust for distortion

NY Times ---- The leading brand in news ---- (for fooling the rubes)

New York Times ------ Covering up ‘Blood for Oil’ Lies

The New York Times CORPORATION ===== The Imperial Paper

For the ‘working class’ the NYTimes serves the same function as K-Y Jelly ----- and handcuffs.

But, they will not go by asking NICELY

Class warfare --- ‘bring it on’.

It's the 'old economy' elite, Stupid. It's the OIL, --- Stupid.

Bipartisan Cabal of Elite Liars

“Democrats and Republicans ---- Elitist whores protecting other elitist whores.”

The CEO of Japan's NEC drives a little hybrid car, while the CEO of GM is **cking us in the back seat of a huge SUV----- and the CEO of Exxon supplying the lubricant ---- and the CEO of the US empire trades 'working class' blood for oil.

Jefferson said, “The tree of liberty must be refreshed with blood”, starting with cutting down the elite Bush that is strangling its roots.

The real reason that Cheney's 'energy' plan must remain secret is that it focused on U.S. oil exhaustion by 2012, and provided the 'solution' of simply taking the Iraq oil which lasts till 2130!

Cheney’s secret energy/war task force included both Exxon and the military, when Exxon said that future oil supplies required “extra-market forces”. What could Rumsfeld and the pentagon have taken that to mean?

The only thing more exciting than the technological miracle claimed by NMD anti-missile pimps as, “hitting a bullet with a bullet”, would be hitting a president with a bullet.

The ‘Best Little Whore House in Texas’ is now doing it’s bidness in Washington.

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Rotten to the core
Posted by: willymack on Jan 12, 2009 7:26 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If prosecuting the bushies for their horrific crimes means the fall of the entire legislative and judicial branches of our government, so be it. At least we'll be rid of some of the most evil criminals ever to infest our government, and we can ALWAYS replace the crooks with good people. Hell, even Joe the plumber would be better than most of the cretins we have now.

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ba
Posted by: mnstra on Jan 12, 2009 7:38 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Must you keep printing this NYT garbage. It was the leading cheerleader for the thefts of the last 8 years. It is an incompetent piece of trash that did nothing to help the American people except to be a mouthpiece for the ruling elite.

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» RE: ba Posted by: Lilly
» RE: ba Posted by: MausMasher54
Is There a Pattern Here?
Posted by: Lilly on Jan 12, 2009 11:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1) For eight years Cheney/Bush are accused of extralegal and unconstitutional abuse of power. Their response: they say "FU" and do it some more.
2) Governor Blagojevich of Illinois, facing impeachment, appoints a Senator anyway, thus saying "FU" and doing it some more.
3) Bernard Madoff, placed on house arrest after eating people's $50 billion, packs up his jewelry to mail it out, thus hiding his assets and saying "FU, I will do it plenty more".
4) Tonight the news reported a man facing time in the big house when his investment firm folded in a bad way---rather than accept his fate, they think he parachuted himself out of a deliberately crashing plane. If so, on the way down he surely said "FU, I will do it as much as I want to".

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» RE: Is There a Pattern Here? Posted by: MausMasher54
I'll help.
Posted by: amacd on Jan 13, 2009 4:50 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Melpol, you say, "If every broker that sold a stock on the belief that it would be a great long term investment was wrong and sent to prison there would not be enough prison space to hold them."

I would personally work for nothing building enough prison space to hold all those real crooks.

In fact, I'm sure that all the unjustly held minor drug offenders would do likewise and build more space for the real ruling-elite crooks.

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RE: Stop Making Madoff A Scapegoat
Posted by: MausMasher54 on Jan 14, 2009 12:42 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yeah, Right!!!

Maddoff is a "C"rook and was exposed just at the right time to keep the "Sheeple" amused at the folly he caused and mis-direct the attention away from the more pressing issues, like the $700billion fraud being comitted by the current ruling elite and their minions.

I do not feel the least bit sorry for those that lost in his scheme, they like him were greedy and lost, so they are pissed...Well there are approx. 300 million pissed off American "Sheeple" now and not sure they can be returned to the happy pasture until the crimes of all greed is exposed and prosecuted.

Look at Pat Robertson's PTL SCAM, a church pastor that is a multi-billionaire, if that is not a crime.....just think of all the good those donations were given for, that was fraud comitted in the name of God and the highest of all crimes(1 of the "Big Ten") a minister can perpetuate.

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