Welcome to UNKNOWN NEWS "News that's not known, or not known enough."
Helen & Harry Highwater's cranky weblog of news and opinion.
 
Log of lies from the Bush-Cheney administration

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May 2001  Sept. 2001  Jan. 2002  May 2002  Oct. 2002  Nov. 2002  Feb. 2003  April 2003  June 2003  July 2003  Aug. 2003  Sept. 2003  Oct. 2003  Nov. 2003  Dec. 2003  Jan. 2004  Feb. 2004  March 2004  April 2004  May 2004  June 2004  July 2004  Aug. 2004  Sept. 2004  Oct. 2004  Nov. 2004  Dec. 2004  Jan. 2005  Feb. 2005  March 2005  April 2005  May 2005  June 2005  Aug. 2005  Sept. 2005  Oct. 2005  Nov. 2005  Dec. 2005  Jan. 2006  Feb. 2006  March 2006  April 2006  May 2006  June 2006  July 2006  Aug. 2006  Sept. 2006  Oct. 2006  Nov. 2006  Dec. 2006  Jan. 2007  Feb. 2007  March 2007  April 2007  May 2007  June 2007  July 2007  Aug. 2007  Sept. 2007  Nov. 2007 
Please note: The Bush-Cheney administration's lies didn't end in November 2007. What ended was only our willingness to keep collecting the lies, when anyone brighter than a broomstick understands: Bush and Cheney are always lying.
Helen & Harry Highwater   (unknownnews at inbox.com)  
 
 
This is NOT AT ALL a comprehensive list of all the lies that emerge daily from George Bush, Dick Cheney, and their cohorts. Good heavens, no -- we'd need a much bigger computer and a staff of dozens just to catalogue the endless supply of whoppers with cheese.

This page offers only a tiny sliver of the Bush-Cheney administration's high-level lies, just the few that catch our attention. If you can document a lie we've overlooked from the White House, please drop us a note at unknownnews at inbox.com.

All politicians lie on occasion, of course, but until this administration it was traditional for America's leaders to at least sometimes speak the truth about some factual matters.

Is there anything, anything at all, any tiny aspect of anything Mr Bush or anyone in the upper levels of his administration has ever said, planned, promised, or done, that doesn't boil down to a lie, a half-truth, or an intentional deception?

--Helen & Harry Highwater, Unknown News

Nov. 5, 2007:
Despite denials, Bush-Cheney
planned nuclear attacks on
Iran, Iraq, Libya and Syria
Excerpt: A briefing on the document obtained by the Federation of American Scientists, showed that the document itself was created to flesh out a 2001 Bush administration revision of long-standing nuclear-weapons policy, known as the Nuclear Posture Review. That review was a Defense Department-led attempt to wean nuclear policy off a Cold-War focus on Russia and China, but the shift raised questions about what purpose nuclear forces would serve apart from deterring an attack. In March 2002, leaks indicated that the review would recommend preparations for nuclear attacks against WMD-aspirant states. Arms Control Today pointed out at the time that planning to attack non-nuclear states that were signatories to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty reversed decades of U.S. nuclear policy.
Sept. 14, 2007:
President's Thursday TV speech had more lies than usual
Excerpt: In his speech last night, President Bush made a case for progress in Iraq by citing facts and statistics that at times contradicted recent government reports or his own words.

Comment: Here's a rare but decent effort at fact-checking from the Washington Post, with a few samples of Bush statements from last night at odds with the facts and/or previous Bush statements.   Helen & Harry     PERMANENT LINK 
Sept. 3, 2007:
Why did Iraqi army dissolve? Bush can't recall.
Excerpt: One of the most heavily criticized actions in the aftermath of the U.S. invasion of Iraq in March 2003 was the decision, barely two months later, to disband the Iraqi army, alienating former soldiers and driving many into the ranks of anti-American militant groups.

But excerpts of a new biography of President Bush show the president saying that he initially wanted to maintain the Iraqi army and, more surprisingly, that he cannot recall why his administration decided to disband it.

Bremer reveals letters establishing that Bush knew in advance of Army dissolution

Excerpt: Mr Bremer, who has been blamed for many of the failures of the post-war occupation, apparently was unwilling to take it any more. He released two letters to the Times to prove his assertion that the White House and the Pentagon knew in advance of his plan to dismantle the military and that they approved.

Comment: I'll let these two intellectual giants argue about who knew what when, but two things are clear: If Bush says something, he's lying.   Helen & Harry     PERMANENT LINK 
August 22, 2007:
Bush lies about Al-Qaeda captures in Iraq
Excerpt: Some distortions are so massive and so deliberate as to constitute outright lies. See if you can spot the dishonesty in this line in President Bush's speech to the Veterans of Foreign Wars' national convention today:

"U.S. forces have killed or captured an average of more than 1,500 al Qaeda terrorists and other extremists every month since January." ...

