June 15, 2005
Last Week In Scandal Land
subtitled: The Emperor Has No Clothes (Again)
sub subtitled: The Elephant In The Living Room
Where is the League of Mullah Action Heroes? Not a word from Pat
Robertson, Jerry Falwell, James Dobson, Richard Land or Rick
Scarborough has been heard about the following. These nuanced and
relativist morality cherrypickers can't bite the hand that feeds them,
sort of like Herod and Pilate.
Where is the mainstream bottomline television press and why is it that
nobody else other than Seymour Hersh is able to connect the dots?
Well, there's a landscape of connected dots for the taking, if only someone would step up
Leave it to a little ol' blogger to provide this provocative entry, in this case The Carpetbagger at The Carpetbagger Report:
"There was a point, in the late
1990s, when conservatives would frequently whine about "scandal
fatigue." Every time they picked up the paper, they'd say, there'd be
another controversy surrounding Clinton's White House. They insisted it
was time to elect a Republican to help give the country a break after
years of constant outrages.
Most of these so-called scandals
were utterly void of any substance. Whitewater was meaningless, while
investigations into Travelgate and Filegate were pointless.
Nevertheless, by way of comparison, I'd like to point out what we've
learned about the Bush White House not since January 2001, but
from just this week.
* The Bush White House let a former lobbyist for the American Petroleum Institute re-write a government report on global warming, editing out scientific conclusions he didn't like.
* Bush's Interior Department offered to overpay a wealthy Republican donor
for oil and gas rights on Everglades land that the government
apparently already owns, overruling the advice of career officials.
* The Pentagon's inspector general
released a report on a lucrative Air Force contract for Boeing that
cost too much for planes the military didn't want. Bush, who has
enjoyed generous campaign contributions from Boeing, was involved with
the contract, personally asking White House aides to work out the deal
and dispatching Chief of Staff Andrew Card to participate in the
contract negotiations. When the inspector general's report came out, 45 sections were deleted by the White House
counsel's office to obscure what several sources described as
references to the Bush gang's involvement in the lease negotiations and
its interaction with Boeing.
* Documents from the U.S. State
Department published this week show that the president backed away from
the Kyoto global warming treaty after being pressured by ExxonMobil, the world's most powerful oil company, and other industries.
* Bush officials at the Justice Department inexplicably decided to reduce its settle request with the tobacco industry from $130 billion to $10 billion, and urged government witnesses to soften their recommendations about sanctions.
Again, these stories were published
just this week and the week's not over yet. Just as importantly,
this isn't a particularly unusual week by Bush standards.
Any one of these stories could
prompt congressional hearings, investigations, and massive media
attention. They won't, of course, but they could..."
Handed over on a silver platter are these Bush
Administration actions, any one of which begs for further investigation
and publicity. Might there just be a pattern developing?
The Republican-controlled Congress certainly won't do anything but is the television press taking its cue from GOP congressional
leaders?
Thought so.
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