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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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Living standards had been in a gradual but constant decline since the days of Nixon, and<br />

it began to dawn on more and more families who considered themselves members of the<br />

middle class that they could no longer afford their own home, nor hope to send their<br />

children to college, all because of the prohibitive costs. <strong>The</strong> Bureau of the Census made<br />

sure in 1990 not to count the number of those who had become homeless during the<br />

1980's, since the real figure would be an acute political embarrassment to <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>:<br />

were there 5 million, or 6, as many as the total population of Sweden, or of Belgium?<br />

New jobs were created, but most of them were dead-ends for losers at or below the<br />

mimimum wage that presupposed illiteracy on the part of the applicant: hamburger sales<br />

and pizza home delivery were the growth areas, although a smart kid might still aspire to<br />

become a croupier. Behind it all lurked the pervasive narcotics trade, with hundreds of<br />

billions of dollars a year in heroin, crack, marijuana.<br />

For the vast majority of the US population (to say nothing of the brutal immiseration in<br />

the developing countries) it was an epoch of austerity, sacrifice, and decline, of the<br />

entropy of a society in which most people have no purpose and feel themselves becoming<br />

redundant, both on the job market and ontologically.<br />

But for a paper thin stratum of plutocrats and parasites, the 1980's were a time of<br />

unlimited opportunity. <strong>The</strong>se were the practioners of the monstrous financial swindles<br />

that marked the decade, the protagonists of the hostile takeovers, mergers and<br />

acquisitions, leveraged buy-outs, greenmail and stock plays that occupied the admiration<br />

of Wall Street. <strong>The</strong>se were corporate raiders like J. Hugh Liedkte, Blaine Kerr, T. Boone<br />

Pickens, and Frank Lorenzo, Wall Street financiers like Henry Kravis and Nicholas<br />

Brady. And these men, surely not by coincidence, belonged to the intimate circle of<br />

personal friends and close political supporters of <strong>George</strong> Herbert Walker <strong>Bush</strong>.<br />

If the orgy of usury and speculation during the 1980's can be compared to a glittering and<br />

exclusive dinner party, and Liedtke, Kerr, Pickens, Lorenzo, Kravis, and Brady were the<br />

invited guests, then surely <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> was the host and arbiter elegantiarum who<br />

presided, deciding according to his own whim who would receive an invitation and who<br />

would not, and setting the norms for acceptable conduct. By late 1991, the long-deferred<br />

bill for these lucullian entertainments was about to arrive. <strong>The</strong> exhausted working people<br />

and destitute unemployed must present the bill to the founder of the feast, the whining<br />

and greedy enfant gate' of American politics, <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>, the man whose idea of<br />

privation would be a life without servants, and whose concept of a domestic agenda<br />

would be a plan to hire two maids and a butler.<br />

One of the landmark corporate battles of the first Reagan Administration was the battle<br />

over control of <strong>Get</strong>ty Oil, a battle fought between Texaco, at that time the third largest oil<br />

company in the United States and the fourth largest industrial corporation, and J. Hugh<br />

Liedkte's Pennzoil. <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>'s old partner and constant crony, J. Hugh Liedtke, was<br />

still obsessed with his dream of building Pennzoil into a major oil company, one that<br />

could become the seventh of the traditional Seven Sisters after Chevron and Gulf merged.<br />

But the sands of biological time were running out on "Chairman Mao" Liedkte, as the

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