Since the surge began, the U.S. has had between 17,000 and 23,000 Iraqis in custody each month, according to the Brookings Institution's Iraq Index (pdf). Last month, Ned Parker of the Los Angeles Times reported that of the 19,000 detainees in U.S. custody in Iraq, only 135 were foreigners -- the most likely indicator of membership in al-Qaeda.
August 15, 2007:
Former CIA Director Woolsey blatantly lies that Iran could have nuclear weapons in "a few months"
Excerpt: “The Iranians continue to work on getting enriched uranium,” said Woolsey. “I’m afraid within, well, at worst, a few months; at best, a few years; they could have a bomb.”

Aug. 2, 2005:
Iran is ten years from nuclear bomb,
say US experts, contradicting Bush


March 31, 2006:
U.N. nuclear chief says Iran is no threat, shouldn't be sanctioned
August 15, 2007:
Promised "Petraus report on Iraq" will be written by White House
Excerpt: Despite Bush’s repeated statements that the report will reflect evaluations by Petraeus and Ryan Crocker, the U.S. ambassador to Iraq, administration officials said it would actually be written by the White House, with inputs from officials throughout the government.
August 7, 2007:
Bush lies about Iran's "proclaimed desire" for nuclear weapons
Excerpt: US President George W. Bush charged Monday that Iran has openly declared that it seeks nuclear weapons -- an inaccurate accusation at a time of sharp tensions between Washington and Tehran. "It's up to Iran to prove to the world that they're a stabilizing force as opposed to a destabilizing force. After all, this is a government that has proclaimed its desire to build a nuclear weapon," he said during a joint press conference with Afghan President Hamid Karzai.

But Iran has repeatedly said that its nuclear program, which is widely believed in the West to be cover for an effort to develop atomic weapons, is for civilian purposes.

Comment: The Bush-Cheney administration has been habitually demonizing Iran, announcing over and over again (with little evidence) that Iran is lying when it says it wants nuclear power, not nuclear bombs. But as that almost-certain lie loses traction, here's the new version, a flat-out indisputable lie that Iran "has proclaimed its desire to build a nuclear weapon." Nobody who speaks for the Iranian government has never claimed that.   Helen & Harry     PERMANENT LINK 
July 13, 2007:
Bush lies again, linking "Al Qaeda in Iraq" to 9/11
Excerpt: In rebuffing calls to bring troops home from Iraq, President George W. Bush employed a stark and ominous defense. "The same folks that are bombing innocent people in Iraq," he said, "were the ones who attacked us in America on September the 11th, and that's why what happens in Iraq matters to the security here at home."

It is an argument that Bush has been making with heavy frequency in the past few months, as the challenges to the continuation of the war have grown. On Thursday alone, he referred at least 30 times to Al Qaeda or its presence in Iraq.

But his references to Al Qaeda in Iraq, and his assertions that it is the same group that attacked the United States in 2001, have greatly oversimplified the nature of the insurgency in Iraq and its relationship with the Qaeda leadership. Bush's critics say that he has overstated the Qaeda connection in an attempt to exploit the same kinds of post-Sept. 11 emotions that helped him win support for the invasion in the first place.

Comment: Bush lies again, about the thoroughly disproven "link" that doesn't exist between Iraq and 9/11. And even in an article that says pretty plainly that Bush is lying again, the headline has to couch the news in terms of "critics rejecting" Bush's claims -- as if the plain facts are somehow in dispute.

As usual with the Bush administration, the facts are only in dispute with the Bush administration.   Helen & Harry     PERMANENT LINK 
July 12, 2007:
Bush’s claims of ‘satisfactory performance’ in Iraq debunked

Excerpt: The White House achieved its objective of spinning the media’s analysis. The New York Times reports the document as “finding some progress on political and security goals in Iraq.” The Washington Post says progress “has been mixed.” Similarly, the AP finds “mixed progress.”

According to National Security Network (NSN), however, there’s nothing mixed about the situation in Iraq; that is purely White House report spin. The NSN explained, the “benchmarks claimed as ’satisfactory’ … demonstrate minimal progress, not achievement” and “others have been achieved on the surface, but fail to accomplish the overall purpose of the specific measurement.”
July 2, 2007:
White House lies about Cheney's declassification authority
Excerpt: The White House press office and some Bush Administration critics are insisting that the 2003 executive order on classification policy endowed the Vice President with a unique status and classification powers identical to those of the President himself. But that's not what the executive order says.
June 28, 2007:
Bush plays al Qaida card to bolster support for Iraq policy
Excerpt: Facing eroding support for his Iraq policy, even among Republicans, President Bush on Thursday called al Qaida "the main enemy" in Iraq, an assertion rejected by his administration's senior intelligence analysts.

The reference, in a major speech at the Naval War College that referred to al Qaida at least 27 times, seemed calculated to use lingering outrage over the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, to bolster support for the current buildup of U.S. troops in Iraq, despite evidence that sending more troops hasn't reduced the violence or sped Iraqi government action on key issues. ...

