Bush's Other Lies
by David Corn
The Nation magazine, October
13, 2003
George W. Bush is a liar. He has lied
large and small, directly and by omission. His Iraq lies have
loomed largest. In the run-up to the invasion, Bush based his
case for war on a variety of unfounded claims that extended far
beyond his controversial uranium-from-Niger assertion. He maintained
that Saddam Hussein possessed "a massive stockpile"
of unconventional weapons and was directly "dealing"
with Al Qaeda-two suppositions unsupported then (or now) by the
available evidence. He said the International Atomic Energy Agency
had produced a report in 1998 noting that Iraq was six months
from developing a nuclear weapon; no such report existed (and
the IAEA had actually reported then that there was no indication
Iraq had the ability to produce weapons-grade material). Bush
asserted that Iraq was "harboring a terrorist network, headed
by a senior AI Qaeda terrorist planner"; US intelligence
officials told reporters this terrorist was operating outside
of Al Qaeda control. And two days before launching the war, Bush
said, "Intelligence gathered by this and other governments
leaves no doubt that the Iraq regime continues to possess and
conceal some of the most lethal weapons ever devised." Yet
former deputy CIA director Richard Kerr, who is conducting a review
of the prewar intelligence, has said that intelligence was full
of qualifiers and caveats, and based on circumstantial and inferential
evidence. That is, it was not no-doubt stuff. And after the major
fighting was done, Bush declared, "We found the weapons of
mass destruction." But he could only point to two tractor-trailers
that the CIA and the Defense Intelligence Agency had concluded
were mobile bioweapons labs. Other experts-including the DIA's
own engineering experts-disagreed with this finding.
But Bush's truth-defying crusade for war
did not mark a shift for him. Throughout his campaign for the
presidency and his years in the White House, Bush has mugged the
truth in many other areas to advance his agenda. Lying has been
one of the essential tools of his presidency. To call the forty-third
President of the United States a prevaricator is not an exercise
of opinion, not an inflammatory talk-radio device. Rather, it
is backed up by an all-too-extensive record of self-serving falsifications.
While politicians are often derided as liars, this charge should
be particularly stinging for Bush. During the campaign of 2000,
he pitched himself as a candidate who could "restore"
honor and integrity to an Oval Office stained by the misdeeds
and falsehoods of his predecessor. To brand Bush a liar is to
negate what he and his supporters declared was his most basic
and most important qualification for the job.
His claims about the war in Iraq have
led more of his foes and more pundits to accuse him of Iying to
the public. The list of his misrepresentations, though, is far
longer than the lengthy list of dubious statements Bush employed-and
keeps on employing- to justify his invasion and occupation of
Iraq. Here then is a partial-a quite partial-account of the other
lies of George W. Bush.
Tax Cuts
Bush's crusade for tax cuts is the domestic
policy matter that has spawned the most misrepresentations from
his camp. On the 2000 campaign trail, he sold his success as a
"tax-cutting person" by hailing cuts he passed in Texas
while governor. But Bush did not tell the full story of his 1997
tax plan. His proposal called for cutting property taxes. But
what he didn't mention is that it also included an attempt to
boost the sales tax and to implement a new business tax. Nor did
he note that his full package had not been accepted by the state
legislature. Instead, the lawmakers passed a $1 billion reduction
in property taxes. And these tax cuts turned out to be a sham.
After they kicked in, school districts across the state boosted
local tax rates to compensate for the loss of revenue. A 1999
Dallas Morning News analysis found that "many [taxpayers]
are still paying as much as they did in 1997, or more." Republican
Lieutenant Governor Rick Perry called the cuts "rather illusory."
One of Bush's biggest tax-cut whoppers
came when he stated, during the presidential campaign, "The
vast majority of my [proposed] tax cuts go to the bottom end of
the spectrum." That estimate was wildly at odds with analyses
of where the money would really go. A report by Citizens for Tax
Justice, a liberal outfit that specializes in distribution analysis,
figured that 42.6 percent of Bush's $ 1.6 trillion tax package
would end up in the pockets of the top 1 percent o of earners.
The lowest 60 percent would net 12.6 percent. The New York Times,
the Los Angeles Times, ABC News and NBC News all reported that
Bush's package produced the results CTJ calculated.
To deal with the criticism that his plan
was a boon for millionaires, Bush devised an imaginary friend-a
mythical single waitress who was supporting two children on an
income of $22,000, and he talked about her often. He said he wanted
to remove the tax-code barriers that kept this waitress from reaching
the middle class, and he insisted that if his tax cuts were passed,
"she will pay no income taxes at all." But when Time
asked the accounting firm of Deloitte & Touche to analyze
precisely how Bush's waitress-mom would be affected by his tax
package, the firm reported that she would not see any benefit
because she already had no income-tax liability.
