ANOTHER ENRON POLITICAL ANALYSIS

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Lemonite

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Ahh yes, I sit here hoping that ya'll still have the interest to read another Enron Political, This one seems to be pretty good in covering the political aspect of Enron et al..

L.Unplugged

ANyways, here's the article,

From: Toogoodreports.com

"Things have changed significantly in Washington D.C. over the past year, very much to the dismay of the Democrat Party and the liberal media establishment. It had started out promisingly enough. The highly contentious, hotly debated circumstances that brought George Bush into the White House held the prospect of crippling the new administration for the duration of what was certain to be a one-term presidency. The commonly held perception of Bush as a pampered rich kid and intellectual lightweight made him look as tantalizing a target to the left as a 20-year-old intern to former President Clinton. And though the economic slowdown had started long before he took office, the well-established pattern of presidents getting credit or blame irrespective of actual responsibility made a Democrat landslide in the mid-term congressional elections a virtual certainty.

The opening months of Bush?s term had gone quite well. Democrats, shaking off their hypocrisy, openly courted Senate Republicans to change party affiliation and succeed in "undoing the election results" of 2001 by giving them control of that congressional body. The stage was then set for them to invoke the time-tested and nauseatingly effective tactics of casting all Republicans as enemies of the common man and servants of the rich. The administration?s connections to the evil energy industry positioned them nicely for vilification as ravagers of the environment and manufactures of California?s energy troubles. The reality that it was decades of socialist-inspired, anti-capitalist leadership that had created the state?s distress was cast aside with characteristic effortlessness.

But in spite of all this promise and the left?s rosy expectations for the future, along came September 11th and the party came to an abrupt end. With President Bush?s approval ratings hovering steadily at a dizzying height, the world has become just a bit confusing. And, as such, they are unlikely to relinquish their death grip on Enron anytime soon.

After nearly a decade of the Clinton Administration and successfully peddling the notion that a president?s personal character was unimportant, many have been left dumbfounded by the weight given to the perception of Bush?s honesty. But a grasp of the concept is less important than understanding that the way to get to Bush is to target this aura. The effort was recently made official with the release of a memo by James Carville and other Democrat strategists calling on the left to exploit the Enron collapse. Not that any additional encouragement was needed.

From the outset the rhetoric has been misleading, at best. In numerous Democrat statements and countless press stories, the impression has been fostered that the onetime corporate giant had bought the president and his inner circle, and that the Enron house of cards was created with their direct participation. The reality is that the company?s stellar growth occurred under Clinton?s watch and with the direct assistance of his administration. The Clinton White House and the Commerce Department facilitated overseas deals and helped the company to acquire hundreds of millions in federal loans. And it was during that time that changes to SEC regulations took place that made the unholy relationship between Arthur Andersen and Enron possible.

For a president that was supposedly in Enron?s back pocket, Bush seems to have done very little for them. After less than a year in office, Enron came crashing down. Not only did the current administration do nothing to prevent the collapse, they took actions that undermined the favoritism created during the Clinton years. Soon after coming to office, Bush abandoned the Kyoto global warming treaty and rejected Clinton?s eleventh-hour regulation to cap carbon emissions. In addition to putting a dagger into the heart of the US economy these measures would have meant billions to Enron by forcing coal-burning power plants to convert to natural gas; Enron?s bread and butter.

Much has been made of representatives from Enron participating in the creation of the Bush energy policy and their meetings with Vice President Dick Cheney and his staff. In truth, many of these so-called "meetings" included many companies and one would be more accurately described as a conference, with hundreds in attendance. A better question than "Why were Enron reps. there?" would be "Why wouldn?t they have been there?" At the time the company was highly influential and a well-respected force in the world energy market. Leaving them out would have been comparable to excluding General Motors when developing a strategy to help the domestic auto industry.

The refusal of the administration to turn over detailed information, transcripts and accounts of its dealing with Enron execs has created a virtual frenzy amongst Democrats and has helped the media to create the impression that the White House is "hiding something". At the behest of congressional Democrats, the General Accounting Office has taken the unprecedented step of suing the administration in order to obtain the information. The GAO?s argument is that because the offices of the vice president and the energy task force have been funded with federal dollars, the information must be provided. Well, everything within the executive branch, including the Bush bedroom, is funded with federal dollars. By the same reasoning they could demand detailed accounts of the first couple?s nighttime conversations and actions. If the precedent is established that any and every conversation or interaction connected to the presidency is to be subject to partisan and media scrutiny, the institution would cease to exist as an effective branch of government.

