Details, Explanation and Meaning About Bush family conspiracy theory

Bush family conspiracy theory Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

The Bush family conspiracy theory is an umbrella term used to describe various conspiracy theory allegations directed towards the family of President George W. Bush, including the President's brother, Florida Governor Jeb Bush, their brother Neil Bush, their father and ex-President George H. W. Bush, grandfather Prescott Bush, and great-grandfather George Herbert Walker.

Some allege criminal conspiracies involving United States or multinational corporations, vested interests, US government organizations, and various dictators. While some attach great importance to suggested links which connect individuals and companies, others dismiss some or all of the conspiracy theories as fantasy and claim that these connections are normal for business families and do not imply wrongdoing or malevolence.

Table of contents
1 Background
2 Various allegations and conspiracy theories
3 Known history
4 Response to allegations
5 Further reading
6 See also
7 External links

Background

Proponents of these conspiracy theories sometimes refer to the alleged secret organization with pejorative terms: Bush League, Bush Buddies, or Texas Taliban. The first is a pun on the baseball term "bush league"— minor league amateurs, or an allusion to George W. Bush's experience with the Texas Rangers baseball team. The others are alliterative.

As the Bush family has provided the last two Republican presidents, there may be a confusion of family conspiracy with what is actually normal political maneuvering. (Similarly, the Kennedy family has produced a number of political and public figures.) Additionally, members of the Bush family are politically and economically prominent, so it is natural that they have connections to other major political and business figures, some of whom have inevitably unsavory reputations.

A number of allegations have been made about different members of the Bush family at different times: it is not reasonable to discuss these allegations as a whole. Listed below are assorted allegations and rebuttals, but any serious consideration of these allegations should be made on a strictly individual basis. Some allegations have received considerable mainstream attention and debate; others are generally regarded as specious and unsubstantiated.

Various allegations and conspiracy theories

Known history

The following are the parts of known history which have led people (see references) to make further unproven claims (see allegations above).

  • Businesses associated with Prescott Bush, such as the Union Banking Corporation, were confiscated just prior to World War II under the Trading With the Enemy Act.
  • George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush were members of the Skull and Bones secret society (Bush's membership in the Skull and Bones society was the subject of several Doonesbury cartoons).
  • George H.W. Bush was head of the Central Intelligence Agency in 1976-77.
  • John Hinckley Jr, the "deranged drifter with the hots for Jodie Foster", also happened to be the son of one of George H.W. Bush's better supporters in his campaign against Ronald Reagan; the Hinckleys' Vanderbilt Energy was threatened with a $2-million fine the morning of the assassination attempt; the families are sufficiently close that Scott Hinckley and Neil Bush had a dinner appointment for the next day.[1] Lastly, the Secret Service were inordinately slow in delivering Reagan to a hospital, claiming they got lost in their own capital.
  • George W. Bush has sealed the presidential records of both himself and his father.
  • Saddam Hussein, was provided with weapons and funding during the Iran-Iraq War in the 1980s, during the Reagan administration, in which George H.W. Bush was Vice President. In addition, Donald Rumsfeld, Secretary of Defense under George W. Bush was the Special Envoy to the Middle East in this period, appointed by President Ronald Reagan and met personally with Saddam Hussein during the Iran-Iraq war.
  • Dick Cheney was G.H.W. Bush's Defense Secretary, and G.W. Bush's Vice-President. Cheney is the former President and CEO of Halliburton Company which has been given, by George W. Bush, an exclusive (and unbidded) contract in postwar Iraq. In addition, Halliburton's accounting firm was Arthur Andersen. This latter firm was convicted of obstruction of justice and, allegedly, committed fraud.
  • The Carlyle Group is an investment group which includes both the Bush family and bin Laden family (one of the richest in Saudi Arabia). Bush Sr. and bin Ladens were at a Carlyle meeting in a DC hotel the morning of 9/11; prominent Saudis, including several bin Ladens, were flown out of the US while all private flights were still grounded. However, their flights out of the US were paid charter flights, which would have been legal. The controversy is that it is possible three Saudis took a private flight from Florida to Kentucky on September 13, which would have been illegal at the time, and that such a flight would have to have been approved at very high levels in the government.[1]
  • George W. Bush and Salem bin Laden were coinvestors/business partners in Arbusto Energy.
  • The 2000 Presidential Election was won by George W. Bush in Florida, whose governor was his brother, Jeb Bush, after a decision by the U.S. Supreme Court.
  • During Election Night of the 2000 Presidential Election, John Prescott Ellis, a full cousin of George W. Bush, was a consultant to Fox News, analyzing data from the Voter News Service. He regurlaly contacted Jeb and George Bush by phone that evening.
  • The Project for the New American Century, which in 1990s advocated the invasion of Iraq for reasons of geopolitical strategy, included Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, and the "Prince of Darkness" Richard Perle, all of whom subsequently held influential positions in the Bush administration.
  • The George W. Bush administration pushed for the USA PATRIOT Act and has used the new powers in a variety of cases.
  • The Bush administration does not accept the International Criminal Court's authority over American citizens, and members of the administration have questioned the usefulness of the United Nations.
  • George W. Bush, during the 2003 State of the Union Address, said that British intelligence had learned Iraq had been attempting to purchase uranium from Africa. That claim was based on information which the CIA said it could not verify, and CIA head George Tenet accepted responsibility for failing to remove the assertion from the speech in the fact-checking stage. An earlier document specifically documenting a supposed buy from Niger was known to be a forgery and was not referred to in any Bush speech.
  • Bush, as governor of Texas, presided over the execution of hundreds of condemned criminals, and joked about some of them prior to and after their executions.
  • George W. Bush twice claimed (, ) to have seen the first September 11 plane crash into the World Trade Center on live television, even though that crash was not in a public broadcast until much later.
  • Bush plans to have nuclear waste stored at the volcanic Yucca Mountain facility.
  • Bush has made the following statements:
    • "I told all four [congressional leaders] that there were going to be some times where we don't agree with each other. But that's OK. If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so long as I'm the dictator." December 18, 2000, [1] [1]
    • Answering a repeated reporter question about the anti-Bush gwbush.com, "But how far should these guys go?", Bush replied "There ought to be limits to freedom. We're aware of the site, and this guy is just a garbage man, that's all he is. Of course I don't appreciate it. And you wouldn't, either." May 21, 1999 [1] [1]
  • When the White House had released a copy of a National Guard Bureau document, Aeronautical Orders Number 87, September 29, 1972, they inked out James R. Bath's name (which was revealed by comparing it to a 2000 release of the same document, Bath's name uncensored). The allegation is that the White House was afraid of drawing attention to George W. Bush's relationship with James R. Bath, who managed funds for members of the Bin Laden family, and was the Director of BCCI.

