A challenge: The Bush Administration, what's right, what's wrong? NO Debate!

Good post. We are so brainwashed by selective media reporting. Every time you turn on a news channel something is being blamed on Bush. Someone has an agenda.
 
Bush Administration Failure #16
The administration's practice of awarding "no bid contracts" that encourage widespread corruption, waste, and fraud - it's being done in Iraq and in the aftermath of Katrina:


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10074995

"Massive bid-rigging scam alleged in Iraq
U.S. says businessman bribed coalition officials to land rebuilding contracts


By Aram Roston
Investigative Unit Producer
NBC News
Updated: 5:30 a.m. ET Nov. 17, 2005


WASHINGTON - A criminal complaint unsealed in federal court in Washington on Wednesday alleges a web of corruption and bid rigging in Iraq by officials who worked with the now-defunct Coalition Provisional Authority, the U.S.-led agency that ran Iraq for more than a year after the 2003 invasion.

The complaint accuses an American-Romanian businessman, Philip H. Bloom, of paying officials from the coalition’s south-central region "bribes, kickbacks and gratuities, amounting to at least $200,000 per month," in order to obtain reconstruction contracts through a bid-rigging scam.

According to the complaint, Bloom "conspired with United States government contract employees and military officials to obtain fraudulently government contracts."

A government affidavit alleges that in one instance, the officials rigged bids for contracts in Hillah and Karbala, two cities 50 to 60 miles south of Baghdad. In some cases, Bloom’s companies performed no work, Patrick McKenna Jr., an investigator for the U.S. special inspector general for Iraq, said in the affidavit.

Efforts to reach representatives for Bloom were unsuccessful.

Bloom or companies he controls made bank deposits of $353,000 on behalf of at least two CPA officials and bought them real estate in North Carolina as well as vehicles and jewelry worth more than $280,000 in 2004 and 2005, McKenna said.

The complaint says one of the U.S. officials was the comptroller for the region in Iraq based in Hillah and controlled $82 million in cash.

One official said to admit involvement
Another coalition official, who worked with the first, has been cooperating with investigators and has admitted he "unlawfully received cash and goods" from Bloom, according to the complaint.

Bloom, according to the complaint, ran several companies in Iraq and Romania, including one called GBG Logistics.

According to a biography of Philip Bloom on the Web site of one of his companies, he is an "expatriate America with a war chest of experiences” operating a variety of firms overseas since the 1970s, including Haitian and Puerto Rican airlines. The biography says that "Bloom is possessed off an uncanny knack for finding business, almost psychic in nature."

GBG Logistics says on its Web site that it has worked on a variety of Iraq reconstruction projects. "As one of the first private firms to enter the Iraqi market in April 2003, GBG Logistics is primarily devoted to identifying and developing new business opportunities in the reconstruction effort," it says.

There have been allegations and suspicions of corruption under the coalition government, which ran Iraq from just after the invasion in March 2003 until June 2004 and was headed by former Ambassador L. Paul Bremer III, and during the Iraq reconstruction process, but this is the first criminal case to be brought in U.S. courts alleging wrongdoing by coalition officials.

Previously, the Hillah region came under scrutiny after the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction reported in an audit that $100 million in seized Iraqi funds could not be accounted for."
 
Bush Administration Failure #17:

The absolute mess of the "Medicare Perscription Drug Plan".

Seniors are supposed to sift through over 80 - that's right - over EIGHTY different choices from private insurers, all with different benefits, prices, co- pays, options, etc... and pick one (or not if none of the plans are to your benefit).

Yeah, right. Even educated health care workers are having problems sifting through all the plans and information. Senior's pharmacists are prohibited by law from offering any advice on which plan to choose. So where do the seniors turn? There is a 1 -800 number that according to ABC nightly news (Nov. 21, 2005) it is difficult to get through to and when you do there isn't any real advice except "go to the website"....and 76% of seniors have never even used the internet. 23% are cognitively impared.


I ask you (and congress and the President) this: just what was so hard about having ONE medicare perscription drug plan and if insurers wanted to offer it to seniors they would have to accept it's terms?

Why have over 80? I tell you why, because the Bush Administration is all about funneling more tax payer money into the pockets of big business rather than meeting the needs of the American tax payer.
 
