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Poor New York Times. GWB acts honestly, and it can only be from Having watched what happened to his predecessor

It is going too far at the moment to call the collapse of Enron a scandal for the Bush administration. Tears on the NYT editorial board.

Enron prove the futility of campaign finance reform. The seventh largest company in the nation will always be able to TRY to influence the administration, in a multitude of ways. Enron successfully influenced the Clinton administration on several occasions, but was unsuccessful with Bush. We need honest government, and accountability from our leaders, not finance reform.

1 posted on 01/12/2002 6:29:07 AM PST by SJackson
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To: SJackson
"...going too far..." Didn't stop the NYT from going on and on and on.
2 posted on 01/12/2002 6:40:56 AM PST by Eric in the Ozarks
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To: SJackson

In case anybody missed it, there's a full-scale, no-holds-barred air war going on right now. A massive one. Daisy-cutters, 2,000-pound bunker-busters -- you name it. Bombs are dropping faster than you can blink. Squadrons of B-52s -- AKA 'big ugly fat fellows' -- are prowling the heavens, pounding enemy positions, unleashing their fiery wrath, carpet bombing around-the-clock....the works.

What's that you say? Haven't heard of this? Thought the war was over, eh? Well Fuggedaboudit! Flick on the idiot box, kick up your feet, sit back and enjoy (Drum roll, please?) -- OPERATION ENRON!!! Yep, folks, it's Enron at dawn, Enron at noon, Enron at dusk. Enron 24/7. The media high command has declared an air war against the Bush administration; The White House, like the mountains of Tora Bora, has become ground zero for media strike bombardiers.

Kidding aside, never -- ever -- in my life have I seen anything quite like what we're witnessing right now.

Media bias is one thing. We've all seen it. We've all tasted it. Heaven knows we've all groused about it, perennially. Bernard Goldberg's bombshell has soared to near the top of the New York Times best-seller list, and for good reason.

But, Ladies and Gentlemen, what we're witnessing goes beyond simple 'bias' -- well beyond. This isn't bias, this is fraud. Wholesale fraud.

The media is perpetrating one of the greatest frauds ever: To wit, the fabrication of a pseudo-political "scandal" -- out of whole cloth.

This isn't "news" "reporting", this is orgy-making -- a veritable orgy of innuendo. It would take years to tally all the libel and slander, all the malicious rumor-mongering, all the baseless smears -- the torrent of lies, insults and calumnies spewed straight from the bowels of our "major media" these past two days -- alone.

Question: Why is the media doing this? That's simple: Because they can.

Any proof of administration wrongdoing? No, not the vaguest hint, not the slightest intimation of official wrongdoing nor impropriety -- and even the media jackals know it.

Any proof of malfeasance or criminal activity by anyone in the Bush White House? Nope. None has been shown, none has been presented. Nothing even remotely resembling an allegation, even. But heck, who needs proof, anyway? Washington craves a 'scandal', and Enron fills the bill nicely, thank you very much.

No proof of 'cover-up'? Then fabricate some! Of course, we all know Bush had nothing to do with the shredding* of documents, the massive cover-up by Enron's auditor. But oh, yummy, yummy -- how exquisitely delicious to find ominous buzz phrases like 'document-shredding', 'cover-up' and the name George W. Bush jammed together in the same sentence, eh? Who cares if they don't belong together? Who cares if Bush did absolutely nothing wrong? This is not about truth or fairness or facts or evidence: This is purely -- first and foremost -- about vengence. Avenging whom or what, you ask? Why, the media's darling golden-boy, William Jefferson Clinton, who eles?

But the haters have a major problem on their hands, and it's this: Signs are this phony "scandal" is headed in the opposite direction -- away from implicating current administration officials.

Indeed, think of how ludicrous this sounds: Democrats want to know -- not why there were -- but why there weren't any quid-pro-quo shenanigans. Why didn't you do any special favors on behalf of your big campaign contributor, Mr. President? Why didn't you bail out your rich oil buddy when he came beckoning and calling?

In other words, what the heck is the matter with you, Mr. President? Why, O why, didn't you do something wrong? Lotting the treasury to bailout fat-cats; seedy backroom deals, bribery, extortion -- that's what we do here in Washington! How dare you be so ethical, so squeaky clean, Mr. President?!?!

Bottom line: Democrats want to know why Enron's generous contributions didn't buy it any favors from this administration. How utterly UN-Clinton-esque can this President get, eh?

This is the first "scandal" in history in which no wrongdoing IS the scandal du jour. No special favors, no shenanigans, no quid-pro-quo -- now that's an outrage!

The Attorney General recusing himself? What?! This earthshaking! Explosive! How scandalous!

Why the AG recusing himself to avoid tainting the probe should be seen as "scandalous"? You go figure.

But that's the nub of the problem with Enron as political "news": Its string of farcical flaws and fallacies.