U.S. military and intelligence officials, however, say that Iraqis with ties to al Qaida are only a small fraction of the threat to American troops. The group known as al Qaida in Iraq didn't exist before the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, didn't pledge its loyalty to al Qaida leader Osama bin Laden until October 2004 and isn't controlled by bin Laden or his top aides.
June 25, 2007:
Bush lies to high school students visiting White House
Excerpt: President Bush was presented with a letter Monday signed by 50 high school seniors in the Presidential Scholars program urging a halt to "violations of the human rights" of terror suspects held by the United States.

The White House said Bush had not expected the letter but took a moment to read it and talk with a young woman who handed it to him."The president enjoyed a visit with the students, accepted the letter and upon reading it let the student know that the United States does not torture and that we value human rights," deputy press secretary Dana Perino said.
June 21, 2007:
Cheney lies about what the Vice Presidency is
Excerpt: The Office of the Vice President has asserted that it is not an “entity within the executive branch” and hence is not subject to presidential executive orders.
June 19, 2007:
White House response to email scandal ("Clinton did it too") is a lie
Excerpt: House Oversight and Government Reform Committee yesterday released a report documenting how White House officials have regularly used RNC and Bush-Cheney ‘04 e-mail accounts for official government business, in apparent violation of the Hatch Act. The report also found that the RNC has overseen “extensive destruction” of these e-mails, which would likely violate the Presidential Records Act.

During yesterday’s press briefing, White House spokesman Tony Snow brushed aside this direct evidence of potential illegality. His response: Clinton did it too. “Those email accounts were set up on a model based on the prior administration, which had done it the same way, in order to try to avoid Hatch Act violations.” ...

Snow’s statement is false. In 1993, President Clinton’s then-Assistant to the President John Podesta issued a staff memo clearly stating that all administration e-mails dealing with official business had to be “incorporated into an official recordkeeping system,” stressing that no “e-mail document that is a Presidential record should be deleted.”
May 31, 2007
U.S. detainee abuse (ie, torture of prisoners) was well planned
Excerpt: Many of the controversial interrogation tactics used against terror suspects in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo were modeled on techniques the U.S. feared that the Communists themselves might use against captured American troops during the Cold War, according to a little-noticed, highly classified Pentagon report released several days ago. Originally developed as training for elite special forces at Fort Bragg under the "Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape" program, otherwise known as SERE, tactics such as sleep deprivation, isolation, sexual humiliation, nudity, exposure to extremes of cold and stress positions were part of a carefully monitored survival training program for personnel at risk of capture by Soviet or Chinese forces, all carried out under the supervision of military psychologists.

Comment: The Bush administration has, of course, always lied that torture was conducted by 'rogue' soldiers without official OK.
Helen & Harry  
May 29, 2007:
Bush routinely, repeatedly lies about public opinion
Excerpt: Increasingly isolated on a war that is going badly, Bush has presented his alternative reality in other ways, too. He expresses understanding for the public's dismay over the unrelenting sectarian violence and American losses that have passed 3,400, but then asserts that the public's solution matches his. "A lot of Americans want to know, you know, when?" he said at a Rose Garden news conference Thursday. "When are you going to win?" Also in that session, Bush said: "I recognize there are a handful there, or some, who just say, 'Get out, you know, it's just not worth it. Let's just leave.' I strongly disagree with that attitude. Most Americans do as well."

In fact, polls show Americans do not disagree, and that leaving -- not winning -- is their main goal.
May 8, 2007:
White House spokesman lies about Kansas disaster preparedness
Excerpt: "If you don’t request it, you’re not going to get it. … As far as we know, the only thing the governor has requested are FM radios. There have been no requests to the National Guard for heavy equipment. … We are eager to provide what Kansas needs. But again there are also - you also have to go through the process of making the request first."

White House Spokesman Tony Snow’s statements are incorrect. On repeated occasions, Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius made clear to the White House that Kansas was dangerously low on National Guard equipment ...
May 3, 2007:
Bush is lying about al Qaeda in Iraq
by Dana Milbank, Washington Post
Excerpt: The man who four years ago admitted "no evidence" of an Iraqi role in the Sept. 11 attacks now finds solid evidence of a role in Iraq by the Sept. 11 hijackers.

"I don't need to remind you who al-Qaeda is," Bush reminded. "Al-Qaeda is the group that plot and planned and trained killers to come and kill people on our soil. The same bunch that is causing havoc in Iraq were the ones who came and murdered our citizens."

This new line of argument would seem to present some difficulty for the White House, and not only because, as the Pentagon inspector general reported last month, al-Qaeda had no ties to Iraq before the U.S. invasion in 2003. More to the point: If the problem in Iraq isn't sectarian strife, then why is the U.S. military building walls to separate Sunni enclaves from Shiite neighborhoods?
April 29, 2007:
Rice lies that U.N. inspectors thought Saddam Hussein had WMDs
Excerpt: In his new book, former CIA Director George Tenet alleges that there was “never a serious debate that I know of within the administration about the imminence of the Iraq threat,” suggesting the administration had made up its mind to go to war from an early stage.

