Ex-Bush Loyalists Cash In
In May, the U.S. economy lost 345,000 nonfarm jobs, pushing the unemployment rate from 8.9% to 9.4%. According to official statistics, 14.5 million Americans are now looking for work and, as a recent headline at Time.com put it, "The jobs aren't coming back anytime soon." In fact, a team of economists at the San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank recently reported that "the level of labor market slack could be higher by the end of 2009 than at any other time in the post-World War Two period."
The news, however, is not altogether grim. While times are especially tough for teenagers (22.7% jobless rate) and blacks (14.9% jobless rate), one group is doing remarkably well. I'm talking about former members of the Bush administration who are taking up prestigious academic posts, inking lucrative book deals, signing up with speakers bureaus, joining big-time law firms and top public relations agencies, and grabbing spots on corporate boards of directors. While their high-priced wars, ruinous economic policies, and shredding of economic safety nets have proved disastrous for so many, for them the economic outlook remains bright and jobs are seemingly plentiful. In fact, many of them have performed the eye-opening feat of securing two or more potentially lucrative revenue streams at once during these tough financial times.
While it would likely take a small book to catalogue the fates of all former "loyal Bushies," a look at just a few of these fortunate folks indicates that not everybody was harmed by the Bush era.
The Memoirists
Many of the top figures of the Bush years are joining the ranks of (or reaffirming their credentials as) men and women of letters. Following in the footsteps of 2003-2006 White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan, who wrote the tell-some exposé, What Happened: Inside the Bush White House and Washington's Culture of Deception, is former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld (2001-2006). Now penning his life story for Sentinel, a conservative imprint of the Penguin Group, he has announced that he is forgoing an advance and donating all proceeds to charity. Similarly, 2006-2009 Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is reportedly donating the "author's profits" from his forthcoming "insider's account of [his] experiences as Treasury Secretary." Many other former colleagues are, however, apparently intent on cashing in on their public service.
Last month, the New York Times reported that Rumsfeld's long-time pal, former Vice President Dick Cheney, "is actively shopping a memoir about his life in politics and service in four presidential administrations" and seeking multi-millions. In the same way, back in 2007, Bush's right-hand man Karl Rove, aka his "brain," agreed, for a reported seven figures, to write a memoir for Simon & Schuster's conservative imprint Threshold. Earlier this year, Bush's first term National Security Advisor and second term Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, signed a gaudy three-book deal, reportedly worth at least $2.5 million, with Random House's Crown imprint.
Following her to Crown (also the publisher of Barack Obama's Dreams from My Father and The Audacity of Hope) was former President Bush himself. His book, tentatively titled Decision Points, will reportedly recount "a dozen of the most interesting and important decisions in the former President's personal and political life" for a cool $7 million. Former First Lady Laura Bush has already inked a book deal with Scribner reportedly worth $3.5-5 million.
Only one prominent Bush loyalist who cared to try appears to have been unable to cash-in. In late 2008, the Wall Street Journal's Evan Perez reported that Alberto Gonzales, former White House counsel (2001-2005) and attorney general (2005-2007), "said he is writing a book to set the record straight about his controversial tenure as a senior official in the Bush administration," but could interest no publisher in the manuscript. This followed an earlier report in the New York Times that Gonzales had been "unable to interest law firms in adding his name to their roster..."
Law and Orders
One Bush administration lawyer who did land a job with a law firm was Gonzales's successor, Attorney General Michael Mukasey (2007-2009), who became a partner at Debevoise & Plimpton, a firm "offering sophisticated legal services" which "places the highest value on collaboration and interdisciplinary cooperation in order to provide clients with seamless representation across practice areas and across continents."
Tommy Thompson, Bush's Secretary of Health and Human Services from 2001-2005, is now a partner with Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld where he "focuses on developing solutions for clients in the health care industry, as well as for companies doing business in the public sector." Michael Chertoff, Secretary of Homeland Security from 2005-2009, is serving as "senior of counsel," and a "member of the White Collar Defense and Investigations practice group" at the firm of Covington & Burling.
Meanwhile, Harriet Miers, who served Bush from 2001-2007 as Staff Secretary, Deputy Chief of Staff, and Counsel to the President -- and whose Supreme Court bid crashed and burned in 2005 -- returned to Locke, Lord, Bissell & Liddell in May 2007 to serve as a member of the law firm's "Litigation and Public Policy sections." That firm is also home to Karin Torgerson, a partner who served as Special Assistant to President George W. Bush, one of several White House positions she held from 2003-2005.
