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Non-Tech : The ENRON Scandal -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Skywatcher who wrote (4115)6/29/2002 10:23:24 AM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 5185
 
I'd be surprised if Ken Lay, Thomas White, our Army Secretary, or any other high Enron official goes to
jail. After all, Kenneth Lay was George Bush's biggest campaign contributor.

cheers,

Mephisto



To: Skywatcher who wrote (4115)6/29/2002 11:05:16 AM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 5185
 
Bush's rich friends, like Ken Lay, Enron's former CEO, will never go to jail because they are:
W's friends.


Here's an older op-ed article by Robert Scheer:

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Let Down His Rich Pals? Over His Dead Body
January 8, 2002
BY Robert Scheer:
E-mail story



Talk about the politics of class struggle. George W.
Bush now is apparently willing to give his life to
make the rich richer. "Over my dead body" was his
response to proposals to scale back the $1.35
trillion in tax cuts planned for the next 10 years.


Notice that he didn't say "over my dead body" will
the homeless--many of them actually employed in
low-paying jobs--sleep in the snows of Minneapolis
because the "faith-based" as well as government
shelters are short on funds. Nor is it "over my dead
body" that Enron workers will be left holding the
bag emptied by the president's good friend,
Kenneth L. "Kenny Boy"
Lay. Nor is it "over my
dead body" that the Boeing company will be given
a $22-billion Air Force contract as it fires
thousands of its workers.

The president cannot say
that "over my dead body" will he forget his pledge
to assist seniors with prescription medical costs,
save Social Security and revive public education,
when in fact his tax cut has made it impossible to
deliver on any such promises.

Nope, his is the manifesto of a true son of the super
rich who has never known a nanosecond of
economic insecurity and genuinely believes that the
truly burdened are those with enormous wealth.

The truly needy in the Bush lexicon are the very wealthy folks who must be given tax breaks so they may more easily invest in the economy. The rest of us are told it is our patriotic duty to buy things we cannot afford, but the rich can only be expected to invest if it does not cost them anything in after-tax dollars.


With blase arrogance, the president now insists that his skewed tax cut be
amplified in the years to come. This is a cheerleader who doesn't know the
game is lost: Unemployment is at a decade high, the huge Clinton budget
surplus is now going into deficit, and eight years of buoyant prosperity and
growth have been turned into a sour recession.


The fact that none of this gives President Bush pause is the purest indication
that he does not, in the least, grasp the suffering engendered by his policies.

It does not have to be this way. The rich can indeed "get it," as Franklin Delano
Roosevelt and many other wealthy American leaders have demonstrated.
However, it does take a bit of work to wedge one's feet into the pinched shoes
of the less fortunate--work that the president (like his father before him) has not
been inspired to perform.

Perhaps if the media and the Democrats had challenged Bush's nostrums more
forthrightly he could have moved beyond the ingrained smugness of a rich brat.

That did not happen, however, and instead the failure of this administration's
economic policies has been ignored, particularly in the aftermath of Sept. 11.
Indeed, that tragedy is turned to the most shameful of partisan political purpose
to explain away a recession that began in earnest in March, half a year before
the terrorist attack.

It is Bush and not Osama bin Laden who is responsible for subverting the
fiscally conservative policies of the Clinton years. A true conservative would
say that "over my dead body" would the government siphon the surplus created
by Social Security taxes to the pockets of the rich, putting the nation further
into the red.

Bush may be the hero of the moment but it won't be so when future generations
try to collect their Social Security checks. If Bush keeps it up he will be
remembered as another Herbert Hoover, a president who let the
unemployment lines grow while the government went broke catering to the
wealthy.


latimes.com