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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (2502)1/31/2002 4:37:09 PM
From: Bill  Respond to of 15516
 
Another wack-job article from a wacko site. Oh wait - you posted that a few days ago!

I guess it's waste recycling time again.



To: Mephisto who wrote (2502)1/31/2002 4:56:58 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
The real scandal is business as usual

Although Bush promised repeatedly to
subsidize religious faith and inject
it into every sphere of American life,
his cronies at Crescent are suing a
Houston church to keep it from leasing
city-owned quarters in Greenway Plaza.

The plaintiffs allege that
churchgoers are bad for business if
they get too close and are
orse to have around than rowdy sports fans, rock concertgoers and other denizens
of Compaq Center.


Houston Chronicle
Jan. 27, 2002, 6:09PM
By JAMES HOWARD GIBBONS
Copyright 2002 Houston Chronicle

President Bush is proud his administration did
nothing to help his cronies at Enron when the
corporation's stock collapsed. So far,
the president has expressed no shame
in doing Ken Lay's bidding up until that
point.

The scandal is not that Enron executives called senior administration officials when they got into trouble,
and vice versa. The scandal is that the president and his appointees placed the machinery of the executive
branch at the beck and call of Enron's chairman (whom irate creditors sacked last week) and other large
campaign donors right from the start.

The real and everlasting scandal is that
the Bush administration, like all the others,
makes so little effort to
discern the greatest good for the greatest
number and pursue it.


Even after Enron's collapse, the
Bush administration accelerated its
efforts to please big business by reversing
key efforts to clean up the air and water.
Bush and his appointees don't want a more
poisonous environment for its own sake,
but they feel beholden to the campaign financiers
who prefer paying candidates and parties
to paying taxes.

President Bush -- congenitally dedicated
to government by the few, for the few,
at the expense of the many -- let months
go by before expressing disapproval of Enron
officials' deceit. Even feigned concern
for abused workers, pensioners and small
investors does not occur naturally in
the Bush White House, but must be
prescribed and scripted by highly paid political strategists.


There are ways to prevent corporate charades
such as the one that made Enron insiders
rich beyond the dreams of avarice while
impoverishing many employees and investors
kept in the dark: Congress and executive
branch regulators must require honest
and transparent accounting.

The way things stand, certified
corporate accounts have all the truth
and accuracy of real estate advertisements:
"Envied location, distinguished address,
world-class views" to describe shunned,
overpriced and dangerously deteriorated property.

However, the Bush administration and its
allies in Congress are devoted to
creating and protecting accounting loopholes,
offshore tax shelters and self-policing
schemes designed to excuse or ignore the worst
sort of cheating, fraud and dereliction of
fiduciary duty.


Many of Enron's underhanded tactics
such as the infamous, off-book partnerships)
are enshrined in law.

Americans can count on the Bush administration
to work assiduously to keep them enshrined.


The real scandal is that Enron's relationship
to government is not the exception but
the rule -- just business as usual.

Another homegrown example is Crescent
Real Estate
Equities Ltd., familiar
to Houstonians as the Fort Worth company
whose officials promised to build a badly
needed convention center hotel here and then
went back on their word.

For years Crescent's principals did everything
they could to help George W. Bush
and put him first in the governor's mansion
and then in the White House. In turn, Bush's
backers at Crescent were rewarded with tax cuts
and sweetheart deals involving state
property and pension funds.

Bush says he never spoke of these deals
to his buddies and partners at Crescent,
and of course he didn't have to.

Bush's minions knew instinctively to
play ball when
the Crescent boys showed up with a bat.

Although Bush promised repeatedly to
subsidize religious faith and inject
it into every sphere of American life,
his cronies at Crescent are suing a
Houston church to keep it from leasing
city-owned quarters in Greenway Plaza.

The plaintiffs allege that
churchgoers are bad for business if
they get too close and are
orse to have around than rowdy sports fans, rock concertgoers and other denizens
of Compaq Center.


I'm inclined to agree, but if the big
shots at Crescent are so hostile to church people,
why did they back Bush? The answer might
be that they (and presumably their candidate)
regarded all the pious rhetoric as so
much slop to be thrown to the faithful
and never intended it to be taken seriously
or to get in the way of big
business and its profits.

The Bush administration is so fond of
official secrecy in aid of crony capitalism,
which it calls executive privilege, that
it won't reveal the industry executives and
influence peddlers it invited in to draft
the national energy policy. Don't the American
people paying the freight have any privileges
that entitle them to know
what their government is up to?

When he ran for president,
Bush promised to restore integrity
to the White House. If this is what
integrity restored looks like, I could be
persuaded to go back to
tawdriness and corruption.

Gibbons, senior editorial writer, is a member of the Chronicle Editorial Board. james.gibbons@chron.com

chron.com