Speak Easy
In addition to his book-writing duties, former President Bush recently signed on with the Washington Speakers Bureau, which already represents his wife. The Bureau is to arrange lucrative speeches for him worldwide. In fact, just last month, the New York Times reported that the former president had "earned more than an estimated $150,000" to "discuss national and international policy" alongside fellow former President Bill Clinton at the Metro Toronto Convention Center.
Together
the Bushes joined a speakers' roster of former administration
heavyweights, including Richard Armitage (Deputy Secretary of State,
2001-2005), John Bolton (U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations,
2005-2006), Andrew Card (White House Chief of Staff, 2001-2006), Ari
Fleischer (White House Press Secretary, 2001-2003), Michael Mukasey,
Colin Powell (Secretary of State, 2001-2005), Condoleezza Rice, Tom
Ridge (Secretary of Homeland Security, 2003-2005), Donald Rumsfeld, and
John Snow (Secretary of the Treasury, 2003-2006), as well as Bush
family consigliere James Baker III.
Meanwhile, at Leading Authorities, another top-of-the-line speakers bureau, the list of ex-Bush loyalists includes Dan Bartlett (Counselor to the President, 2002-2007), Christopher Cox (Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, 2005-2009), Ed Gillespie (Counselor to the President, 2007-2009), Porter Goss (Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, 2005-2006), Stephen Hadley (National Security Advisor, 2005-2009), Michael Hayden (Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, 2006-2009), Keith Hennessey (Director of the National Economic Council, 2007-2009), Dana Perino (White House Press Secretary, 2007-2009), and Margaret Spellings (Secretary of Education, 2005-2009).
A third lecturers' stable, the Leigh Bureau, boasts John Negroponte who served Bush as Ambassador to the United Nations, Ambassador to Iraq, Director of National Intelligence, and Deputy Secretary of State.
Talking Heads and Lobbyists
Some Bush loyalists have nabbed other sorts of speaking gigs. Karl Rove, for one, took a job as an analyst for Fox News. (He also writes a weekly op-ed for the Wall Street Journal and, in 2007, signed a two-year deal to be a columnist for Newsweek magazine.)
Ari Fleischer was hired as a media consultant to the Green Bay Packers in 2008 and serves as the president of Ari Fleischer Communications, Inc., which bills itself as a "unique media training and consultancy company [that] brings to the world of sports the lessons of how to successfully handle the toughest situations with the most aggressive reporters." (Clients reportedly include Major League Baseball, the Sporting Goods Manufacturers Association, and "several other leading sports figures.")
Many more Bush loyalists, however, are involved in another lucrative form of communication. For example, Michael Chertoff quickly launched the Chertoff Group, a consulting firm that "will advise clients on a range of security concerns, including cyber security, terrorism, fraud, border protection and supply-chain security." Tom Ridge, when not serving as a keynote-speaker-for-hire (as he did recently at the 2009 CoBank Energy Directors Conference in Colorado Springs, Colorado) is now a security and crisis-management consultant for his own firm, Ridge Global, whose self-professed "expertise encompasses risk management and global trade security, leadership guidance and strategic business generation, event security, crisis management and communications, campus security, technology innovation and integration and more."
In fact, a recent analysis by USA TODAY found that "more than one in four members of President George W. Bush's Cabinet have landed jobs with consulting or lobbying firms in which they can help clients navigate the departments they once oversaw." And it's not just heads of executive departments like Homeland Security who are cashing in.
John Ashcroft (Attorney General, 2001-2005) co-founded the Ashcroft Group, a strategic consulting firm that advises and invests "in companies in the security and law enforcement marketplaces." Not surprisingly, the firm has become a home for Bush loyalists like Juleanna Glover, who served on the senior staffs of then President-elect George W. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney, and was then "the registered U.S. government affairs advisor for Iraq's first post-Saddam Hussein ambassador to the United States."
Recently, according to the Quad City Times, Jim Nussle, Bush's director of the White House Office of Management and Budget (2007-2009) "formed a company that will offer consulting, government relations and lobbying services." The Nussle Group, its website proclaims, "specializes in recruiting a talented team and developing creative solutions to assist clients in navigating the complicated and challenging intersections of public policy, government relations, public relations, international relations and politics."
