[Mb-civic] '100 Facts and 1 Opinion' from The Nation
Kevin Walz
kevin at walzworkinc.com
Sat Oct 23 07:02:22 PDT 2004
>
> FYI
>
> 100 Facts and 1 Opinion
> by Judd Legum
>
>
> Click here to download, circulate and distribute a PDF version of
> this article.
>
> IRAQ
>
> 1. The Bush Administration has spent more than $140 billion on a
> war of choice in Iraq.
>
> Source: American Progress
>
> 2. The Bush Administration sent troops into battle without
> adequate
> body armor or armored Humvees.
>
> Sources: Fox News,
>
> The Boston Globe
>
> 3. The Bush Administration ignored estimates from Gen. Eric
> Shinseki that several hundred thousand troops would be required
> to secure Iraq.
>
> Source: PBS
>
> 4. Vice President Cheney said Americans "will, in fact, be greeted
> as liberators" in Iraq.
>
> Source: The Washington Post
>
> 5. During the Bush Administration's war in Iraq, more than
> 1,000 US troops have lost their lives and more than 7,000
> have been injured.
>
> Source: globalsecurity.org
>
> 6. In May 2003, President Bush landed on an aircraft carrier in a
> flight suit, stood under a banner proclaiming "Mission
> Accomplished," and triumphantly announced that major combat
> operations were over in Iraq. Asked if he had any regrets about
> the stunt, Bush said he would do it all over again.
>
> Source: Yahoo News
>
> 7. Vice President Cheney said that Iraq was "the geographic base
> of
> the terrorists who have had us under assault for many years,
> but
> most especially on 9/11." The bipartisan 9/11 Commission found
> that Iraq had no involvement in the 9/11 attacks and no
> collaborative operational relationship with Al Qaeda.
>
> Source: MSNBC , 9-11 Commission
>
> 8. National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice said that
> high-strength aluminum tubes acquired by Iraq were "only really
> suited for nuclear weapons programs," warning "we don't want
> the
> smoking gun to be a mushroom cloud." The government's top
> nuclear scientists had told the Administration the tubes were
> "too narrow, too heavy, too long" to be of use in developing
> nuclear weapons and could be used for other purposes.
>
> Source: New York Times
>
> 9. The Bush Administration has spent just $1.1 billion of the
> $18.4
> billion Congress approved for Iraqi reconstruction.
>
> Source: USA Today
>
> 10. According to the Administration's handpicked weapon's
> inspector,
> Charles Duelfer, there is "no evidence that Hussein had passed
> illicit weapons material to al Qaeda or other terrorist
> organizations, or had any intent to do so." After the release
> of
> the report, Bush continued to insist, "There was a risk--a real
> risk--that Saddam Hussein would pass weapons, or materials, or
> information to terrorist networks."
>
> Sources: New York Times, White House news release
>
> 11. According to Duelfer, the UN inspections regime put an
> "economic
> strangle hold" on Hussein that prevented him from developing a
> WMD program for more than twelve years.
>
> Source: Los Angeles Times
>
> TERRORISM
>
> 12. After receiving a memo from the CIA in August 2001 titled "Bin
> Laden Determined to Attack America," President Bush continued
> his monthlong vacation.
>
> Source: CNN.com
>
> 13. The Bush Administration failed to commit enough troops to
> capture Osama bin Laden when US forces had him cornered in the
> Tora Bora region of Afghanistan in November 2001. Instead, they
> relied on local warlords.
>
> Source: csmonitor.com
>
> 14. The Bush Administration secured less nuclear material from
> sites
> around the world vulnerable to terrorists in the two years
> after
> 9/11 than were secured in the two years before 9/11.
>
> Source: nti.org
>
> 15. The Bush Administration underfunded Nunn-Lugar--the program
> intended to keep the former Soviet Union's nuclear legacy out
> of
> the hands of terrorists and rogue states--by $45.5 million.
>
> Source: armscontrol.org
>
> 16. The Bush Administration has assigned five times as many agents
> to investigate Cuban embargo violations as it has to track
> Osama
> bin Laden's and Saddam Hussein's money.
>
> Source: sfgate.com
>
> 17. According to Congressional Research Service data, the Bush
> Administration has underfunded security at the nation's ports
> by
> more than $1 billion for fiscal year 2005.