Failure #18 And the secrecy and spying on American Citizens continues:

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,178893,00.html

Officials: Bush Authorized NSA Eavesdropping in the US

Friday, Dec. 19, 2005 Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Bush has personally authorized a secretive eavesdropping program in the United States more than three dozen times since October 2001, a senior intelligence official said Friday night.
The disclosure follows angry demands by lawmakers earlier in the day for congressional inquiries into whether the monitoring by the highly secretive National Security Agency violated civil liberties.


"There is no doubt that this is inappropriate," declared Republican Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. He promised hearings early next year.

Bush on Friday refused to discuss whether he had authorized such domestic spying without obtaining warrants from a court, saying that to comment would tie his hands in fighting terrorists.
In a broad defense of the program put forward hours later, however, a senior intelligence official told The Associated Press that the eavesdropping was narrowly designed to go after possible terrorist threats in the United States.
The official said that, since October 2001, the program has been renewed more than three dozen times. Each time, the White House counsel and the attorney general certified the lawfulness of the program, the official said. Bush then signed the authorizations.
 

Failure #19: George W Bush thinks he is above the law and condones the use of torture.

Bush could bypass new torture ban
Waiver right is reserved
By Charlie Savage, Globe Staff | January 4, 2006


WASHINGTON -- When President Bush last week signed the bill outlawing the torture of detainees, he quietly reserved the right to bypass the law under his powers as commander in chief.

After approving the bill last Friday, Bush issued a ''signing statement" -- an official document in which a president lays out his interpretation of a new law -- declaring that he will view the interrogation limits in the context of his broader powers to protect national security. This means Bush believes he can waive the restrictions, the White House and legal specialists said.

''The executive branch shall construe [the law] in a manner consistent with the constitutional authority of the President . . . as Commander in Chief," Bush wrote, adding that this approach ''will assist in achieving the shared objective of the Congress and the President . . . of protecting the American people from further terrorist attacks."

Some legal specialists said yesterday that the president's signing statement, which was posted on the White House website but had gone unnoticed over the New Year's weekend, raises serious questions about whether he intends to follow the law.

A senior administration official, who spoke to a Globe reporter about the statement on condition of anonymity because he is not an official spokesman, said the president intended to reserve the right to use harsher methods in special situations involving national security.

''We are not going to ignore this law," the official said, noting that Bush, when signing laws, routinely issues signing statements saying he will construe them consistent with his own constitutional authority. ''We consider it a valid statute. We consider ourselves bound by the prohibition on cruel, unusual, and degrading treatment."

But, the official said, a situation could arise in which Bush may have to waive the law's restrictions to carry out his responsibilities to protect national security. He cited as an example a ''ticking time bomb" scenario, in which a detainee is believed to have information that could prevent a planned terrorist attack.

''Of course the president has the obligation to follow this law, [but] he also has the obligation to defend and protect the country as the commander in chief, and he will have to square those two responsibilities in each case," the official added. ''We are not expecting that those two responsibilities will come into conflict, but it's possible that they will."

David Golove, a New York University law professor who specializes in executive power issues, said that the signing statement means that Bush believes he can still authorize harsh interrogation tactics when he sees fit.

''The signing statement is saying 'I will only comply with this law when I want to, and if something arises in the war on terrorism where I think it's important to torture or engage in cruel, inhuman, and degrading conduct, I have the authority to do so and nothing in this law is going to stop me,' " he said. ''They don't want to come out and say it directly because it doesn't sound very nice, but it's unmistakable to anyone who has been following what's going on."

Golove and other legal specialists compared the signing statement to Bush's decision, revealed last month, to bypass a 1978 law forbidding domestic wiretapping without a warrant. Bush authorized the National Security Agency to eavesdrop on Americans' international phone calls and e-mails without a court order starting after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

The president and his aides argued that the Constitution gives the commander in chief the authority to bypass the 1978 law when necessary to protect national security. They also argued that Congress implicitly endorsed that power when it authorized the use of force against the perpetrators of the attacks.

Legal academics and human rights organizations said Bush's signing statement and his stance on the wiretapping law are part of a larger agenda that claims exclusive control of war-related matters for the executive branch and holds that any involvement by Congress or the courts should be minimal.

Vice President Dick Cheney recently told reporters, ''I believe in a strong, robust executive authority, and I think that the world we live in demands it. . . . I would argue that the actions that we've taken are totally appropriate and consistent with the constitutional authority of the president."