It's why "Enron" will soon be running on fumes -- politically worthless, just like the company's stock. Absent some 'hook' -- proof of government cover-up, official malfeasance, etc. -- "Enron" inexorably reverts to its rightful place in the business page of the newspaper.

Already people are asking: Where's the beef?

*Ironies of ironies: The wholesale document destruction by Enron's auditor, Arthur Andersen LLP, raises an interesting dilemma, particularly in light of the close ties between Ken Lay and the previous administration. Clinton was known to personally intervene on Enron's behalf on a number of occasions. Generous campaign donations would follow. The documents destroyed may have revealed a nexus.

My intrepid prediction: Enron will backfire on Democrats. Americans will see them as grossly over-reaching -- the "hearings" as sheer vindicativeness, an unwelcomed extention of Campaign 2000. Their vicious and spiteful crusade will be seen as bloodsport -- a thinly veiled, all-out effort to cripple this President; the Democrats' ultimate goal is to assassinate him, politically, with constant, deadly attacks and smears.

But it won't work, because it can't work. The public will not look to fondly at their "Wanted: Dead or Alive" modus operandi at politics (again, figuritively speaking).

A political party whose sole obession, whose only mission is to bring down the President -- come hell or high water -- is a party destined, rightfully, for the ash heap.

Fate will deal the Democrats, tone deaf and blinded by hate, a cruel blow, indeed. So let them nurse their hatred -- let them beat the dead horse of Enron: They will only bring down the wrath of a people, of a nation, still smoldering over September 11.


3 posted on 01/12/2002 6:44:57 AM PST by JohnHuang2
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To: SJackson
We need honest government and accountability from our leaders, not finance reform.

So true but what we REALLY need is honest reporting. The NYT acts holier than thou but they are so dishonest in their reporting, as is most of the media, it's pathetic. As to banning corporate donations to political parties, Bush called for that, both in the campaign and during the debate in the Senate. Perhaps they could check the record. Uhhhh...no, that would be honest reporting.

4 posted on 01/12/2002 6:50:05 AM PST by Wphile
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To: SJackson
"But none of that was necessarily improper, and there is no indication that those calls or other conversations between Enron executives and administration officials led to any action by the government. That has not stopped Mr. Bush from trying to sidestep the Enron connections to his administration."

This also hasn't stopped the media from trumpeting this non-scandal into some huge scandal surpassing all of Clinton's scandals. No crime, no allegations of a crime, no nothing. Where is the story????

5 posted on 01/12/2002 6:50:22 AM PST by Always Right
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To: SJackson
He could also begin a Justice Department investigation, disclosing the influence which ocurred under his predecessor, thde IMPOTUS, including the awarding of lucrative power plant contracts in India, Mozambique, and Nigeria, and then dare the press to find similar "quid pro quos" under his own term.
6 posted on 01/12/2002 6:57:01 AM PST by copycat
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To: SJackson
My synopsis of this article:

"It doesn't look like the administration has done anything wrong, but just to make sure they need to take the following twenty steps that we in the liberal media recommend ..."

On another note is it just me or has there been a concerted effort to dislodge Marc Racicot?
7 posted on 01/12/2002 7:00:10 AM PST by Pan_Yan
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To: SJackson
Who in blazes elected the NYT "editorial" board to ANYTHING? Yet, in it's egotistical and smug way these morons try to run the country.

"Bush SHOULD do this, Bush SHOULD do that, Bush MUST do this, Bush BETTER do that....yadda, yadda...."

I've a mental picture of this "board" at an editorial meeting every Wednesday morning putting together the socialist, anti-Republican propaganda piece of the week. Each agreeing with each other. Each bloviated with his/her own perceived power over the masses. Each keeping the secretary busy running for coffee.

They must truly enjoy these power sessions because when they go home, these effete armchair critics of the President are probably beaten to pulps by their spouses for not helping do the dishes.

Leni

9 posted on 01/12/2002 7:15:53 AM PST by MinuteGal
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To: SJackson
There are plenty of things Mr. Bush can do to inoculate himself against any taint from the Enron disaster. He should embrace campaign finance reform, demand a severing of ties between Enron and those around him and cooperate with all Congressional investigations on the issue.

Ahhh...everyone's an opportunist. Here we go again folks. John McCain, Tim "Trigger" Russert, the NYT, and every other Democrat's going to be ALL OVER the place yapping about CFR and "the special interests".

God help us.

12 posted on 01/12/2002 7:25:13 AM PST by sayfer bullets
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To: Enron_list
indexing
14 posted on 01/12/2002 8:00:12 AM PST by testforecho
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To: SJackson
I just wish the media were this aggressive in pursuing campaign donations from China, Buddhist temples, and such. If the investigation leads in any way towards the Clinton administration, maybe the media will have to acknowledge it this time. If it does and they don't, the contrast would be glaringly obvious to all.

-PJ

29 posted on 01/12/2002 8:41:47 AM PST by Political Junkie Too
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