>
> Source: American Progress
>
> 18. The Bush Administration did not devote the resources necessary
> to prevent a resurgence in the production of poppies, the raw
> material used to create heroin, in Afghanistan--creating a
> potent new source of financing for terrorists.
>
> Source: Pakistan Tribune
>
> 19. Vice President Cheney told voters that unless they elect George
> Bush in November, "we'll get hit again" by terrorists.
>
> Source: Washington Post
>
> 20. Even though an Al Qaeda training manual suggests terrorists
> come
> to the United States and buy assault weapons, the Bush
> Administration did nothing to prevent the expiration of the
> ban.
>
> Source: sfgate.com
>
> 21. Despite repeated calls for reinforcements, there are fewer
> experienced CIA agents assigned to the unit dealing with Osama
> bin Laden now than there were before 9/11.
>
> Source: New York Times
>
> 22. Before 9/11, John Ashcroft proposed slashing counterterrorism
> funding by 23 percent.
>
> Source: americanprogress.org
>
> 23. Between January 20, 2001, and September 10, 2001, the Bush
> Administration publicly mentioned Al Qaeda one time.
>
> Source: commondreams.org
>
> 24. The Bush Administration granted the 9/11 Commission $3 million
> to investigate the September 11 attacks and $50 million to the
> commission that investigated the Columbia space shuttle crash.
>
> Source: commondreams.org
>
> 25. More than three years after 9/11, just 5 percent of all
> cargo--including cargo transported on passenger planes--is
> screened.
>
> Source: commondreams.org
>
> NATIONAL SECURITY
>
> 26. During the Bush Administration, North Korea quadrupled its
> suspected nuclear arsenal from two to eight weapons.
>
> Source: New York Times
>
> 27. The Bush Administration has openly opposed the Comprehensive
> Test Ban Treaty, undermining nuclear nonproliferation efforts.
>
> Source: commondreams.org
>
> 28. The Bush Administration has spent $7 billion this year--and
> plans to spend $10 billion next year--for a missile defense
> system that has never worked in a test that wasn't rigged.
>
> Sources: www.gao.gov/new.items/d04409.pdf, Los Angeles Times
>
> 29. The Bush Administration underfunded the needs of the nation's
> first responders by $98 billion, according to a Council on
> Foreign Relations study.
>
> Source: nationaldefensemagazine.org
>
> CRONYISM AND CORRUPTION
>
> 30. The Bush Administration awarded a multibillion-dollar no-bid
> contract to Halliburton--a company that still pays Vice
> President Cheney hundreds of thousands of dollars in deferred
> compensation each year (Cheney also has Halliburton stock
> options). The company then repeatedly overcharged the military
> for services, accepted kickbacks from subcontractors and served
> troops dirty food.
>
> Sources: The Washington Post, The Tapei Times, BBC News
>
> 31. The Bush Administration told Saudi Prince Bandar bin Sultan
> about plans to go to war with Iraq before telling Secretary of
> State Colin Powell.
>
> Source: detnews.com
>
> 32. The Bush Administration relentlessly pushed an energy bill
> containing $23.5 billion in corporate tax breaks, much of which
> would have benefited major campaign contributors.
>
> taxpayer.net, Washington Post
>
> 33. The Bush Administration paid Iraqi-exile and neocon darling
> Ahmad Chalabi $400,000 a month for intelligence, including
> fabricated claims about Iraqi WMD. It continued to pay him for
> months after discovering that he was providing inaccurate
> information.
>
> Source: MSNBC
>
> 34. The Bush Administration installed as top officials more than
> 100
> former lobbyists, attorneys or spokespeople for the industries
> they oversee.
>
> Source: Source: commondreams.org
>
> 35. The Bush Administration let disgraced Enron CEO Ken Lay--a
> close
> friend of President Bush--help write its energy policy.
>
> Source: MSNBC
>
> 36. Top Bush Administration officials accepted $127,600 in jewelry
> and other presents from the Saudi royal family in 2003,
> including diamond-and-sapphire jewelry valued at $95,500 for
> First Lady Laura Bush.