On CNN’s Late Edition, Condoleezza Rice responded, “We all thought that the intelligence case was strong,” adding that even “the U.N weapons inspectors [thought] Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction.” She concluded, “So there’s no blame here of anyone.”
April 29, 2007:
Seven out of eight "successes" in Iraq are U.S. lies
Excerpt: In a troubling sign for the American-financed rebuilding program in Iraq, inspectors for a federal oversight agency have found that in a sampling of eight projects that the United States had declared successes, seven were no longer operating as designed because of plumbing and electrical failures, lack of proper maintenance, apparent looting and expensive equipment that lay idle.
April 27, 2007:
White House spokeswoman lies about illegal meetings
Excerpt: During yesterday’s press briefing ... one reporter asked White House spokeswoman Dana Perino whether the briefings were a “White House idea, initially, or was it the agencies,” Perino dodged the question and replied that “the Clinton administration had similar briefings.” ...

Perino’s “Clinton did it too” is wrong. Bush White House officials went to federal agencies on at least 20 occasions and conducted private briefings for large groups of political appointees. They gave presentations focusing on “Republican electoral prospects in the last midterm election.” The Hatch Act explicitly prohibits the use of federal property for partisan political purposes.

Doug Sosnik, who served as President Clinton’s Director of Political Affairs and later as Counselor to the President, told ThinkProgress, “We never went to agencies and briefed political appointees.” Sosnik and several other former Clinton administration officials told ThinkProgress that Clinton officials never conducted similar briefings.
April 25, 2007:
U.S. officials exclude car bombs in touting drop in Iraq violence
Excerpt: U.S. officials who say there has been a dramatic drop in sectarian violence in Iraq since President Bush began sending more American troops into Baghdad aren't counting one of the main killers of Iraqi civilians.

Car bombs and other explosive devices have killed thousands of Iraqis in the past three years, but the administration doesn't include them in the casualty counts it has been citing as evidence that the surge of additional U.S. forces is beginning to defuse tensions between Shiite and Sunni Muslims.
April 19, 2007:
Training of Iraqi troops no longer matters in U.S. policy
Comment: In the never-ending fountain of lies from the Bush-Cheney administration, let's not forget that "training Iraqi troops" was one of the key lies of the Bush-Cheney re-election ...
Helen & Harry  
April 13, 2007:
Despite denials, Gonzales DID have Republican replacements in the wings
Excerpt: A Justice Department e-mail message released on Friday shows that the former chief of staff to Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales proposed replacement candidates for United States attorneys nearly a year before they were dismissed in December 2006. The department has repeatedly stated that no successors were selected before the dismissals.
April 12, 2007:
First White House response to email inquiry was, of course, a lie
Excerpt: On March 27, White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said that the RNC had been archiving all emails being sent through their accounts. Perino underscored that the archiving had not begun in response to Chairman Henry Waxman’s request to the RNC to preserve all emails, but rather "this has been something that was in place long before that." She added, "The archiving that would have been for any of these -- over the past few years, of emails that had been going back and forth between people that would have these accounts to the outside."

When pressed on how many White House staffers use political email accounts, Perino claimed, "I think it’s a handful, I don’t think it’s a lot."

Comment: As of April 12, the best estimate is that about five-million White House emails were sent on Republican Party servers and subsequently destroyed.
Helen & Harry  
April 11, 2007:
Bush's "Election Assistance Commission" ignored experts,
made up lies for its "final report"
Excerpt: A federal panel responsible for conducting election research played down the findings of experts who concluded last year that there was little voter fraud around the nation, according to a review of the original report obtained by The New York Times.

Instead, the panel, the Election Assistance Commission, issued a report that said the pervasiveness of fraud was open to debate.

The revised version echoes complaints made by Republican politicians, who have long suggested that voter fraud is widespread and justifies the voter identification laws that have been passed in at least two dozen states.
April 9, 2007:
FDA urges label change from "irradiated" to "pasteurized"
Excerpt: The FDA has recently promoted a proposal relaxing the rules regarding how products that have been zapped with radiation to be labeled. The change calls for a shift from the term "irradiated" to "pasteurized."

This proposed rule, according to the Food and Drug Administration, would loosen regulations on labeling for certain meat products, among other foods, that have been treated with radiation, but are not changed material. Material change can refer to wither taste, texture, smell or shelf life.

Comment: Of course, this is a lie, unless you think Louis Pasteur invented irradiation and Marie Curie figured out how to kill bacteria in liquids.
Helen & Harry  
April 6, 2007:
Cheney again claims Saddam worked with al-Qaeda,
while Defense Dept again says, no, he didn't
Excerpt: Vice President Dick Cheney repeated his assertions of al-Qaida links to Saddam Hussein's Iraq on Thursday as the Defense Department released a report citing more evidence that the prewar government did not cooperate with the terrorist group.