According to his company bio, the senior policy director at lobbying powerhouse Dutko Worldwide, Gene Hickok, "joined the George W. Bush Administration as Under Secretary of Education. He became Deputy Secretary in 2003 [and] was an architect of the No Child Left Behind Act." And he isn't alone. Kent Sholars, a Senior Associate at Dutko, "was a political appointee during both terms of the administration of George W. Bush, serving as the Confidential Assistant to the Controller for the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) in Washington, DC," while Karen Yeager, a Dutko vice president, "serve[d] in the White House for President Bush in 2001."
Spin-Mistresses
Karen Hughes helped George W. Bush get elected in 2000 and, for the first two years of his first term, served him as a "counselor." In 2002, she left the White House to spend more time with her family in Texas. In 2004, however, she was back at work on Bush's campaign and then, in 2005, signed on as an undersecretary of state. In 2007, she left again, the White House said, "to spend more time with her family." Nonetheless, in 2008, she was in an office yet again, this time as Global Vice Chair at public relations giant Burson-Marsteller. In 2009, she was joined there by former White House Press Secretary Dana Perino, who now serves as Chief Issues Counselor for the company in the U.S.
Here, too, Michael Chertoff has gotten into the act. The announcement of the formation of the Chertoff Group, wrote the Wall Street Journal, "was made by the communications firm Burson-Marsteller, which said it formed an alliance with Mr. Chertoff."
Board to Death
Bush Administration officials have also been popping up on various boards of directors. Richard Armitage is perhaps typical. He sits on the board at military-corporate complex member ManTech International. He also serves on the boards of oil giant ConocoPhillips, "pharmaceutical and cosmeceutical" company Transcu Ltd., and his own firm, Armitage International, which, according to its website, provides "multinational clients with critical support in the areas of international business development, strategic planning, and problem-solving."
In April, chemical giant DuPont announced that Samuel Bodman, Secretary of Energy from 2005-2009 (and before that, Deputy Secretary of the Treasury, 2004-2005, and Deputy Secretary of the Department of Commerce, 2001-2004) had been elected to its board of directors.
That same month, former CIA chief Michael Hayden became a member of the Board of Directors of the National Interest Security Company, an "information technology, information management, and management technology consulting services" provider serving the U.S. Intelligence Community and the Departments of Defense, Homeland Security, and Energy. There, Hayden joined fellow former administration cronies Henry A. Crumpton (Coordinator for Counterterrorism at the State Department, 2005-2007) and Donald Kerr (Principal Deputy Director of National Intelligence, 2007-2009).
Meanwhile, Andrew Card not only serves on the board of directors of railroad giant Union Pacific, but has also turned up on the board of directors of the George W. Bush Presidential Library Foundation.
In the Tank
If you can't get a gig at a law firm, a PR agency, or on a corporate board of directors, there are always the nation's think-tanks to fall back into -- and they've become a shelter for more than a few Bush administration refugees in the Obama era. For example, after serving as a Deputy Assistant to the President and Deputy National Security Adviser in the Bush administration, Elliott Abrams has now joined the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) as senior fellow for Middle Eastern studies.
Alongside Abrams at CFR are a number of officials who served during the Bush years, including Evan Feigenbaum, former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, and the Maldives; Paul Lettow, former senior adviser to the Under Secretary of State for Democracy and Global Affairs and the Senior Director for Strategic Planning and Institutional Reform on the National Security Council staff; and Dan Senor, an administration foreign policy advisor and senior advisor to the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq.
Meanwhile, the conservative Heritage Foundation is not surprisingly housing a large contingent of Bush loyalists, including Becky Norton Dunlop, who served as the chairperson of the Federal Services Impasse Panel (which handles disputes between government agencies and labor unions); Kim R. Holmes, Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs; Terry Miller, ambassador to the United Nations Economic and Social Council; Peter Brookes, Deputy Assistant Defense Secretary for Asian and Pacific Affairs; and Mike Gonzalez who, in 2005, left the Wall Street Journal to join the Bush administration where, according to his Heritage Foundation bio, he "wrote speeches for Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Christopher Cox, then moved to the State Department in 2006 as communications adviser and speechwriter on European and Eurasian affairs" and even "helped craft an op-ed column... which appeared throughout Europe under the bylines of Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates."
