It's the Economy, Stupid

Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill's dotty performance Sunday on Meet the Press signals just how vicious Bush can be when he puts his buddies out to dry. O'Neill's insistence that the fundamentals of the economy are great is buttressed by the administration's deliberately twisted facts, such as:

•Bush projects that the stock market will rise this year, when it already has tanked. When Bush came to power, the Dow Jones industrial average stood at 10,600. Last Monday, it fell below 8,000. According to the Standard N Poor's Index of 500 stocks, Bush's first year and a half has been the worst ever recorded.

•Bush claims that tax cuts aren't responsible for the vanishing surplus, when in fact they contributed 38 percent.

•O'Neill says the fundamentals are good, but for younger workers, unemployment rose last month to 12.2 percent from 11.6 percent. For blacks, it stands at 10.7 percent. With the overall jobless rate hovering around 6 percent, job growth is flat and payrolls in the private sector are declining. “Wages grew more slowly in the second quarter than in over six years,” reports the Economic Policy Institute, “and the ranks of the long-term unemployed are historically high and, by some measures, growing.”

Then, consider the following:

PENSIONS: Republicans in Congress successfully beat down efforts to give employees a say on committees investing their money. There is absolutely no protection within the laws administered by—of all places—the do-nothing Labor Department, which already has admitted it knew about the Enron debacle months before it became public and took no action to protect 401(k) holders. CORPORATE CORRUPTION: the new accounting board will still be under the thumb of the weaselly Securities and Exchange Commission, which never has had the staff, money or inclination to actually regulate Wall Street. The symbol of the status quo is SEC chairman Harvey Pitt, who with one other commissioner (from the accounting business) dominates the agency. Pitt feels put-upon and wants a higher salary. MEDICARE: Democrats and Republicans can't agree on a bill to help oldsters buy drugs. WHITE-COLLAR CRIME: the Justice Department has squelched criminal prosecutions of white-collar crimes. Enron and WorldCom crooks are still on the street. AFGHANISTAN: our supposed national security asset in Central Asia is the Caspian Sea oil and gas deposits, which we had once hoped to cash in on through a pipeline across Afghanistan and through Pakistan. But it's too late. China is in the final stages of securing a major pipeline deal with Shell; ExxonMobil; and Gazprom, the big Russian pipeline operator. Meanwhile, Iran is building a pipeline to Pakistan and India. SOCIAL SECURITY: even though thousands of 401(k) holders have lost their shirts, Bush still wants to convert the entire Social Security system to an IRA-fund type of operation, with individuals managing their own investments, which means Wall Street would be guaranteeing that everyone in the country will go broke at the same time. BANKRUPTCY REFORM: pending legislation would make it easier for credit card companies to seize houses, autos and other assets and to collect debts ahead of every other creditor, including women receiving alimony payments. HIDE YOUR PAPERS!
The CIA, which devoted long hours in the 1960s to reading outgoing foreign mail, wants to jump in and stop journalists from publishing embarrassing leaks. “We've got to do whatever it takes—if it takes sending SWAT teams into journalists' homes—to stop these leaks,” James B. Bruce, vice chairman of the CIA's Foreign Denial and Deception Committee, told the Institute of World Politics last week, according to NewsMax.com. “Somehow there has evolved a presumptive right of the press to leak classified information. I hope we get a test case soon that will pit the government's need to prosecute those who leak its classified documents against the guarantees of free speech. I'm betting the government will win.” Previously, Bruce worked for the CIA as deputy national intelligence officer for science and technology in the National Intelligence Council. SMEARS, SLIME AND SNOOPS
If you were in a jam big-time and needed a smart lawyer, you'd die for Michael Tigar. He is probably the most respected criminal-defense lawyer in the United States today, having represented such clients as John Connally, Nazi prison guard John Demjanjuk, and the Chicago Seven, along with Oklahoma City bomber Terry Nichols. Tigar has also been a player in the international fight to get Chilean general Augusto Pinochet.

In the 1960s, Tigar was an influential activist on the UC Berkeley campus, even participating in one massive protest against the House Un-American Activities Committee. His experience after finishing law school is instructive in light of Bush's nutty drive to overrun the Posse Comitatus Act and set up a neighborhood snitch system. The story, as Tigar himself recounts in his new book, Fighting Injustice, goes like this:

While Tigar headed the Berkeley law review, two of his professors suggested his name to Supreme Court Justice Brennan as a possible clerk. Brennan promptly offered Tigar the job. Then the conservative press ripped into him, claiming, per usual, that he was soft on Communism. J. Edgar Hoover's FBI was soon gathering information on Tigar and passing it along to the Lyndon B. Johnson White House. From there, it went by LBJ's man at the Supreme Court, Justice Abe Fortas. Chief Justice Earl Warren pressured Brennan, who vacillated and called in Tigar to answer questions about his supposed Commie activities. Brennan eventually fired him before he even started work.

All during this period, Army intelligence was conducting a massive operation against domestic protest demonstrations and circulating this information throughout the government. “In all, an estimated 100,000 individuals were the subjects of army surveillance,” Senator Frank Church's committee, which looked into military spying on civilians, later reported.

Some 15 years later, Tigar filed freedom of information suits to find out what happened to his clerkship. A couple of heavily redacted documents came back from Army intelligence. “Oliver Twist won the awed admiration of his fellow orphans when he had the supreme audacity to take his empty porridge bowl back to ask for more,” stated one bizarre smear memo. “Oliver apparently has a counterpart among our young radicals. In 1966, Michael TIGAR was a candidate for the post of law clerk to U.S. Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan Jr. The appointment fell through when Brennan was apprised of TIGAR's left-wing background.” The other memo made perfectly clear what was going on: “TIGAR may still be as radical as he ever was, but even if his political position has changed, he may find that his widely publicized left-wing activities as a young man will plague him far into the future. This is a bitter lesson many of today's young radicals may have to learn.”

Tigar gradually became friends with Brennan, who said many years later he had “overreacted” in firing him.

This brief shows the slime politics played in the Supreme Court, the mendacity of the Johnson people, and, of course, business as usual for Hoover's FBI. And it reveals how military intelligence was employed to spread smears about people.

And this is precisely what Bush is in the process of re-creating, so that the two-bit snoops from the Pentagon can fan out across the nation. Homeland security boils down to the FBI's acting on neighborhood snitch watches to penetrate and track supposed terrorist groups while the military dicks spread out like a plague of locusts to spread the gossip.

Research by Cassandra Lewis, Caroline Ragon and Gabrielle Jackson.

One Reply to “It's the Economy, Stupid”

  1. I recently tried CBD gummies from this website https://www.cornbreadhemp.com/products/cbd-sleep-gummies for the blue ribbon leisure and was pleasantly surprised by the results. Initially skeptical, I initiate that it significantly helped with my desire and slumber issues without any notable side effects. The fuel was serene to speak, with clear dosage instructions. It had a mild, earthy leaning that was not unpleasant. Within a week, I noticed a patent upgrading in my all-inclusive well-being, feeling more relaxed and rested. I cognizant the unstudied approach to wellness CBD offers and plan to pursue using it.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *