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If you have any doubts ...
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... that the schoolboy and his cohort cabal have little respect for truth or honor or honesty, as suggested by the following
paragraphs, then you are operating with a different set of assumptions than is the audience to whom this site is directed.
We take these to be given truths, though only a small sample of the total malfeasance, and are seeking a remedy for America.
- Boy Bush, or his immediate staff with his acquiescence, grossly and tragically underestimated the difficulty of creating
a stable and humane government in Iraq. (read the April 2003 newspapers) Their real reasons for their wanting to go into Iraq
are still being debated.
- The schoolboy misled the nation to war with false declarations that Iraq possessed and was improving on an arsenal of
weapons of mass destruction. During his 2003 State of the Union address, Bush claimed, "The British government has learned
that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa." This, in spite of the fact that both the
CIA and State Department had learned the allegation to be unfounded and had warned his staff not to depend on it.
- Schoolboy Bush, or someone working for him, exposed a covert CIA agent, apparently for revenge. Days after Joseph
Wilson publicly debunked intelligence that Iraq sought uranium in Africa columnist Robert Novak revealed that "a top whitehouse
official" had told him Wilson's wife was a covert CIA operative. Because she in fact was, this was highly classified, and
its leak treasonous with likely deadly consequences. (Five other journalists also were told and had the honorable sense
not to report the leak.)
- Halliburton and Dick Cheney are illegal tacit partners. In March 2003, the Pentagon awarded to the construction wing of
Halliburton a no-bid contract to help rebuild Iraqi oil infrastructure The initial deal was thought to be worth as much as
$7 billion. In postwar Iraq, Halliburton is the largest single private contractor, with potential deals totaling over $11
billion. Federal ethics laws consider both Cheney's deferred compensation and his unexercised stock options as a lingering
financial interest in the company.
- The Bush Administration lied about the cost of the Medicare bill and threatened those who wanted to blow the whistle.
The White House finally admitted it had underestimated the costs by $135 billion. Medicare chief actuary Richard Foster was
threatened with losing his job if he told Congress the true cost.
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