REDWAVE
Urban Jungle Dweller
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2001
- Posts
- 6,013
O man, am I having a field day today! I couldn't make stuff up any richer than what's actually happening.
Henry Kissinger has abruptly resigned as head of the independent commission appointed to investigate Sept. 11. His appointment had been greeted with howls of derision-- the master of the coverup was supposed to uncover the truth. But it quickly got even better. First former Senator George J. Mitchell, the ranking Democrat on the panel, abruptly resigned-- apparently, because he saw Kissinger was determined to cover up what really happened, and didn't want to be a party to that. Next Kissinger refused to disclose the clients of his highly lucrative consulting firm Kissinger Associates. That looked really good-- the man who's supposed to get to the bottom of things hiding things himself. His resignation now indicates he saw the handwriting on the wall. Eventually, he would be forced to disclose his clients, which would reveal he had conflicts of interest up the ying yang, and destroy the commission's credibility. Or if he didn't disclose them, the controversy over that would destroy the commission's credibility.
Now Bush is really in a pickle. He has to find someone else who will conduct a coverup, without making it too obvious to the public that's what he's doing. He doesn't dare appoint anyone who would conduct a serious investigation of Sept. 11, because that would inevitably expose Bush as a traitor and mass murderer of Americans.
The whole way Bush has handled this investigation, first stonewalling it, then appointing the master of deceit to head it, shows he has a lot to hide. This could be the beginning of the end for him.
I really feel sorry for him, don't you?
Henry Kissinger has abruptly resigned as head of the independent commission appointed to investigate Sept. 11. His appointment had been greeted with howls of derision-- the master of the coverup was supposed to uncover the truth. But it quickly got even better. First former Senator George J. Mitchell, the ranking Democrat on the panel, abruptly resigned-- apparently, because he saw Kissinger was determined to cover up what really happened, and didn't want to be a party to that. Next Kissinger refused to disclose the clients of his highly lucrative consulting firm Kissinger Associates. That looked really good-- the man who's supposed to get to the bottom of things hiding things himself. His resignation now indicates he saw the handwriting on the wall. Eventually, he would be forced to disclose his clients, which would reveal he had conflicts of interest up the ying yang, and destroy the commission's credibility. Or if he didn't disclose them, the controversy over that would destroy the commission's credibility.
Now Bush is really in a pickle. He has to find someone else who will conduct a coverup, without making it too obvious to the public that's what he's doing. He doesn't dare appoint anyone who would conduct a serious investigation of Sept. 11, because that would inevitably expose Bush as a traitor and mass murderer of Americans.
The whole way Bush has handled this investigation, first stonewalling it, then appointing the master of deceit to head it, shows he has a lot to hide. This could be the beginning of the end for him.
I really feel sorry for him, don't you?