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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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In a 1971 article, Draper likened the developing nations to an ``animal reserve,'' where,<br />

when the animals become too numerous, the park rangers ``arbitrarily reduce one or<br />

another species as necessary to preserve the balanced environment for all other animals.<br />

``But who will be the park ranger for the human race?,'' he asked. ``Who will cull out the<br />

surplus in this country or that country when the pressure of too many people and too few<br />

resources increases beyond endurance? Will the death-dealing Horsemen of the<br />

Apocalypse--war in its modern nuclear dress, hunger haunting half the human race, and<br />

disease--will the gaunt and forbidding Horsemen become Park Ranger for the two-legged<br />

animal called man?''<br />

Draper collaborated closely with <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> during the latter's congressional career. As<br />

noted above, <strong>Bush</strong> invited Draper to testify to his Task Force on Earth Resources and<br />

Population; reportedly, Draper helped draft the <strong>Bush</strong>-Tydings bill.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> felt an overwhleming affinity for the bestial and degraded image of man reflected in<br />

the raving statements of Draper. In September 1969, <strong>Bush</strong> gave a glowing tribute to<br />

Draper that was published in the cf2 Congressional Record cf1 . ``I wish to pay tribute to<br />

a great American,'' said <strong>Bush</strong>. ``I am very much aware of the significant leadership that<br />

General Draper has executed throughout the world in assisting governments in their<br />

efforts to solve the awesome problems of rapid population growth. No other person in the<br />

past five years has shown more initiative in creating the awareness of the world's leaders<br />

in recognizing the economic consequences of our population explosion.''<br />

In a 1973 publication, <strong>Bush</strong> praised the PCC itself for having played a ``major role in<br />

assisting government policy makers and in mobilizing the United States' response to the<br />

world population challenge....'' <strong>The</strong> PCC made no bones about its admiration for <strong>Bush</strong>; its<br />

newsletters from the late 1960s-early 1970s feature numerous articles highlighting <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

role in the congressional population-control campaign. In a 1979 report assessing the<br />

history of Congressional action on population control, the PCC/Draper Fund placed <strong>Bush</strong><br />

squarely with the ``most conspicuous activists,'' on population-control issues, and lauded<br />

him for ``proposing all of the major or controversial recommendations'' in this arena<br />

which came before the U.S. Congress in the late 1960s.<br />

Draper's son, William III, has enthusiastically carried out his father's genocidal legacy-frequently<br />

with the help of <strong>Bush</strong>. In 1980, Draper, an enthusiastic backer of the Carter<br />

administration's notorious cf2 Global 2000 cf1 report, served as national chairman of the<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> presidential campaign's finance committee; in early 1981, <strong>Bush</strong> convinced Reagan<br />

to appoint Draper to had the U.S. Export-Import Bank. At the time, a Draper aide, Sharon<br />

Camp, disclosed that Draper intended to reorient the bank's functions toward<br />

emphasizing population control projects.<br />

In 1987, again at <strong>Bush</strong>'s behest, Draper was named by Reagan as administrator of the<br />

United Nations Development Program, which functions as an adjunct of the World Bank,<br />

and has historically pushed population reduction among Third World nations. In late<br />

January of 1991, Draper gave a speech to a conference in Washington, in which he stated<br />

that the core of <strong>Bush</strong>'s ``new world order'' should be population reduction.

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