As he sold his tax cuts from the White
House, Bush maintained in 2001 that with his plan, "the greatest
percentage of tax relief goes to the people at the bottom end
of the ladder." This was trickery-technically true only because
low-income earners pay so little income tax to begin with. As
the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities put it, "a two-parent
family of four with income of $26,000 would indeed have its income
taxes eliminated under the Bush plan, which is being portrayed
as a 100 percent reduction in taxes." But here was the punch
line: The family owed only $20 in income taxes under the existing
law. Its overall tax bill (including payroll and excise taxes),
though, was $2,500. So that twenty bucks represented less than
I percent of its tax burden. Bush's "greatest percentage"
line was meaningless in the real world, where people paid their
bills with money, not percentages.
Bush also claimed his tax plan-by eliminating
the estate tax, at a cost of $300 billion-would "keep family
farms in the family." But, as the New York Times reported,
farm-industry experts could not point to a single case of a family
losing a farm because of estate taxes. Asked about this, White
House press secretary Ari Fleischer said, "If you abolish
the death tax, people won't have to hire all those planners to
help them keep the land that's rightfully theirs." Caught
in a $300 billion lie, the White House was now saying the reason
to abolish the tax-a move that would be a blessing to the richest
2 percent of Americans-was to spare farmers the pain in the ass
of estate planning. Bush's lies did not hinder him. They helped
him win the first tax-cut fight-and, then, the tax-cut battle
of 2003. When his second set of supersized tax cuts was assailed
for being tilted toward the rich, he claimed, "Ninety-two
million Americans will keep an average of $1,083 more of their
own money." The Tax Policy Center of the Brookings Institution
and the Urban Institute found that, contrary to Bush's assertion,
nearly 80 percent of tax filers would receive less than $ 1,083,
and almost half would pocket less than $ 100. The truly average
taxpayers-those in the middle of the income range- would receive
$265. Bush was using the word "average" in a flimflam
fashion. To concoct the misleading $ 1,083 figure, the Administration
took the large dollar amounts high-income taxpayers would receive
and added that to the modest, small or nonexistent reductions
other taxpayers would get-and then used this total to calculate
an y average gain. His claim was akin to saying that if a street
had nine households led by unemployed individuals but one with
an earner making a million dollars, the average income of the
families on the block would be $ 100,000. The radical Wall Street
Journal reported, "Overall, the gains from the taxes are
weighted toward upper-income taxpayers."
The Environment
One of Bush's first PR slip-ups as President
came when his EPA announced that it would withdraw a new standard
for arsenic in drinking water that had been developed during the
Clinton years. Bush defended this move by claiming that the new
standard had been irresponsibly rushed through: "At the very
last minute my predecessor made a decision, and we pulled back
his decision so that we can make a decision based upon sound science
and what's realistic." And his EPA administrator, Christine
Todd Whitman, said the standard had not been based on the "best
available science." This was a harsh charge. And untrue.
The new arsenic standard was no quickie
job unattached to reasonable scientific findings. The EPA had
worked for a decade on establishing the new, 10-parts-per-billion
standard. Congress had directed the agency to establish a new
standard, and it had authorized $2.5 million a year for studies
from 1997 through 2000. A 1999 study by the National Academy of
Sciences (NAS) had concluded that the existing 50-ppb standard
"could easily" result in a 1-in-100 cancer risk and
had recommended that acceptable levels be lowered "as promptly
as possible." EPA policy-makers had thought that a 3-ppb
standard would have been justified by the science, yet they took
cost considerations into account and went for the less stringent
10 ppb.
Bush's arsenic move appeared to have been
based upon a political calculation-even though Bush, as a candidate,
had said he would not decide key policy matters on the basis of
politics. But in his book The Right Man, David Frum, a former
Bush economic speechwriter, reported that Karl Rove, Bush's chief
political adviser, had "pressed for reversal" of the
arsenic standard in an attempt to win votes in New Mexico, one
of a few states that have high naturally occurring levels of arsenic
and that would face higher costs in meeting the new standard.
Several months after the EPA suspended
the standard, a new NAS study concluded that the 1 0-ppb standard
was indeed scientifically justified and possibly not tight enough.