Ivory Tower Power
While Gates stayed on to work for President Barack Obama, Rice is pursuing many different career paths. In addition to the lucrative book contracts and the speakers bureau gigs, she inked a deal for the William Morris Agency to represent her for "business initiatives in media, sports and communications." Rice also returned, as a professor of political science, to her old stomping grounds at Stanford University, where she had long taught and also, from 1993-1999, served as provost. Presumably in her spare time, she serves as the Thomas and Barbara Stephenson Senior Fellow on Public Policy at Stanford's conservative Hoover Institution.
Rice is actually following in the footsteps of Rumsfeld who served a stint, beginning in 2007, as "a distinguished visiting fellow" at the Hoover Institution. But Stanford is hardly the only academic bastion of former Bush-ites. For example, this year, John Negroponte headed back to his old alma mater, Yale University, to become the "Brady-Johnson Distinguished Senior Research Fellow in Grand Strategy and Lecturer in International Affairs at the Whitney and Betty MacMillan Center for International and Area Studies."
"Torture memo" author John Yoo, who served as Deputy Assistant Attorney General in the Office of Legal Counsel at the Department of Justice from 2001-2003, is, of course, a professor of law at the School of Law of that bastion of leftist radicalism, the University of California at Berkeley. (As Liliana Segura of AlterNet recently reported, he also just landed a gig as a columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer.)
Hope on the Horizon
Last year, for many Americans, Barack Obama became synonymous with hope. (And last year, Obama's The Audacity of Hope as well as his Dreams from My Father earned him an eye-popping $2.4 million in royalties.) This year, for struggling job-hunters nationwide, it's former Bush administration officials who offer a glimmer of hope in tough economic times. Their ease in finding gainful employment suggests that, even if your prior work has been judged ruinous by many and been roundly repudiated, there's still hope for you on the job front.
Even former Vice President Cheney, a man about whom 55% of Americans hold an unfavorable opinion, has realistic prospects of receiving a multimillion dollar book deal. After all, his former boss is viewed unfavorably by 57% of Americans and look how he's done.
Since most jobless Americans don't have nearly the unfavorable polling numbers of Bush or Cheney, nor do they face the distant threat of possible war crimes prosecutions like John Yoo, they should perk up. Maybe the problem is that none of them have signed up with the right speakers bureau to discuss their disastrous life circumstances. Maybe they haven't had that extra little bit of help tweaking their book proposals for their proposed tell-littles and tell-nones. Maybe they hadn't thought to check with Burson-Marsteller, just in case a few top slots with grandiose titles are still open. Maybe the Hoover Institution will now extend distinguished visiting fellowships to a few of the residents of modern-day Hoovervilles.
With only former Attorney General Gonzales still out of work, grant the men and women of the Bush administration one thing: the best unemployment rate in the land. In but a few short months, they've managed to prove that, no matter how spectacularly you fail, those inside-the-Beltway never have to tighten a belt. In our world, they will always fail upwards -- generally in lucrative, prestigious, and glamorous ways.

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24 Comments so far
Show AllWhat should be added to this articles is which of these people are receiving a pension and how much that is. It's a note on the standard American obsession of wallowing in money. I don't get it. I never quite understand the need for even more money when you already have more than you know what to do with. You see someone like Jimmy Carter whose done nothing but volunteer his time and it really gives you the juxtaposition of how bad our form of American avarice can be. Remember that "avarice" is the "love of money" and people with this disease are generally incurable. I'm not rich but I'm doing okay. I best summed up how I feel about the amount of time I volunteer in the first year Bush took office, "I volunteered more hours at a local elementary school than GW worked the entire year." This was true because it was one of the few years there was money to have summer school so I volunteered to help through the summer.
So on top of what ever pensions and benefits these public figures still recieve (more than the average US income) they are out making even more money to talk about and comment on what? The failed policies that they promoted?
What will they speak about? The taste of dirt?
Just plain sickening.
Yes, so it would seem that the cream rises to the top once again, but this milk is not the milk of human kindness, rather its a witch's brew of greed and corruption made chiefly for "the Bushies" to suck all the money they possibly can for as long as they can.
I will continue my boycott of buying anything from these agents of the Devil that would help support them. If there is anything I want to read I will get it from the Public Library.
If any of these folks come to my hometown to speak, I will meet them with signs of protest and I would hope an opportunity to place them under citizen's arrest for crimes against humanity.
