19.12.2012 Views

George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Electronics, the prospective factory builders, had received a state loan of $383,000 to<br />

build the plant, while townspeople had raised some $60,000 to buy the plant site, before<br />

the entire deal fell through.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Reader's Digest told disapprovingly of Yarborough addressing a group of 35<br />

Crockett residents on a telephone squawk box in March, 1963, telling them that he was<br />

authorized by the White House to announce "that you are going to gain a fine new<br />

industry-one that will provide new jobs for 180 people, add new strength to your area."<br />

<strong>The</strong> Reader's Digest article left the distinct impression that the $60,000 invested by local<br />

residents had been lost. "Because people believed that their Senator's 'White House<br />

announcment' of the ARA loan to Audio guaranteed the firm's soundness, several Texans<br />

invested in it and lost all. One man dropped $40,000. A retired Air Force officer plowed<br />

in $7000." It turned out in reality that those who had invested in the real estate for the<br />

plant site had lost nothing, but had rather been made an offer for their land that<br />

represented a profit of one third on the original investment, and thus stood to gain<br />

substantially.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> campaign headquarters immediately got into the act with a statement that "it is a<br />

shame" that Texans had to pick up the Reader's Digest and find their senator "holding the<br />

hand of scandal." "<strong>The</strong> citizens of the area raised $60,000 in cash, invested it in the<br />

company, and lost it because the project was a fraud and never started." Yarborough shot<br />

back with a statement of his own, pointing out that <strong>Bush</strong>'s claims were "basely false," and<br />

adding that the "reckless, irresponsible false charges by my opponent further demonstrate<br />

his untruthfulness and unfitness for the office of US Senator." Most telling was<br />

Yarborough's charge on how the Reader's Digest got interested in Crockett, Texas, in the<br />

first place: "<strong>The</strong> fact that my opponent's multi-millionaire father's Wall Street investment<br />

banking connections enable the planting of false and libellous articles about me in<br />

national magazine like the Reader's Digest will not enable the Connecticut candidate to<br />

buy a Texas seat in the US Senate." That was on target, that hurt. <strong>Bush</strong> whined in<br />

response that it was Yarborough's statement which was "false, libellous, and hogwash,"<br />

and challenging the senator to prove it or retract it. [fn 17]<br />

Beyond these attempts to smear Yarborough, it is once again characteristic that the<br />

principal issue around which <strong>Bush</strong> built his campaign was racism, expressed this time as<br />

opposition to the civil rights bill that was before the Congress during 1964. <strong>Bush</strong> did this<br />

certainly in order to conform to his pro-Goldwater ideological profile, and in order to<br />

garner votes (especially in the Republican primary) using racist and states' rights<br />

backlash, but most of all in order to express the deepest tenets of the philosophical worldoutlook<br />

of himself and his oligarchical family.<br />

Very early in the campaign <strong>Bush</strong> issued a statement saying: "I am opposed to the Civil<br />

Rights bill now before the Senate." Not content with that, <strong>Bush</strong> proceeded immediately to<br />

tap the wellsprings of nullification and interposition: "Texas has a comparably good<br />

record in civil rights," he argued, "and I'm opposed to the Federal Government<br />

intervening further into State affairs and individual rights." At this point <strong>Bush</strong> claimed

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!