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Fortunate
Son
Greg Palast's
Introduction to the new edition of Jim Hatfield's Biography of George W.
Bush
by
Greg Palast
HORNS
& HALOS, the documentary about the publication of this book, will
screen on CINEMAX February 18th, 2004 at 7PM.
Jim Hatfield? Wasn't he some kind of whack-o? Some kind of
Conspiracy Theorist with fruitcake ideas out to get the Bushes?
I've got to admit it. That's the first thing that popped into my head
when Soft Skull suggested I write an introduction to the new edition of
Hatfield's Fortunate
Son.
But then I read the book.
Twenty pages in, I'm wondering, So where’s the goofball info? Where
are the rumors and unsupported claims? Not only is the information
solid, the writing well-considered and thoughtful, but damn, this
Hatfield guy actually likes the Bushes – even if, good journalist that
Hatfield is, he has to lay out the facts both flattering and less so.
Just read Hatfield on Bush Sr's comforting Barbara over the death of
their young daughter: deeply sympathetic, without a hint of Texas irony
or shots at the Bushes for politicizing personal tragedy. I wonder if I
would have been so nice to the
serial presidents.
What you get here is the drumbeat of fact after fact after fact on the
rise of a president born with a silver oil well in his mouth. It's
without invective, even without the usual speculation common to
political bios, but it is devastating. Gone is the Hollywood re-make of
Dubya as Just Plain Folks who happened to pick up a few dollars in the
oil and sports biz. This is about a guy who stuffed his pockets and
built a career on a combination of daddy's Rolodex, political venom and
rich-kid contacts. The big boys didn't help Bush, they invested in him.
But unlike the investors in Dubya's shaky oil-well partnerships, the
money-bags who bet on Junior Bush hit a gusher. Never have so few
enriched themselves for so long at the expense of so many.
I owe Hatfield big time. Fortunate Son is the unacknowledged Chapter One
of my own book on the Junior Bush Administration. In reading
Hatfield’s description of Bush’s rise to Governor of Texas, we see
that history repeats itself with horrifying predictability: first as
farce and then as Presidency.
In November 2001, for BBC Television, I reported that FBI agents, prior
to September 11 attack on the World Trade Center, told me that the Bush
Administration had put the kibosh on investigations of Saudi Arabian
funding of terror groups including a see-no-evil policy on members of
the Bin Ladin family (excluding the evil Osama). It just didn’t make
sense to me until I read Jim’s book: how young Dubya struck it rich in
the oil business drilling
nothing but dry holes . . . except for the hole he drilled into the
pockets of Sheikh Abdullah Bakhsh (a Bin Ladin family advisor) and the
story of the extraordinary contract granted Bush’s oil company, Harken,
by a Persian Gulf emirate.
You can’t understand our White House today – the oil company wet
dream of an Energy Plan, the Kiss-Me-I’m-Saudi foreign policy –
without reading the rise and reign of Governor Dubya. "Vending machine
government is what it is," Houstonian LaNell Andersen told me,
"You
put the money in, and the policies come out." LaNell has reason to be
angry, suffering from diseases linked to
the filth spewed into the air above the Houston ship channel by
Exxon-Mobil and Bush’s other major political donors.
It’s not as simple as "this lump of cash for this change in
regulations." As one CIA agent put it: Suggesting an investigation of
your President’s or his daddy’s business partners is not a
career-maker. It’s a web of relationships, one hand--or one wallet--washing another. Somehow those that took care of the Bush family get
taken care of. For example, while
investigating the theft of the vote in Florida, I discovered that a
company, ChoicePoint, had given a list of 57,000 "felons" to the
office of Secretary of State Katherine Harris prior to the 2000 election
– and she ordered the removal of these criminals from the voter rolls.
In fact, 95% of those on the list were innocent of crimes – but the
vast majority were guilty of being African-Americans and Democrats. That
was the election. Lo and behold! The big winner in the contracting game
that is the Bush War of Terrorism: ChoicePoint, the database company
whose computers made George our President. Hatfield showed us the
pattern: investigative reporters today just have to fill in the new
names.
I have a couple of complaints about the book. Hatfield could have been
tougher. Take the story of Gtech, the dodgy lottery company. Did GTech
save its billion-dollar contract with the State of Texas because their
lobbyist knew the secret of how young George Junior got into the Texas
Air Guard? Hatfield, thorough as they come, would have known the story,
but must have
left it out rather pile on an accusation which needed further
corroboration. Hatfield's sin then, if any, was over-cautiousness.
And that is why it borders on criminal that Hatfield was smeared with
the charge of making an unsubstantiated accusation. It all came down to
the astonishingly insignificant information that Junior Bush got caught
with a bit of cocaine in 1972. Hey, what's a little toot between
friends, Mr. Rove?
Why did the Bush Battalions go hunting for Hatfield and force St.
Martins to run, hide and withdraw the book? Every political hack in D.C.
knows that the way to cover personal transgressions is to give the
goobers the old I-Sinned-As-A-Youth-Then-Found-Jesus routine. Hatfield
reports -- without laughing out loud -- Bush's famous soul-saving walk
on the beach with Billy Graham. Hatfield’s revelation of the
nose-candy bust blows Bush’s cover as
just a kid with a few boy-will-be-boys DWI tickets. Yet in the
revelation of the cocaine story, Hatfield doesn't gloat, doesn't say,
"Gotcha!" -- he just reports.
And for that sin – reporting – Jim Hatfield was driven to his death.
So God Bless America.
And God bless Soft Skull for keeping this book alive. There is a special
place in hell for publishers who run from their authors like craven
dogs, who don't mind sensationalism that sells . . . until the game gets
rough. I suspect that for my own sins, I'll end up in the Flames – but
when I do, at least I'll have the comfort of seeing the spineless
executives of St. Martin's Press roasting with me.
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