>
> Source: Seattle Times
>
> 37. Secretary of Homeland Security Tom Ridge awarded lucrative
> contracts to several companies in which he is an investor,
> including Microsoft, GE, Sprint, Pfizer and Oracle.
>
> Source: cq.com
>
> 38. President Bush used images of firefighters carrying flag-draped
> coffins through the rubble of the World Trade Center to score
> political points in a campaign advertisement.
>
> Source: The Washington Post
>
> THE ECONOMY
>
> 39. President Bush's top economic adviser, Greg Mankiw, said the
> outsourcing of American jobs abroad was "a plus for the economy
> in the long run."
>
> Source: CBS News
>
> 40. The Bush Administration turned a $236 billion surplus into a
> $422 billion deficit.
>
> Sources: Fortune, dfw.com
>
> 41. The Bush Administration implemented regulations that made
> millions of workers ineligible for overtime pay.
>
> Source: epinet.org
>
> 42. The Bush Administration has crippled state budgets by
> underfunding federal mandates by $175 billion.
>
> Source: cbpp.org
>
> 43. President Bush is the first President since Herbert Hoover to
> have a net loss of jobs--around 800,000--over a four-year term.
>
> Source: The Guardian
>
> 44. The Bush Administration gave Accenture a multibillion-dollar
> border control contract even though the company moved its
> operations to Bermuda to avoid paying taxes.
>
> Sources: The New York Times, cantonrep.com
>
> 45. In 2000, candidate George W. Bush said "the vast majority of my
> tax cuts go to the bottom end of the spectrum." He passed the
> tax cuts, but the top 20 percent of earners received 68 percent
> of the benefits.
>
> Sources: cbpp.org, vote-smart.org
>
> 46. In 2000, candidate George W. Bush promised to pay down the
> national debt to a historically low level. As of September 30,
> the national debt stood at $7,379,052,696,330.32, a record
> high.
>
> Sources: www.georgewbush.com , Bureau of the Public Debt
>
> 47. As major corporate scandals rocked the nation's economy, the
> Bush Administration reduced the enforcement of corporate tax
> law--conducting fewer audits, imposing fewer penalties,
> pursuing
> fewer prosecutions and making virtually no effort to prosecute
> corporate tax crimes.
>
> Source: iht.com
>
> 48. The Bush Administration increased tax audits for the
> working poor.
>
> Source: theolympian.com
>
> 49. In 2000, candidate George W. Bush promised to protect the
> Social
> Security surplus. As President, he spent all of it.
>
> Sources: georgewbush.com, Congressional Budget Office
>
> 50. The Bush Administration proposed slashing funding for the
> largest federal public housing program, putting 2 million
> families in danger of losing their housing.
>
> Source: San Francisco Examiner
>
> 51. The Bush Administration did nothing to prevent the minimum wage
> from falling to an inflation-adjusted fifty-year low.
>
> Source: Los Angeles Times
>
> EDUCATION
>
> 52. The Bush Administration underfunded the No Child Left Behind
> Act
> by $9.4 billion.
>
> Source: nwitimes.com
>
> 53. In 2000, candidate George W. Bush promised to increase the
> maximum federal scholarship, or Pell Grant, by 50 percent.
> Instead, each year he has been in office he has frozen or cut
> the maximum scholarship amount.
>
> Source: Source: edworkforce.house.gov x
>
> 54. The Bush Administration's Secretary of Education, Rod Paige,
> called the National Education Association--a union of
> teachers--a "terrorist organization."
>
> Sources: CNN.com
>
> HEALTHCARE
>
> 55. The Bush Administration, in violation of the law, refused to
> allow Medicare actuary Richard Foster to tell members of
> Congress the actual cost of their Medicare bill. Instead, they
> repeated a figure they knew was $100 billion too low.
>
> Source: Washington Post, realcities.com
>
> 56. The nonpartisan GAO concluded the Bush Administration created
> illegal, covert propaganda--in the form of fake news
> reports--to
> promote its industry-backed Medicare bill.
>
> Source: General Accounting Office
>
> 57. The Bush Administration stunted research that could lead to new
> treatments for Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, diabetes, spinal
> injuries, heart disease and muscular dystrophy by placing
> severe
> restrictions on the use of federal dollars for embryonic
> stem-cell research.
