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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Ron who wrote (286273)8/13/2002 1:40:07 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
MORE SHOKKKKING NEWS
Robert Scheer:
Dirty Dealings? Bush Is Shocked ... Shocked!
His friends helped create corporate America's mess.

Last week, speaking in Mississippi near the
corporate headquarters of the now bankrupt and
disgraced WorldCom, President Bush consoled
fired workers with his shopworn canard that the
loss of their jobs was the result of "shady corporate
practices" that deeply shocked him.

This naivete, if not feigned, reflects an embarrassing
stupidity about how he and his corporate buddies
played the capitalism game during the last decade.

Companies like WorldCom and Enron were not a
natural manifestation of the free-market capitalism
celebrated by the likes of Adam Smith. The
corporate manipulators of the market that we are
now seeing were precisely the enemy of the
"invisible hand" celebrated in Smith's economics
classic, "The Wealth of Nations"; they betrayed the
solid post-Great Depression regulatory foundation
designed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to
prevent large corporations from subverting the
integrity of the free market.

The fervent deregulators of the last two decades were not interested in a truly
free market in which profit is dictated by consumers choosing what they want
to buy. On the contrary, although government interference in the economy was
corporate America's most convenient scapegoat for its failures, this was also
exactly what it wanted. Regulations that suited its purposes were just fine.
Corporate America was very much against government action to protect the
environment, consumers, the poor or even shareholders trying to read annual
reports, but it had no compunction about buying legislative loopholes that the
clumsiest of con artists could jump through.

Without such loopholes, snake-oil salesmen would not have been able to
transform Enron--a small energy company affected by logical legal restraints on
utilities--into the dominant manipulator of the U.S. energy market before it
became a flaming wreck.

Similarly, WorldCom was only a minor player until the Telecommunications
Act of 1996, pushed through Congress by Rep. Newt Gingrich and Sen. Trent
Lott and signed into law with the enthusiastic support of corporation-friendly
"New Democrat" President Clinton. At the behest of lobbyists for
WorldCom--based in Lott's home state of Mississippi--the senator stuck in an
amendment specifically designed to enable WorldCom to grab a huge chunk of
the telephone market.

At the time, WorldCom was lagging badly behind the big three long-distance
carriers. Lott's legalese, however, turned this to the company's advantage by
specifying that only companies--such as WorldCom--with 5% or less of the
long-distance market could enter into joint marketing agreements with local
phone service suppliers.

The firm was thus free to buy MFS Communications, then the top alternative
provider of local phone services, for $12.4 billion and became the first
company to provide both local and long distance since deregulation forced the
breakup of the Bell system.

Lott was rewarded for his efforts with major contributions from WorldCom to
him and other GOP politicians who had propelled him into the top leadership
position in the Senate. WorldCom also granted a cool million to help
underwrite the Trent Lott Leadership Institute, which presumably will train
future politicians to comply with the wishes of corporate lobbyists.

Thus was born the overreaching, out-of-control and fundamentally dishonest
corporation that is now in bankruptcy after conceding false accounting of more
than $7 billion. Bush condemns such irresponsibility without ever daring to
examine its roots. Is he clueless, or is it that he just doesn't want to know?

Bush was in Mississippi not just to console the WorldCommers but to help
raise a quick half-million dollars for the campaign of Rep. Charles W. "Chip"
Pickering, the Republican candidate for reelection who "represents" many of
the fired WorldCom workers. Pickering got that job after being an aide to Lott
on the very telecommunications issues that favored WorldCom, which returned
the favor with $80,000 in contributions to Pickering.

When Bush said, "I met WorldCom employees who no longer have work, who
are disillusioned like me and others about the corporate fraud which is taking
place in our country," it might have provided comic relief if the president had
turned to Pickering and Lott and asked them whether they were now sorry for
creating this monster. Or maybe not; the risk is that they might have turned the
question back on Bush in pointed reference to his own sordid history of
business shenanigans.
CC