Since the 2001 attacks, the administration has also asserted the power to bypass domestic and international laws in deciding how to detain prisoners captured in the Afghanistan war. It also has claimed the power to hold any US citizen Bush designates an ''enemy combatant" without charges or access to an attorney.

And in 2002, the administration drafted a secret legal memo holding that Bush could authorize interrogators to violate antitorture laws when necessary to protect national security. After the memo was leaked to the press, the administration eliminated the language from a subsequent version, but it never repudiated the idea that Bush could authorize officials to ignore a law.

The issue heated up again in January 2005. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales disclosed during his confirmation hearing that the administration believed that antitorture laws and treaties did not restrict interrogators at overseas prisons because the Constitution does not apply abroad.

In response, Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona, filed an amendment to a Defense Department bill explicitly saying that that the cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment of detainees in US custody is illegal regardless of where they are held.

McCain's office did not return calls seeking comment yesterday.

The White House tried hard to kill the McCain amendment. Cheney lobbied Congress to exempt the CIA from any interrogation limits, and Bush threatened to veto the bill, arguing that the executive branch has exclusive authority over war policy.

But after veto-proof majorities in both houses of Congress approved it, Bush called a press conference with McCain, praised the measure, and said he would accept it.

Legal specialists said the president's signing statement called into question his comments at the press conference.

''The whole point of the McCain Amendment was to close every loophole," said Marty Lederman, a Georgetown University law professor who served in the Justice Department from 1997 to 2002. ''The president has re-opened the loophole by asserting the constitutional authority to act in violation of the statute where it would assist in the war on terrorism."

Elisa Massimino, Washington director for Human Rights Watch, called Bush's signing statement an ''in-your-face affront" to both McCain and to Congress.

''The basic civics lesson that there are three co-equal branches of government that provide checks and balances on each other is being fundamentally rejected by this executive branch," she said.

''Congress is trying to flex its muscle to provide those checks [on detainee abuse], and it's being told through the signing statement that it's impotent. It's quite a radical view."





Failure #20 Is there a government agency that isn’t corrupt??? Bush Administration tries to hide cases of Mad Cow Disease in the United States in an attempt to prop up the Beef Industry:

Meatpacker sues for mad cow tests

Washington - A Kansas meatpacker sued the government on Thursday for refusing to let the company test for mad cow disease in every animal it slaughters.

Creekstone Farms Premium Beef says it has Japanese customers who want comprehensive testing. The Agriculture Department threatened criminal prosecution if Creekstone did the tests, according to the company's lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Washington. - from wire reports

Gwinnett Daily Post, March 24, 2006 , 6A






Failure # 21 Ex – EPA Chiefs slam Bush on the Environment

From Atlanta Journal and Constitution Thursday, January 19, 2006

“Six former heads of the Environmental Protection Agency – five Republicans and one Democrat – accused the Bush administration Wednesday of neglecting global warming and other environmental problems.”
…
“We need leadership, and I don’t think we’re getting it,” (Russell Train) said at an EPA-sponsored symposium centered around the agency’s 35th anniversary. “To sit back and just push it away and say we’ll deal with it sometime down the road is dishonest to the people and self-destructive.”

…Agency heads during five Republican administrations, including the current one, criticized the Bush White House for what they described as a failure of leadership.”
 
In the new book "Saddam's Secrets", by a General of the Iraqi Air Force and now a Defense leader (Not sure) in the Iraqi security counsol, the author states that he saw the WMD AFTER, yes AFTER 1990, and the soldiers who transferred the WMD to Syria reported directly to him. Or are you Democrats going to brush this under the rug. He also stated that Iraq is not hte same place it used to be, and it is for the better. He is GLAD that Saddam was captured.
 
Haven't read through the whole thread, so if this has been mentioned, I apologize........but I consider another failure the fact that the debt ceiling
had to be raised again for the 5TH time :confused3

I also wonder when the this administration is going to come clean with
the american people and put the hundreds of billions spent in Iraq into
the federal budget???