Cheney contended that al-Qaida was operating in Iraq before the March 2003 invasion led by U.S. forces and that terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi was leading the Iraqi branch of al-Qaida. Others in al-Qaida planned the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. ...

However, a declassified Pentagon report released Thursday said that interrogations of the deposed Iraqi leader and two of his former aides as well as seized Iraqi documents confirmed that the terrorist organization and the Saddam government were not working together before the invasion.
April 3, 2007:
While Bush blasted Pelosi for trip to Syria, White House
arranged trip to Syria for Republican Congressmen
Excerpt: the chief of staff to Republican Congressman Joe Pitts, who went to Syria, stated unequivocally that this trip was "done in cooperation with the administration." That would be the very same administration that has spent days and days attacking Pelosi for doing the same thing -- attacks that the big news orgs have eagerly spent a great deal of time and resources amplifying.

FLASHBACK: Hastert traveled abroad, told
foreign leaders not to listen to Clinton


I>Excerpt: In 1997, Rep. Dennis Hastert (R-IL) led a delegation to Colombia at a time when U.S. officials were trying to attach human rights conditions to U.S. security assistance programs. Hastert specifically encouraged Colombian military officials to "bypass" President Clinton and "communicate directly with Congress."
file under lies ... April 3, 2007:
Feds lied about interrogation of protesters
Excerpt: A secret FBI intelligence unit helped detain a group of war protesters in a downtown Washington parking garage in April 2002 and interrogated some of them on videotape about their political and religious beliefs, newly uncovered documents and interviews show.

For years, law enforcement authorities suggested it never happened. The FBI and D.C. police said they had no records of such an incident. And police told a federal court that no FBI agents were present when officers arrested more than 20 protesters that afternoon for trespassing; police viewed them as suspicious for milling around the parking garage entrance.

But a civil lawsuit, filed by the protesters, recently unearthed D.C. police logs that confirm the FBI's role in the incident.
April 3, 2007:
Bush lies about military support for "surge"
Excerpt: Bush just spoke to the nation, trying to convince the public to support his Iraq quagmire, and he claimed again that the surge, the escalation, was the idea of his commanders in the field, and he's just following their advice.

In fact, all of the Joint Chiefs, the heads of the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines, ALL opposed the surge.
March 30, 2007:
Bush is, of course, lying about Iraq spending deadline
Excerpt: The real deadline for Congress to provide more money for the war in Iraq is well beyond the April 15 deadline cited by President Bush and Defense Secretary Robert Gates.

The Pentagon can take several penny-pinching steps without harming troop readiness or other dire consequences predicted by the Bush administration until Congress actually comes up with the money.

Mid-April is about when $70 billion provided by Congress for the war will run out. After that, Pentagon accountants will move money around in the department's more than half-trillion dollar budget to make sure operations in Iraq and Afghanistan are not disrupted.
March 24, 2007:
Former White House aide defends climate lying
Excerpt: A former White House aide has defended editing government reports on global climate change to put them in line with the views of the Bush administration. Phil Cooney, former chief of staff of the White House's Council on Environmental Quality, said this was part of the normal review process. A former lobbyist for the American Petroleum Institute, Cooney now works for oil company ExxonMobil.

Cheney's office involved in
global warming manipulation


Excerpt: ... the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee's hearing into Philip Cooney's editing of global warming reports revealed that Cheney's office also played a role. Kevin O'Donovan, an aide in Cheney's office, wrote a memo to Cooney suggesting they try to "reinvigorate debate on the actual climate history of the past thousand years."
March 19, 2007:
Bush lied about "surge"
Excerpt: The surge is now just shy of 30,000 more troops. ... Why did Bush "low-ball," i.e. deceive us about the numbers? My best bet is that he thought if he actually told people we'd be sending 30,000 more troops (and maybe more), Americans would balk. I would have been more impressed, of course, and more inclined to support it. But this is beside the point. The point is: why is it beyond this president to tell the truth to the American people in wartime?
March 16, 2007:
White House never investigated Plame leak,
says Bush-Cheney Security Chief
Excerpt: Dr. James Knodell, director of the Office of Security at the White House, revealed today that to his knowledge the White House has never ordered a probe, report, or sanctions as a result of the outing of covert CIA operative Valerie Plame. "I have no knowledge of any investigation in my office," he said. ...

Shortly after the leak was revealed by Novak, President Bush said he wanted an investigation to identify the leaker:

A senior official quoted Bush as saying, "I want to get to the bottom of this," during a daily meeting yesterday morning with a few top aides, including Rove.

Bush: "If there is a leak out of my administration, I want to know who it is."
Feb. 27, 2007:
Claim of Iranian weapons in Iraq further debunked
Excerpt: Two weeks ago, the Bush administration organized an intelligence briefing for journalists in Iraq to demonstrate that Iran was providing weapons to Iraqi insurgents. According to the anonymous briefers, the weapons -- particularly explosively formed penetrators or E.F.P.s -- were manufactured in Iran, ... a fact that meant direction for the operation was “coming from the highest levels of the Iranian government.” ...