After that, the Administration decided that the original 10 ppb
was exactly the right level for a workable rule, even though the
latest in "best available science" now suggested that
the 10-ppb level might not adequately safeguard water drinkers.
The arsenic screw-up was one of the few
lies for which Bush took a hit. On the matter of global warming,
he managed to lie his way through a controversy more deftly. Months
into his presidency, Bush declared that he was opposed to the
Kyoto Protocol, the 1997 global warming accord. To defend his
retreat from the treaty, he cited "the incomplete state of
scientific knowledge." This was a misleading argument, for
the scientific consensus was rather firm. The Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), an international body of thousands
of scientists assembled by the UN and the World Meteorological
Organization, held that global temperatures were dramatically
on the rise and that this increase was, to an unspecified degree,
a result of human-induced emissions.
In early June 2001 the NAS released a
report Bush had requested, and it concluded global warming was
under way and "most likely due to human activities."
Rather than accept the analysis it had commissioned, the Bush
White House countered with duplicity. Press secretary Fleischer
maintained that the report "concludes that the Earth is warming.
But it is inconclusive on why-whether it's man-made causes or
whether it's natural causes." That was not spinning. That
was prevaricating. The study blamed "human activities"
while noting that "natural variability" might be a contributing
factor too.
Still, the Bush White House wanted to
make it seem as if Bush did take the issue seriously. So on June
11, he delivered a speech on global warming and pledged to craft
an alternative to Kyoto that would "reduce" emissions.
The following February he unveiled his plan. "Our immediate
goal," Bush said, "is to reduce America's greenhouse-gas
emissions relative to the size of our economy."
Relative to the size of our economy? This
was a ruse. Since the US economy is generally growing, this meant
emissions could continue to rise, as long as the rate of increase
was below the rate of economic growth. The other industrialized
nations, with the Kyoto accord, were calling for reductions below
1990 levels. Bush was pushing for slower increases above 2000
levels. Bush's promise to lower emissions had turned out to be
no more than hot air.
September 11
As many Americans and others yearned to
make sense of the evil attacks of September 11, Bush elected to
share with the public a deceptively simplistic explanation of
this catastrophe. Repeatedly, he said that the United States had
been struck because of its love of freedom. "America was
targeted for attack," he maintained, "because we're
the brightest beacon for freedom and opportunity in the world."
This was shallow analysis, a comic book interpretation of the
event that covered up complexities and denied Americans information
crucial for developing a full understanding of the attacks. In
the view Bush furnished, Osama bin Laden was a would-be conqueror
of the world, a man motivated solely by irrational evil, who killed
for the purpose of destroying freedom.
But as the State Department's own terrorism
experts-as well as non-government experts-noted, bin Laden was
motivated by a specific geostrategic and theological aim: to chase
the United States out of the Middle East in order to ease the
way for a fundamentalist takeover of the region. Peter Bergen,
a former CNN producer and the first journalist to arrange a television
interview with bin Laden, observes in his book Holy War, Inc.,
"What [bin Laden] condemns the United States for is simple:
its policies in the Middle East." Rather than acknowledge
the realities of bin Laden's war on America, Bush attempted to
create and perpetuate a war-on-freedom myth.
In the aftermath of 9/11, Bush was disingenuous
on other fronts. Days after the attack, he asserted, "No
one could have conceivably imagined suicide bombers burrowing
into our society and then emerging all in the same day to fly
their aircraft-fly US aircraft-into buildings full of innocent
people." His aides echoed this sentiment for months. They
were wrong. Such a scenario had been imagined and feared by terrorism
experts. And plots of this sort had previously been uncovered
and thwarted by security services in other nations-in operations
known to US officials. According to the 9/11 inquiry conducted
by the House and Senate intelligence committees, the US intelligence
establishment had received numerous reports that bin Laden and
other terrorists were interested in mounting 9/11-like strikes
against the United States.
Fourteen months after the attack, Bush
said, "We must uncover every detail and learn every lesson
of September the 11 th." But his actions belied this rhetoric.
His White House refused to turn over information to the intelligence
committees about a pre-9/11 intelligence briefing he had seen,
and the Bush Administration would not allow the committees to
tell the public what intelligence warnings Bush had received before
September 11. More famously, Bush would not declassify the twenty-seven-page
portion of the committees' final report that concerned connections
between the 9/11 hijackers and Saudi Arabia. And following September
11, Bush repeatedly maintained that his Administration was doing
everything possible to secure the nation. But that was not true.
The Administration did not move- and has not moved-quickly to
address gaping security concerns, including vulnerabilities at
chemical plants and ports and a huge shortfall in resources for
first responders [see Corn, "Homeland Insecurity," September
22].