So much for Bush and the republicans in Congress being fiscally conservative :rolleyes:
 
Saxsoon said:
In the new book "Saddam's Secrets", by a General of the Iraqi Air Force and now a Defense leader (Not sure) in the Iraqi security counsol, the author states that he saw the WMD AFTER, yes AFTER 1990, and the soldiers who transferred the WMD to Syria reported directly to him. Or are you Democrats going to brush this under the rug. He also stated that Iraq is not hte same place it used to be, and it is for the better. He is GLAD that Saddam was captured.
I'm happy that he's glad. :confused3
 
Cor44432 said:
Haven't read through the whole thread, so if this has been mentioned, I apologize........but I consider another failure the fact that the debt ceiling
had to be raised again for the 5TH time :confused3

I also wonder when the this administration is going to come clean with
the american people and put the hundreds of billions spent in Iraq into
the federal budget???

So much for Bush and the republicans in Congress being fiscally conservative :rolleyes:

I can't imagine that Roosevelt and then Truman rang their hands and nashed their teeth over the federal budget during WWII. :rolleyes:
 
Saxsoon said:
In the new book "Saddam's Secrets", by a General of the Iraqi Air Force and now a Defense leader (Not sure) in the Iraqi security counsol, the author states that he saw the WMD AFTER, yes AFTER 1990, and the soldiers who transferred the WMD to Syria reported directly to him. Or are you Democrats going to brush this under the rug. He also stated that Iraq is not hte same place it used to be, and it is for the better. He is GLAD that Saddam was captured.

The Saddam papers and tapes are certainly shedding a lot of light on what we always knew to be true. Now the Russians are implicated in providing pre war intelligence to Saddam. No surprises for me. I feel that President Bush has always had the best interest of the USA at heart and he will be vindicated and the dems will look like Saddam's cohorts.
 
Last year our economy grew at a healthy 3.5 percent. Over the past two-and-a-half years, the economy has added nearly 5 million new jobs. That's more than Japan and the 25 nations of the European Union combined.
The national unemployment rate is 4.8 percent -- that's lower than the average rate of the 1970s, the 1980s and the 1990s. Household net worth is at an all-time high. Real after-tax income is up more than 8 percent per person since the beginning of 2001

All I know for sure is that 1) My family and I have been safe, 2) My wife and I have been fully employed as well as my friends and extended family, and 3) My investments for retirement have been in double-digit returns. Bush has been successful in my mind. It is important that each person evaluate his terms in office for his or her self.
 
Laz said:
Last year our economy grew at a healthy 3.5 percent. Over the past two-and-a-half years, the economy has added nearly 5 million new jobs. That's more than Japan and the 25 nations of the European Union combined.
The national unemployment rate is 4.8 percent -- that's lower than the average rate of the 1970s, the 1980s and the 1990s. Household net worth is at an all-time high. Real after-tax income is up more than 8 percent per person since the beginning of 2001

All I know for sure is that 1) My family and I have been safe, 2) My wife and I have been fully employed as well as my friends and extended family, and 3) My investments for retirement have been in double-digit returns. Bush has been successful in my mind. It is important that each person evaluate his terms in office for his or her self.


Isn't it amazing that this news gets so under reported by the mainstream media. Lets not forget the HUGE accomplishment. Two conservative judges on the Supreme Court!
 
Yup all of those service jobs have done wonders for everyone. I think it's important to look at the type of job growth, not just the job growth alone.

It is important that each person evaluate his terms in office for his or her self.
I LOVE this comment though. Excellent point IMO.
 
Roosevelt and Truman actually had a plan for post-war Europe, unlike
our current administrations lack of planning for post-war Iraq. Besides
WWII and the war in Iraq is comparing apples to oranges.

Bush should worry about the federal budget, that's part of his job.
 
I'm happy for ya Laz(really, not being sarcastic), I never begrudge people
for their success.

"1) My family and I have been safe, 2) My wife and I have been fully employed as well as my friends and extended family, and 3) My investments for retirement have been in double-digit returns."
I could say the same things back in the mid to late 90's when Clinton was
president.

I guess things just haven't "trickeld down" to my neck of the woods yet with
this President.
 
Cor44432 said:
Roosevelt and Truman actually had a plan for post-war Europe, unlike
our current administrations lack of planning for post-war Iraq. Besides
WWII and the war in Iraq is comparing apples to oranges.

Bush should worry about the federal budget, that's part of his job.


We have a plan. You aren't paying attention.
 



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