A raid in southern Iraq on Saturday seems to have complicated the case. There, The Wall Street Journal reports, troops "uncovered a makeshift factory used to construct advanced roadside bombs that the U.S. had thought were made only in Iran." ... The New York Times reports ... the finding of "cardboard boxes of the gray plastic PVC tubes used to make the canisters. The boxes appeared to contain shipments of tubes directly from factories in the Middle East, none of them in Iran."
Feb. 24, 2007:
White House website is scrubbing embarrassing interviews
Excerpt: It's difficult to tell how extensive the operation has been, of course, but clearly it has wide dimensions. The most obvious losses from the White House website have been the transcripts of interviews. A little searching for prominent interviews by the Vice President quickly turned up some striking absences.
Feb. 23, 2007:
Cheney: 'There does not appear to be a consensus' that global warming is 'caused by man'
Excerpt: Continuing the Bush administration's long resistance to the science of global warming, Vice President Dick Cheney said today a consensus is lacking on whether global warming is caused by human activity.
Feb. 12, 2007:
5 ousted U.S. attorneys
received positive job evaluations
Excerpt: Although the Bush administration has said that six U.S. attorneys were fired recently in part because of "performance related" issues, at least five of them had received positive job evaluations before they were ordered to step down.
Feb. 8, 2007:
Bush-Cheney rewriting history, and lying to the public
Excerpt: There was an absolutely incredible letter from the White House yesterday concerning Bush's record on climate change. It is signed by Office of Science and Technology Policy director John Marburger and Council on Environmental Quality chair James Connaugton, both of whom, with this letter, are guilty of deceiving the public.

The letter says: "Beginning in June 2001, President Bush has consistently acknowledged climate change is occurring and humans are contributing to the problem." False. I need only point out, yet again, that just last year, Bush claimed there was a debate over whether global warming was "manmade or naturally caused."
Feb. 3, 2007:
Still no evidence to back Bush-Cheney claims on Iraq
Excerpt: Administration officials have long complained that Iran was supplying Shiite Muslim militants with lethal explosives and other materiel used to kill U.S. military personnel. But despite several pledges to make the evidence public, the administration has twice postponed the release -- most recently, a briefing by military officials scheduled for last Tuesday in Baghdad.

Comment: The Bush-Cheney administration has told us that Iran presents some clear and present danger to America -- while every source un-connected to the White House says that just ain't true.
Helen & Harry  
Jan. 29, 2007:
Cheney unleashes flood of lies in interview
Excerpt: Vice President Cheney said yesterday that the administration has achieved 'enormous successes' in Iraq but complained that critics and the media 'are so eager to write off this effort or declare it a failure' that they are undermining U.S. troops in a war zone, striking a far more combative tone than President Bush did in his State of the Union address the night before.
Jan. 27, 2007:
Bush's four anti-terror successes all fictional
Summary: President Bush claimed in his State of the Union speech to have prevented four terrorist plots. All four incidents have been exaggerated to the point that citing them amounts for four lies.
Jan. 26, 2007:
US military lied about soldiers' deaths
Comment: If this was an isolated lie, one public relations officer spinning the facts into something not-so-factual but perhaps a tad more heroic-sounding, maybe you could argue that the lie doesn't matter much. ...

Fact is, America's public conversation on Iraq has been contaminated by countless lies from the White House and military command. So many of official announcements have been just plain bull, any wise observer has to doubt anything this administration says.

And now, Bush, Cheney, and their league of liars are about to attack another nation, based on another set of lies ...    Helen & Harry  PERMANENT LINK
Jan. 22, 2007:
White House lies about Harvard research on stem cells
Excerpt: But according to the authors of the Harvard study, the White House has distorted their research. In a letter to Reps. Diana DeGette (D-CO) and Mike Castle (R-DE), the authors write:

"We are surprised to see our work on reprogramming adult stem cells used to support arguments that research involving human embryonic stem cells is unnecessary. On the contrary, we assert that human embryonic stem cells hold great promise to find new treatments and cures for diseases. … "The work that we performed and that was cited in the White House policy report is precisely the type of research that is currently being harmed by the President’s arbitrary limitation on federal funding for human embryonic stem cell research. …"
Jan. 13, 2007:
Bush lies to troops about escalation plans
Excerpt: Pres. Bush was caught rewriting recent history in a speech he gave Thursday to the troops at Ft. Benning, Georgia, some of whom are preparing for their third deployment to Iraq.
Jan. 9, 2007:
Snow lied about Bush's "Mission accomplished" speech
Excerpt: I think the public ought to just listen to what the president has to say. You know that the mission accomplished banner was put up by members of the USS Abraham Lincoln, and the president, on that very speech, said just the opposite, didn't he?
Jan. 6, 2007:
Bush claim on tax cuts: Dead wrong
Excerpt: President Bush wrote in a Wall Street Journal op-ed Wednesday that "it is also a fact that our tax cuts have fueled robust economic growth and record revenues." The claim about fueling record revenue is flat wrong, and it is shocking that the president should persist in making such errors. After all, tax cuts are the central plank of his domestic policy. How can he fail to understand the basic facts about them?
Dec. 27, 2006:
US says "extraordinary renditions" are over, but the evidence says otherwise
Excerpt: The US is telling its overseas allies that it has stopped "extraordinary renditions" and needs their help to empty Guantánamo's prison cells. But human rights groups dispute this assertion and a question mark hangs over 200 "war on terror" detainees who could be held indefinitely without trial.
Dec. 22, 2006:
Homeland Security Dept admits breaking privacy laws, lying about it
Comment: DHS violated the law and lied about it. And there's nothing in this report to plausibly suggest the violation was anything but intentional.

