| Getting Away With, Well, Everything |
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| 02-10-03 Originally Posted on Bartcop.com By Houston Wade |
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| The Energy Task Force. This is something that I have been wondering about for two years now. Sometime around April 2001 Vice President Dick Cheney met with the top executives from the top energy firms in the world to draft plans for the nation's energy policy. Naturally one would expect the office of the executive to meet with business leaders to discuss their markets and possible reforms-mostly in a lobbying capacity-but this was different. Dick Cheney, instead of inviting a diverse group with multiple opinions on the various issues that surround our nation's energy policies, brought together only those which profit from its over-consumption. Of the attendees the most notable name is that of Kenneth Lay, the former CEO and Chairman of the now infamous Enron. In the 2000 election cycle Lay donated some $350,550 to Republicans while Enron itself was a little more even with their donations. Enron sent $615,676 to Republicans (more than half of which went to the presidential campaign) and $543,000 to Democrats (it must be noted that none of the money donated to the Democrats funds went to the presidential election). Other Enron executives and their employees contributed another $1.5 million to the 2000 elections, the vast majority of which went to Republicans. The combination of the three made Enron and its associates the largest financial contributors to any election cycle in history. Right after Enron collapsed Bush and Cheney were both desperately trying to distance themselves from Kenneth Lay (Kenny-Boy as Bush likes to call him) and insisted that any contact between them and Lay were brief and unimportant. Just a couple of months ago a videotape surfaced with both G. H. W. Bush and G. W. Bush praising Lay for his great friendship and impeccable business skills. Bush and Cheney lied and no one seems to care. If Clinton or Gore had done something similar we would not have heard the end of it. You might be wondering where I am going with this (hopefully you are not that dense). Well, many people-most people-feel that Big Oil bought the White House for the sole purpose of making it easier to rake in oodles of cash off of oil and other energy resources. The Government Accounting Office (GAO), the investigative arm of congress, fearing that some wrongdoing occurred sued the White House, specifically Cheney, to obtain the records of the Energy Task Force meetings. When the GAO did this (the GAO did not start the investigation until after the Senate went into a Democratic majority in spring 2001) Cheney, out of fear of a possible prison term, claimed Executive Privilege in the matter. He insisted that the Office of the Vice President would be compromised if whenever a Vice President "consulted" with someone said consultation could not be guaranteed to remain confidential. Thus, hampering the Vice President's ability to obtain unbiased, objective information. The precedent that forms the basis of this lawsuit lies in the Clinton Cock Hunt of the 1990's. The Republicans, using almost every means possible, sued the White House a few dozen times for many frivolous documents pertaining to everything from 20 year old land deals to travel records to the journals of White House interns. To them the ability for the PRESIDENT (not the ultimately, up until now, useless Vice President) to conduct meetings and expect a certain level of privacy and confidentiality did not matter. If Republicans were going to find out if Clinton had ever done anything wrong they needed to have the ability to read every document ever filed in the White House. The Federal Court that heard the case between Clinton and the GAO (and others like Judicial Watch) ruled that Executive Privilege only applied to matters of national security and that the rest fell under the Freedom of Information act. Flash forward to just last year, the GAO, out of fear that the Vice President and possibly the President of the United States have abused their positions of power. Start seeking to clarify any misunderstandings and launched an investigation into whether the Bush administration gave the leaders of the wealthiest corporations in the world, specifically oil and energy conglomerates, the ability to self regulate. The possibility existed that the Bush Administration had done so without the consent of congress and at the same time thwarted the investigative and regulatory arms of the Executive Branch; the FBI, SEC and EPA, etc... from doing their jobs. Corporations like Enron started manipulating the power market in the West in such a way as to under-produce electric power in a recently deregulated California by some 15 gigawatts of capacity forcing them to seek alternatives in out-of-state producers. Enron then raised power rates by over 1000% to boost their profits by billions (the $7 billion California power market became a $70 billion market in less than a year). There was even fear that some of the Task Force talks centered around the "Pipeline of Peace" that will ultimately link oil and natural gas rich Turkmenistan with the ports of Pakistan through a pre 9/11 Afghanistan. While other talks may have had to with plans surrounding the smuggling of black market oil out of Iraq and into the hands of companies like Shell and Unocal for refining. Black market exports from Iraq miraculously jumped by some 400% in just a few months after the April Task Force meetings and up until last August (pre saber rattling) represented 12% of all US oil imports. Naturally the Senate was alarmed at the possibilities and, as I said, sued for the release of the documents that related with the Energy Task Force meetings. The case, like Clinton's, went to Federal Court but this time the court ruled for the White House. What was that? I thought that the precedent was that of "cases of national security only?" Well, not any more. Apparently the court believes that the Office of the Vice President is so much more sacred than that of the President. The GAO was set to appeal the case to a Federal Circuit Court but then two things happened: the Senate reverted back to the Republicans and the GAO had its budget slashed by almost half. So, on February 6th the GAO announced that it would not follow through on its appeal to obtain some of the most important White House documents since Iran/Contra or even Watergate. Let me put this in perspective for you. Now that the congress is solidly Republican they see no problem with the Executive Branch getting away with what could be one of the most heinous and brazen crimes in history. Crimes that may have already led us to one war in Afghanistan and is setting our footing for a second in Iraq; all of this in less than two years. To top this off, the most important aspect of congress, its ability to check the Office of the President, has been severely impaired to make way for the cost of the coming war and tax cuts for the rich (or just to possibly thwart its ability to investigate). The GAO, which until recently, had only been a tool of the right to find any incriminating evidence on the most investigated man in history (Clinton) was finally doing its job and investigating possible crimes that affect our national interests and security can no longer fulfill its duty. This is sick. |
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