Response to allegations

Critics of the theory allege that its proponents mispresent events as part of the theory.

As a result, critics of Bush family conspiracy theories see them as a string of unconnected claims which have at most circumstantial evidence but which contains no hard evidence of any longterm conspiracy.

Further reading

  • Afternoon of March 30th: a contemporary historical novel Nathaniel Blumberg (1984) ISBN 0961333804 (site)
  • Alice in Wonderland and the World Trade Center Disaster, by David Icke (ISBN 0953881024)
  • The Best Democracy Money Can Buy by Greg Palast (2002) ISBN 0452283914
  • The Biggest Secret: The Book That Will Change the World, by David Icke (ISBN 0952614766)
  • Bush's Brain: How Karl Rove Made George W. Bush Presidential by James Moore (2003) ISBN 0471423270
  • The Dirty Truth, The Oil and Chemical Dependency of George W. Bush by Rick Abraham (2000) ISBN 0970519001
  • Dude, Where's My Country by Michael Moore (2003) ISBN 0446532231 (site)
  • Forbidden Truth: U.S.-Taliban Secret Oil Diplomacy, Saudi Arabia and the Failed Search for bin Laden]] by Jean-Charles Brisard, Guillaume Dasquie, Wayne Madsen, Lucy Rounds (2002) ISBN 1560254149
  • Fortunate Son: George W. Bush and the making of an American President J. H. Hatfield et al (2d ed 2001) ISBN 1887128840
  • The Franklin Cover-up: child abuse, satanism, and murder in Nebraska John DeCamp (2nd ed 1996) ISBN 0963215809
  • George Bush: the unauthorized biography Webster Griffin Tarpley & Anton Chaitkin (c1991) ISBN 0943235057 (site)
  • The Immaculate Deception: The Bush Crime Family Exposed by Russell S. Bowen (1991) ISBN 0922356807
  • Kiss the Boys Goodbye: how the US betrayed its own POWs in Vietnam Monika Jensen-Stevenson, William Stevenson (1990) ISBN 0-525-24934-6
  • The Mafia, CIA and George Bush by Pete Brewton (1992) ISBN 1561712035
  • The Secret War Against the Jews: How Western Espionage Betrayed the Jewish People by John Loftus and Mark Aarons (1994) ISBN 0312156480
  • Stupid White Men: and other sorry excuses for the state of the nation! Michael Moore ISBN 0060392452

See also

External links


This is an Article on Bush family conspiracy theory. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Bush family conspiracy theory


Google
 
Web www.E-paranoids.com

Search Anything