In the America I'd like to live in, lawbreakers in high political office would be prosecuted.   Helen & Harry   PERMANENT LINK
Dec. 18, 2006:
Iran article is blocked from New York Times  VIDEO LINK   
Excerpt: "The White House intervened in the CIA's pre-publication review process, and has threatened me with criminal prosecution if I publish this op-ed ... because, in the White House's view, that op-ed contains classified information.

"That claim is false. Indeed, I would say that claim is fraudulent. The people making that claim know it is not true.

"The White House is using the rubric of protecting classified information, not to protect classified information, but to limit the dissemination of the views of someone who is very critical of their approact to Iran policy."
Nov. 11, 2006:
Bush lied about Rumsfeld, Washington Post lets it slide
Excerpt: There can be no reasonable dispute about this, since the President at his Press Conference not only admitted lying when he told the reporters that Rumsfeld would stay, but he even went on to explain his reasons for lying ("the reason why is I didn't want to inject a major decision about this war in the final days of a campaign. And so the only way to answer that question and to get you on to another question was to give you that answer"). The decision was clearly a fait accompli before the election, as the President himself said: "win or lose, Bob Gates was going to become the nominee."
Nov. 3, 2006:
Cheney: 'Full Speed Ahead' on Iraq
Excerpt: "We've got the basic strategy right," Cheney told George Stephanopoulos in an interview to be broadcast Sunday on This Week.

Comment: Nobody knows where Bush-Cheney's lies end and the insanity begins ...   Helen & Harry   PERMANENT LINK
Oct. 22, 2006:
Bush lies: "We've never been 'stay the course'"

Oct. 20, 2006:
Cheney still lying about Iraq-Al Qaeda link
Excerpt: Just last month, the Senate Intelligence Committee -- chaired by Bush-ally Sen. Pat Roberts (R-KS) -- concluded that there was absolutely no relationship between Saddam Hussein and the late al-Qaeda operative Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. Nevertheless, in an interview with a South Bend, Indiana television station yesterday, Vice President Cheney falsely asserted that Zarqawi was proof of a connection between Iraq and al Qaeda.
Sept. 29, 2006:
President Bush has something to say about torture
Excerpt: We found this long-forgotten press release at the White House website on September 29, 2006 -- the day the President is expected to sign the new law ending eight hundred years of habeas corpus, authorizing torture on the President's say-so, and retroactively legalizing torture previously authorized by the despicable President of the United States.

The text of the press release, probably never even read and certainly never comprehended by George W. Bush, is credited as a "statement by the President."

The illustrations did not come from the White House website, but what's illustrated certainly did.

We republish Bush's old press release as a tribute to the nation America could be, if men like Bush were imprisoned instead of President, and because we expect this "statement by the President" won't remain on the White House website much longer.
Report finds 485 contacts between crooked lobbyist and White House
Excerpt: A bipartisan Congressional report documents hundreds of contacts between White House officials and the corrupt lobbyist Jack Abramoff and his partners, including at least 10 direct contacts between Mr. Abramoff and Karl Rove, the president's chief political strategist.

The House Government Reform Committee report, based on e-mail messages and other records subpoenaed from Mr. Abramoff's lobbying firm, found 485 contacts between Mr. Abramoff's lobbying team and White House officials from 2001 to 2004, including 82 with Mr. Rove's office.

Comment: And of course, the White House lied about it.   Helen & Harry   PERMANENT LINK

White House Press Conference, 1/17/2006:

Question: Can you be more specific about [Jack Abramoff's] contacts with the senior staff? You said you were going to get back to us on that. Can you give us --

Press Secretary Scott McClellan: I did check. There were a few staff-level meetings. As I indicated there were -- I think I previously indicated that he attended three Hanukkah receptions at the White House. It is actually only two Hanukkah receptions that he attended.

White House Press Conference, 1/17/2006:

Reporter's question: why are you guys resistant to open this here? What is there to hide, or why not just say, here are the contacts he had, here are the issues he talked about when he came to the White House, here are the people --

Press Secretary Scott McClellan: Well, I did do a check, and I indicated to you exactly what I just told you. I indicated to you that there were a few staff-level meetings that he attended at least -- he attended two holiday receptions, in 2001 and 2002.
Sept. 15, 2006:
Bush rewrites history on Zarqawi statements
Excerpt: During today's press conference, ABC News reporter Martha Raddatz asked Bush why he continues to say Saddam "had relations with Zarqawi," despite the Senate Intelligence Report findings that Hussein "did not have a relationship with, harbor, or turn a blind eye toward Zarqawi." Bush replied: "I never said there was an operational relationship."