The current Democrat demands for information have been compared to the Republican?s requests for information regarding the Hillary Clinton healthcare task force and charges of hypocrisy have been levied. The glaring difference is that, Hillary Clinton was un-elected and unaccountable, and therefore had no right to be operating in such a capacity. Furthermore, she was not entitled to the constitutional protection bestowed upon the executive branch. The fact of the matter is that while most investigations begin with a crime and then search for suspects, congressional Democrats and the press have decided that the Bush administration is loaded with suspects and they are now in search of a crime.

Critics see the Bush administration?s support for energy deregulation as evidence of Enron?s influence. But don?t conservatives generally support such things? Additionally, their reluctance to institute broad price controls to help save California from its self-created energy crisis has drawn accusations. A letter sent by Ken Lay to the Bush White House, requesting the denial of price controls is seen by some as a smoking gun. The presumption is that without the company?s financial campaign backing that such price controls would have been embraced. This, of course, is ridiculous. It was price controls that created the California debacle, and enacting further controls would have only exacerbated the problem, spread the misery and endangered many other companies. Lay?s letter simply asked the administration not to do something that it had no intention of doing in the first place.

In an attempt to sanitize their distorted definitions and their one-sided "quest for justice" Democrats and press operatives have revived the crusade for "campaign finance reform" as a way to prevent future Enron-type debacles. If one chooses to recall, the idea originally gained momentum within the liberal establishment and with John McCain (who are often indistinguishable) when the staggering extent of the Clinton fundraising abuses came to light. The punch line of the Clinton administration?s support for such reform was that it was roughly equivalent to someone being caught running out of a bank with a bag of stolen money in-hand and the alarm blaring, then declaring their desire to make banks more difficult to rob. But I digress.

Contrary to the contention that Enron?s relationship with Bush necessitates a change in the system, as a company source declared: "The lesson from this is that money gets you access, but not results." The insidious image of corporate CEOs notwithstanding, they represent countless millions of employees, stockholders and American economic interests in general. There is no right more significant than that of free speech. The collective petitioning of the government, either directly or through financial means, is inextricably linked to that right. The methods that they employ are no different from those of trade unions, environmental organizations or other "special interest groups". But never let it be said that Americans are not willing to sacrifice constitutional protections based on momentary, and artificially produced, hysteria.

Although Enron mania has been justified by declared concerns for "the little guy" and to defend against future "conflicts of interests", thus far these concerns have not applied to the case of DNC chairman Terry McAuliffe and his $18 million profit from a meager $100,000 investment in the now bankrupt telecommunications company Global Crossing. McAuliffe has long held the ear of Bill Clinton and was one of his most valued media attack dogs. He was also chosen by the former president to head the Democrat Party. During Clinton?s tenure, Global Crossing received a defense contract potentially worth $400 million in a bidding competition that has been called "rigged" by other bidders, which included AT&T Corp, Quest Communications, Sprint and Worldcom.

Not surprisingly, in addition to the lucrative harvest collected by the DNC chairman, Clinton's presidential library received a $1 Million donation from Global Crossing?s Chairman Gary Winnick. The fund was a favorite cause for those who sought pardons from Clinton. The finished monument to his alleged greatness is said to include spacious living quarters for our former chief executive, and the fund has been raided to deal with other Clinton financial concerns.

House Minority leader Dick Gephardt has said that the Bush/Enron situation "can?t pass the smell test". It?s unclear what aroma he and his cohorts detect in that relationship but it cannot possibly be as pungent as that emanating from Clinton and company. Then again, a drive to protect Joe Average and ensure the dignity of our government the Enron case has never been. This is merely a weapon with which to politically bloody the Bush White House. It is unclear how effective this weapon will ultimately be, but here?s hoping that once again the left has underestimate the abilities of George W. Bush. And here?s hoping that I?ve underestimated the ability of the American people to detect political B.S.
"


[This message has been edited by Lemonite (edited 02-04-2002).]

[This message has been edited by Lemonite (edited 02-05-2002).]
 
Originally posted by Lemonite:
Ahh yes, I sit here hoping that ya'll still have the interest to read another Enron Political, this time fewer partisan remarks

Can I just check you were being sarcastic there. That article has a right-wing bias that's evident right from the first sentence.

I have no problem with people posting partisan articles, but it's a little misleading to try to portray them as anything resembling an objective commentary.

(And I am not trying to start a fight, nor insult anyone, nor start a huge discussion on media bias, etc. This is just an observation.)
 