As my father used to say, "I wouldn't spit on them to save them if they were on fire!" That pretty much sums up my feelings towards this crowd.
An amusing sentiment from your father.
It raises the question:
Would he spit on them if they were drowning?
I heard that Alan Greenspan is now a bank consultant. Specializes in Non-Euclidean Accounting. He learned it from Congress. They learned it from the Mob.
STOP buying any books from the mentioned publishing houses.
Sioux Rose
I applaud Nick Turse for always providing such in-depth data and analyses on a great many topics that would otherwise remain under the radar.
Although the ostensible subject of this article is the pay garnered by these deadly should-be has-beens, what I see in their being granted prestigious/influential positions is a further consolidation of "conservative" ideology with the clear intent to extend its base of operations.
These big whigs grant eachother titles the way old European royals anointed "favorites of the king" with special honors. They are the 21st century of sold-out dukes and earls. Taken together, these think tanks and conservative publishing houses act in concert to grant a cloak of legitimacy and renown to persons who advance a philosophy and form of governance that is utterly cruel, devoid of humanity, and more than just morally bankrupt.
The only good thing I can think of is that if the work awaiting the the Lords of Karma in any way emulates that of law enforcement personnel (on THIS plane), then all these lawless frauds are quite easy to track given their dark radiance in highly paid public amphitheaters of one type or another. So full of pride for their "accomplishments" as they get to wear their fancy robes they have completely lost track of the inconvenient facts of karma. They traded this lifetime's comfort against the misery of so many, and there will be an equal price extracted, even if it takes MANY MANY lifetimes.
The last paragraph is interesting. The way I see it, and believe me out here in South Carolina even the poor (usually the poor Caucasians) can be disgustingly amoral, those who lose track of karma and less worried about it are bound to lose. It's like a soldier sitting and laughing thinking he killed all the victims and then losing control of his faculties until surprise surprise one of the victim survivors defeats him. Seeing how corruption and amorality have spread all the way to the lower class, it is harder for me to see who will really get their taste of karma vs those who don't. Let's take an example. Senator Lindsey Graham exploits the lower class folks as he always does, Afro and Caucasian. The poor uneducated conservatives gleefully accept what he's doing for them and want to be like him so they engage in amoral behavior. In the case of Lindsey Graham, he knew what he was doing but in the case of the poor uneducated conservatives, we don't know how many of them would have stayed amoral, reformed, or gotten worse. So the question is who gets punished and to what degree?
Sioux Rose
FREDERICK: One of the most interesting experiences of my life was spending 10 days at a Buddhist monastery in Nepal. It was a program of meditation and we were to be silent until the mid-day meal. I was one of the only people over 40 and could not sustain the meditation position for one-hour periods on the hard floor (or a mat), but they were OK about that. We had opportunities through a translator to pose questions of crucial concern to high monks. In fact on my last day there I had a brief audience with a Lama who blessed my writing and specifically asked me to "write about this." In any case just as Western law has books devoted to specific penalties for specific crimes where the knowledge of the crime factors into the sentence, there are levels of culpability appreciated by Buddhism with respect to any action(s) taken that harms another. Even what we in the west term "an accident" is considered a karmic debit to the Buddhist. For instance, if you inadvertently hit a bicyclist, could the extra cup of coffee that morning have had anything to do with the speed at which you were traveling? Could an argument with a loved one have left you less observant than usual to factors in the outer sphere? Of course not I, nor any human can entirely deduce the level of accountability involved. I believe an individual's level of consciousness factors in, too.
If I know stealing to be wrong and steal anyway, that holds a higher penalty than say an instance (and this is based on a boy I knew in school) where a child is raised by a parent TO steal. The spiritual admonishment, "To the one much is given, much is expected," holds a parallel with respect to one's "account" of knowledge.
"Even what we in the west term "an accident" is considered a karmic debit to the Buddhist."
Interesting. It's bad enough that the higher ups very easily create loopholes and try to invent "accident" to cover-up for wrongdoing and then shift the blame elsewhere as possible. There has to be some way(s) to close those loopholes open to abuse.
Nepal looks interesting. I haven't travelled much out of the country but my children and grandchildren have and Nepal was one of the countries they visited. I don't know what it's like out there but I'll bet it's a hell of a lot better than the fat and dopey ignorance out here in South Carolina.