It did not start with Iraq. Bush has been
Iying throughout the presidency. He claimed he had not gotten
to know disgraced Enron chief Ken Lay until after the 1994 Texas
gubernatorial election. But Lay had been one of Bush's larger
contributors during that election and had-according to Lay himself-
been friends with Bush for years before it. In June 2001, Bush
said, "We're not going to deploy a [missile defense] system
that doesn't work." But then he ordered the deployment of
a system that was not yet operational. (A June 2003 General Accounting
Office study noted, "Testing to date has provided only limited
data for determining whether the system will work as intended.")
His White House claimed that it was necessary to drill for oil
in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to "secure America's
energy needs." But the US Geological Survey noted that the
amount of oil that might be found there would cover up to slightly
more than two years' worth of oil consumption. Such a supply would
hardly "secure" the nation's needs.
Speaking for his boss, Fleischer in 2002
said, "the President does, of course, believe that younger
workers...are going to receive no money for their Social Security
taxes." No money? That was not so. A projected crunch will
hit in four decades or so. But even when this happens, the system
will be able to pay an estimated 70 percent of benefits-which
is somewhat more than "no money." When Bush in August
2001 announced he would permit federal funding of stem-cell research
only for projects that used existing stem-cell lines-in a move
to placate social conservatives, who opposed this sort of research-he
said that there were sixty existing lines, and he asserted that
his decision "allows us to explore the promise and potential
of stem cell research." Yet at the time-according to scientific
experts in the field and various media reports-there were closer
to ten available lines, not nearly enough to support a promising
research effort.
Does Bush believe his own untruths? Did
he truly consider a WMD-loaded Saddam Hussein an imminent threat
to the United States? Or was he knowingly employing dramatic license
because he wanted war for other reasons? Did he really think the
average middle-class taxpayer would receive $1,083 from his second
tax-cut plan? Or did he realize this was a fuzzy number cooked
up to make the package seem a better deal than it was for middle-
and low-income workers? Did he believe there were enough stem-cell
lines to support robust research? Or did he know he had exaggerated
the number of lines in order to avoid a politically tough decision?
It's hard to tell. Bush's public statements
do suggest he is a binary thinker who views the world in black-and-white
terms. You're either for freedom or against it. With the United
States or not. Tax cuts are good-always. The more tax cuts the
better- always. He's impatient with nuances. Asked in 1999 to
name something he wasn't good at, Bush replied, "Sitting
down and reading a 500-page book on public policy or philosophy
or something." Bush likes life to be clear-cut. And perhaps
that causes him to either bend the truth or see (and promote)
a bent version of reality. Observers can debate whether Bush considers
his embellishments and misrepresentations to be the honest-to-God
truth or whether he cynically hurls falsehoods to con the public.
But believer or deceiver-the result is the same.
With his misrepresentations and false
assertions, Bush has dramatically changed the nation and the world.
Relying on deceptions, he turned the United States into an occupying
power. Using lies, he pushed through tax cuts that will profoundly
reshape the US budget for years to come, most likely insuring
a long stretch of deficits that will make it difficult, perhaps
impossible, for the federal government to fund existing programs
or contemplate new ones.
Does Bush lie more than his predecessors,
more than his political opponents? That's irrelevant. He's guiding
the nation during difficult and perhaps perilous times, in which
a credible President is much in need. Prosperity. or economic
decline? War or peace? Security or fear? This country has a lot
to deal with. Lies from the White House poison the debates that
must occur if Americans are going to confront and overcome the
challenges of this century at home and abroad.
Presidential Iying, in fact, threatens
the country. To render informed and wise choices about the crucial
and complicated controversies of the day, people need truthful
information. The
President is generally in a position to
define and dominate a debate more than other political players.
And a lie from the White House-or a fib or a misrepresentation
or a fudged number-can go a long way toward distorting the national
discussion.
Bush campaigned for the presidency as
the fellow who would bring honesty back to the White House. During
his first full day on the job, while swearing in his White House
staff, he reminded his cadre, "On a mantelpiece in this great
house is inscribed the prayer of John Adams, that only the wise
and honest may rule under this roof." But Adams's prayer
would once more go unanswered. There has been no restoration of
integrity. Bush's promise was a lie. The future of the United
States remains in the hands of a dishonest man.
David Corn, Washington editor of The Nation,
is the author of The Lies of George W. Bush: Mastering the Politics
of Deception (Crown). For information on the book, see www.bushlies.com.
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