Originally posted by FizzingWhizzbees:
Can I just check you were being sarcastic there. That article has a right-wing bias that's evident right from the first sentence.

I have no problem with people posting partisan articles, but it's a little misleading to try to portray them as anything resembling an objective commentary.

(And I am not trying to start a fight, nor insult anyone, nor start a huge discussion on media bias, etc. This is just an observation.)

Yah.. Mos Defly, sarcasm, referencing the last Enron Article and all that followed.. That is now closed..

But I do think it does an intellectual job.. regardless of my affiliation.. at presenting the scenario.. if anything in tandem with the Moore Article... A sort of accompanying piece that gives the other side a chance to answer.

THose of you who can't take a little light heartedness in a serious issue.. Lighten up.. Buy yourself some Ice Cream.. Apparently it was one joke too much for you... Take yourself less seriously.. and Then Maybe We'll listen to YOU.

L.Unplugged

Haha.. Maybe I do need my Lemonite Stand after all...



[This message has been edited by Lemonite (edited 02-05-2002).]
 
Sigh...It is most apparent that everything that was said in the "Moore" thread went in one ear and out the other. It is obvious now that these posts are just for provocation, yet another attempt to shove conservative rhetoric down our throats and pass it off as "objective." The least you could do is just state it to be the conservative antithesis of the liberal Moore thread, but that would just be too objective. Tell a lie, tell it often enough, and people will believe it, right?

I'm ignoring this thread from here, and I hope others will as well. When we are ready to push aside partisanship, along with these nice little ideological stereotypes we have of each other and actually discuss things, rather than snidely posting articles and running away like a snickering schoolgirl, then it might be worth talking about. Until then...

Melon

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"He had lived through an age when men and women with energy and ruthlessness but without much ability or persistence excelled. And even though most of them had gone under, their ignorance had confused Roy, making him wonder whether the things he had striven to learn, and thought of as 'culture,' were irrelevant. Everything was supposed to be the same: commercials, Beethoven's late quartets, pop records, shopfronts, Freud, multi-coloured hair. Greatness, comparison, value, depth: gone, gone, gone. Anything could give some pleasure; he saw that. But not everything provided the sustenance of a deeper understanding." - Hanif Kureishi, Love in a Blue Time

[This message has been edited by melon (edited 02-05-2002).]
 
Originally posted by melon:
Sigh...
I'm ignoring this thread from here, and I hope others will as well.
Melon


Melon.. This is an article that those who read the Moore article, should read because it gives the other side of things..Ordering people around eh?.. And you call Bush a Dictator.

Here's to looking at the other side of things.. Not fighting about them.. Just looking at them. I'm not even really asking for discussion, I's just keeping it atop long enough for people to read it.. That's all...

And I will continue to pray for you.

L. Unplugged


[This message has been edited by Lemonite (edited 02-05-2002).]
 
Originally posted by Lemonite:
Ordering people around eh?.. And you call Bush a Dictator.

See, it is histrionics like this that piss me off.

Here's to looking at the other side of things..

How many articles on Enron have you posted? And in how many have you called them "objective"? And in how many fashions do I have to tell you that it is not the case? I'm tired of repeating myself.

And I will continue to pray for you.

Can someone fill me in on this little tidbit? There have been a lot of conservatives in this forum "praying" for me. Are you somehow hoping I can use all my writing skills to further your causes? Not likely.

And leave it at that. Post on the article, not this side commenting, if you so very wish to continue this superfluous thread.

Melon

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"He had lived through an age when men and women with energy and ruthlessness but without much ability or persistence excelled. And even though most of them had gone under, their ignorance had confused Roy, making him wonder whether the things he had striven to learn, and thought of as 'culture,' were irrelevant. Everything was supposed to be the same: commercials, Beethoven's late quartets, pop records, shopfronts, Freud, multi-coloured hair. Greatness, comparison, value, depth: gone, gone, gone. Anything could give some pleasure; he saw that. But not everything provided the sustenance of a deeper understanding." - Hanif Kureishi, Love in a Blue Time
 
Lemonite..

Thread Closed usually means Topic Closed.

In this case, TOPIC EXHAUSTED.

In other words, dont start a thread spinning off of a closed thread.

I didnt close the other thread but I've been given the OK to close this one.

Let this topic rest please.


------------------
It's cold in the ground
But there's peace in the sound
Of the white and the black
Spilling over


Sicy's Website
 
Bringing this back to the top, because I think that after the Michael Moore Bonanza, It's important to read a differing point of view on this issue.

L. Unplugged
 
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