Speaking Buddhism, I here that it used to be dominant even in China up until somewhere in the latter half of the 20th century. Like Hinduism in India, Confucianism in China is dying out. Both those countries have the largest populations and despite the clear warnings of the dangers and consequences, they're giving up those good philosophies for capitalism. Much like what is happening to the poor conservatives here who suck up to elitist capitalism even when it hurts them the most, the karma over there is coming but bound to be worse. I would have thought that they would have learned what happened in US, Europe, and even Japan as a result but I guess something's blinding them there.
On the last paragraph, I take it that under karma, if I stole but acknowledged that I didn't know and was in fact working to correct that error that I would be forgiven but that if I stole but had know intention of correcting that error regardless of knowing it then I'd be punished quickly or slowly depending on the circumstance, correct?
I find the idea of karma interesting. Even when many will denounce it, just looking at the current events and daily consequences, I find it hard to ignore that idea.
and they say crime doesn't pay.
"Earlier this year, Bush's first term National Security Advisor and second term Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, signed a gaudy three-book deal, reportedly worth at least $2.5 million, with Random House's Crown imprint."
"...Rice is pursuing many different career paths. In addition to the lucrative book contracts and the speakers bureau gigs, she inked a deal for the William Morris Agency to represent her for "business initiatives in media, sports and communications." Rice also returned, as a professor of political science, to her old stomping grounds at Stanford University, where she had long taught and also, from 1993-1999, served as provost. Presumably in her spare time, she serves as the Thomas and Barbara Stephenson Senior Fellow on Public Policy at Stanford's conservative Hoover Institution."
"IN HER SPARE TIME"??? Who is buying her shoes or playing her piano? Also, presumably as a "professor of political science" at Stanford, she must be teaching at least one course, doubtless on how to fashion an ethereal mushroom cloud out of a nonexistent "smoking gun." One can only hope the students get their tuitions' worth.
As much as anything, this article goes far to explain the real nature of the revolving door of Washington politics and its truly incestuous corruption. This group seems spread a little thin unless you have studied the historical nature of the "interlocking directorates" of America's corporations and so-called "think-tanks."
Given how depraved things have become, one can only hope that Obama's NSA is recording their conference calls.
-30-
our time will come.
In May, the U.S. economy lost 345,000 nonfarm jobs, pushing the unemployment rate from 8.9% to 9.4%.
Of the infinity of lies told by the federal government (no matter whose management it is under) this is one of the truly outstanding whoppers. The actual unemployment rate in the United States is probably around 16 - 18%.
So true; they only count those that currently receive benefits. Don't qualify for benefits? Benefits ran out? You don't count. In my state, the real rate could be 20%
The upcoming tomes from all the aforementioned douche bags is such an utter waste of valuable wood. A better use would be as toilet paper, as what would be on it from these scum bags would have similar worth.
Seems like they need to save up some money for the lawyers. As all of their future may have views of (iron) bars in them.
In any case , they are contracting with falling dollar, created by their own policies.
toophat for you!
Why limit this to ex-Bush loyalists? By 2013 or 2017, the ex-Obama loyalists will do exactly the same thing. If Ralph Nader or Cynthia Mckinney were president, those goons would have been on trial or better yet, locked up already ! This is what we get for Obama choosing not to hold them accountable.
AND...in 2000 and beyond...even today, Clinton loyalists are doing the same thing. Look at Obama's appointments.
Cynthia McKinney??? Get serious. She has about as much chance of being President as I do. She is a non-factor in American politics...Thank God!
"Cynthia McKinney??? Get serious. She has about as much chance of being President as I do. She is a non-factor in American politics...Thank God!"
And that's your problem. You suck up to the corporate media hook, line, and sinker running on a phoney "electability" lie when in fact you don't even know the candidate. You'd be better off renaming your userid to OntheWRONGside !
When we can elect a fraud like Obama, we can sure as hell elect better pols such as Mckinney. Do you believe in rich lying liars or are you just plain deluded?
You can't see the forrest for the trees: With our corrupt voting and election campaigns system no non-Duopoly party can win the Presidency, whether it is McKinney, Nader, Buchannan, let alone Rs and Ds who do not toe the party line (eg. Ron Paul, Dennis K.) So you can thank your mythological god all you want, without the public mobilizing to DEMAND change, it aint gonna happen.
So you don't have to worry your little rightwing head, you can be sure the status quo will be maintained, no matter who is in power.
Here here!!
(just a nitpick - the phrase is "hear, hear.")