>
> Source: CBS News
>
> 58. The Bush Administration reinstated the "global gag rule," which
> requires foreign NGOs to withhold information about legal
> abortion services or lose US funds for family planning.
>
> Source: healthsciences.columbia.edu
>
> 59. The Bush Administration authorized twenty companies that have
> been charged with fraud at the federal or state level to offer
> Medicare prescription drug cards to seniors.
>
> Source: American Progress
>
> 60. The Bush Administration created a prescription drug card for
> Medicare that locks seniors into one card for up to a year but
> allows the corporations offering the cards to change their
> prices once a week.
>
> Source: Washington Post
>
> 61. The Bush Administration blocked efforts to allow Medicare to
> negotiate cheaper prescription drug prices for seniors.
>
> Source: American Progress
>
> 62. At the behest of the french fry industry, the Bush
> Administration USDA changed their definition of fresh
> vegetables
> to include frozen french fries.
>
> Source: commondreams.org
>
> 63. In a case before the Supreme Court, the Bush Administrations
> sided with HMOs--arguing that patients shouldn't be allowed to
> sue HMOs when they are improperly denied treatment. With the
> Administration's help, the HMOs won.
>
> Source: ABC News
>
> 64. The Bush Administration went to court to block lawsuits by
> patients who were injured by defective prescription drugs and
> medical devices.
>
> Source: Washington Post
>
> 65. President Bush signed a Medicare law that allows companies that
> reduce healthcare benefits for retirees to receive substantial
> subsidies from the government.
>
> Source: Bloomberg News
>
> 66. Since President Bush took office, more than 5 million people
> have lost their health insurance.
>
> Source: CNN.com
>
> 67. The Bush Administration blocked a proposal to ban the use of
> arsenic-treated lumber in playground equipment, even though it
> conceded it posed a danger to children.
>
> Source: Miami Herald
>
> 68. One day after President Bush bragged about his efforts to help
> seniors afford healthcare, the Administration announced the
> largest dollar increase of Medicare premiums in history.
>
> Source: iht.com
>
> 69. The Bush Administration--at the behest of the tobacco
> industry--tried to water down a global treaty that aimed to
> help
> curb smoking.
>
> Source: tobaccofreekids.org
>
> 70. The Bush Administration has spent $270 million on
> abstinence-only education programs even though there is no
> scientific evidence demonstrating that they are effective in
> dissuading teenagers from having sex or reducing the
> transmission of sexually transmitted diseases.
>
> Source: salon.com
>
> 71. The Bush Administration slashed funding for programs that
> suggested ways, other than abstinence, to avoid sexually
> transmitted diseases.
>
> Source: LA Weekly
>
> ENVIRONMENT
>
> 72. The Bush Administration gutted clean-air standards for aging
> power plants, resulting in at least 20,000 premature deaths
> each year.
>
> Source: cta.policy.net
>
> 73. The Bush Administration eliminated protections on more than 200
> million acres of public lands.
>
> Source: calwild.org
>
> 74. President Bush broke his promise to place limits on carbon
> dioxide emissions, an essential step in combating global
> warming.
>
> Source: Washington Post
>
> 75. Days after 9/11, the Bush Administration told people living
> near Ground Zero that the air was safe--even though they knew
> it wasn't--subjecting hundreds of people to unnecessary,
> debilitating ailments.
>
> Sierra Club , EPA
>
> 76. The Bush Administration created a massive tax loophole for
> SUVs--allowing, for example, the write-off of the entire cost
> of
> a new Hummer.
>
> Source: Washington Post
>
> 77. The Bush Administration put former coal-industry big shots in
> the government and let them roll back safety regulations,
> putting miners at greater risk of black lung disease.
>
> Source: New York Times
>
> 78. The Bush Administration said that even though the weed killer
> atrazine was seeping into water supplies--creating, among other
> bizarre creatures, hermaphroditic frogs--there was no reason to
> regulate it.
>
> Source: Washington Post
>
> 79. The Bush Administration has proposed cutting the budget of the
> Environmental Protection Agency by $600 million next year.
>
> Source: ems.org
>
> 80. President Bush broke his campaign promise to end the
> maintenance
> backlog at national parks. He has provided just 7 percent of
> the
> funds needed, according to National Park Service estimates.
>
> Source: bushgreenwatch.org
>
> RIGHTS AND LIBERTIES
>
> 81. Since 9/11, Attorney General John Ashcroft has detained 5,000
> foreign nationals in antiterrorism sweeps; none have been
> convicted of a terrorist crime.
>
> Source: hrwatch.org
>
> 82. The Bush Administration ignored pleas from the International
> Committee of the Red Cross to stop the abuse of prisoners in
> US custody.
>
> Source: Wall Street Journal
>
> 83. In violation of international law, the Bush Administration hid
> prisoners from the Red Cross so the organization couldn't
> monitor their treatment.
>
> Source: hrwatch.org
>
> 84. The Bush Administration, without ever charging him with a
> crime,
> arrested US citizen José Padilla at an airport in
> Chicago, held him on a naval brig in South Carolina for two
> years, denied him access to a lawyer and prohibited any contact
> with his friends and family.
>
> Source: news.findlaw.com
>
> 85. President Bush's top legal adviser wrote a memo to the
> President
> advising him that he can legally authorize torture.
>
> Source: news.findlaw.com
>
> 86. At the direction of Bush Administration officials, the FBI went
> door to door questioning people planning on protesting at the
> 2004 political conventions.
>
> Source: New York Times
>
> 87. The Bush Administration refuses to support the creation of an
> independent commission to investigate the abuse of foreign
> prisoners in American custody. Instead, Secretary of Defense
> Donald Rumsfeld selected the members of a commission to review
> the conduct of his own department.
>
> Source: humanrightsfirst.org
>
> FLIP FLOPS
>
> 88. President Bush opposed the creation of the 9/11 Commission
> before he supported it, delaying an essential inquiry into one
> of the greatest intelligence failure in American history.
>
> Source: americanprogressaction.org
>
> 89. President Bush said gay marriage was a state issue before he
> supported a constitutional amendment banning it.
>
> Sources: CNN.com, White House
>
> 90. President Bush said he was committed to capturing Osama bin
> Laden "dead or alive" before he said, "I truly am not that
> concerned about him."
>
> Source: americanprogressaction.org
>
> 91. President Bush said we had found weapons of mass destruction in
> Iraq, before he admitted we hadn't found them.
>
> Sources: White House, americanprogress.org
>
> 92. President Bush said, "You can't distinguish between Al Qaeda
> and
> Saddam when you talk about the war on terror," before he
> admitted Saddam had no role in 9/11.
>
> Sources: White House, Washington Post
>
> BIOGRAPHY
>
> 93. George Bush didn't come close to meeting his commitments to the
> National Guard. Records show he performed no service in a
> six-month period in 1972 and a three-month period in 1973.
>
> Source: boston.com
>
> 94. In June 1990 George Bush violated federal securities law when
> he
> failed to inform the SEC that he had sold 200,000 shares of his
> company, Harken Energy. Two months later the company reported
> significant losses and by the end of that year the stock had
> dropped from $3 to $1.
>
> Source: The Guardian
>
> 95. When asked at an April 2004 press conference to name a mistake
> he made during his presidency, Bush couldn't think of one.
>
> Source: White House
>
> SECRECY
>
> 96. The Bush Administration refuses to release twenty-seven pages
> of
> a Congressional report that reportedly detail the Saudi Arabian
> government's connections to the 9/11 hijackers.
>
> Source: philly.com
>
> 97. Last year the Bush Administration spent $6.5 billion creating
> 14
> million new classified documents and securing old secrets--the
> highest level of spending in ten years.
>
> Source: openthegovernment.org
>
> 98. The Bush Administration spent $120 classifying documents for
> every $1 it spent declassifying documents.
>
> Source: openthegovernment.org
>
> 99. The Bush Administration has spent millions of dollars and
> defied
> numerous court orders to conceal from the public who
> participated in Vice President Cheney's 2001 energy task force.
>
> Source: Washington Post
>
> 100. The Bush Administration--reversing years of bipartisan
> tradition--refuses to answer requests from Democratic members
> of
> Congress about how the White House is spending taxpayer money.
>
> Source: Washington Post
>
> OPINION
>
> If the past informs the future, four more years of the Bush
> Administration will be a tragic period in the history of the United
> States and the world.
>
> The Nation
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