In fact, Bush has repeatedly asserted that Saddam "harbored" and "provided safe-haven" to Zarqawi...
Sept. 14, 2006:
UN says US report on Iran nuclear program is a big lie
Excerpt: U.N. inspectors investigating Iran's nuclear program angrily complained to the Bush administration and to a Republican congressman yesterday about a recent House committee report on Iran's capabilities, calling parts of the document "outrageous and dishonest" and offering evidence to refute its central claims.

Comment: The US Congress is LYING to make the case that we have to attack Iran, now, for the love of Pete.

The House report says that Iran is producing weapons-grade enriched uranium, but the UN's nuclear watchdog agency, the IAEA, says that's a giant big fat lie.

The rat bastards in the Republican Party, after they've completely destroyed our military AND our credibility on the last lie-based war, are now actually trying to LIE THIS COUNTRY INTO ANOTHER DAMN WAR!

Peter Hoekstra's (R-MI) pants are COMPLETELY ON FIRE! Experts are saying that this is just like before Iraq, which ALSO DIDN'T HAVE A NUCLEAR PROGRAM!

Dagnaggit, these people are starting to REALLY PISS ME OFF!!!   Madeline Zane   PERMANENT LINK
Sept. 11, 2006:
Military lied about Iraqi deaths
Excerpt: The U.S. military did not count people killed by bombs, mortars, rockets or other mass attacks when it reported a dramatic drop in the number of murders in the Baghdad area last month, the U.S. command said Monday.

The decision to include only victims of drive-by shootings and those killed by torture and execution, usually at the hands of death squads, allowed U.S. officials to argue that a security crackdown that began in the capital August 7 had more than halved the city's murder rate.

But the types of slayings, including suicide bombings, that the U.S. excluded from the category of "murder" were not made explicit at the time. That led to confusion after Iraqi Health Ministry figures showed that 1,536 people died violently in and around Baghdad in August, nearly the same number as in July.
Sept. 11, 2006:
Government pays for insurance policies to shield CIA torturers from court verdicts
Excerpt: CIA counterterrorism officers have signed up in growing numbers for a government-reimbursed, private insurance plan that would pay their civil judgments and legal expenses if they are sued or charged with criminal wrongdoing, according to current and former intelligence officials and others with knowledge of the program.

Comment: How could any American read this news and not feel ashamed, outraged?

Government-reimbursed insurance shields CIA employees from paying for their crimes — including "abuse, torture, human rights violations and other misconduct, including wrongdoing related to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks."

There's only one reason the CIA would offer reimbursement for such policies and, as this article reports, encourage its officers to sign up. There's only one reason a CIA officer would want this kind of insurance:

If their actions are brought to the light of day, it's likely that what they've done and what they're doing will be found illegal.

This is shameful, despicable on how many different levels?

Federal employees are paid to torture, to violate human rights, American law, and the Geneva Conventions...

... And the Bush-Cheney administration authorized it, but lies about it constantly ("We don't torture," as Bush himself said again last week, while pushing for new laws shielding torturers from prosecution)...

... And little-known government-backed insurance policies are being pushed, so government workers who torture for a living needn't worry about paying any civil damages for their illegal acts...

Is this the America Tom Jefferson and Ben Franklin and George Washington fought to establish?

Or is this the tyranny they fought against?   Helen & Harry   PERMANENT LINK
Sept. 6, 2006:
Federal and local agencies lied, covered up Ground Zero contamination
70% of 9/11 rescue workers have respiratory problems
Excerpt: Five years after Sept. 11, seven out of 10 first responders and workers who toiled at Ground Zero suffer from chronic lung ailments that probably will be lifelong, doctors said yesterday in announcing the largest-ever study of 9/11 health effects... Doctors at Mount Sinai also said they expect to find cancer among the study's participants in coming years.

Comment: It would be an appropriate gesture, commemorating five years since September 11, 2001, to finally, finally take care of the rescue workers.

Appropriate, but unlikely.

The Bush-Cheney administration uses the rescue workers' heroism for photo ops and propaganda, but when it comes to the heroes' health, White House policy is, You're screwed.   Helen & Harry Highwater   PERMANENT LINK
Aug. 29, 2006:
Terrorists are manipulating US media, says Rumsfeld
Excerpt: "What bothers me the most is how clever the enemy is," he continued, launching an extensive broadside at Islamic extremist groups which he said are trying to undermine Western support for the war on terror.

"They are actively manipulating the media in this country" by, for example, falsely blaming U.S. troops for civilian deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan, he said.

Comment: Will any American reporter challenge Rumsfeld's absolutely delusional propaganda?

He names no names, cites no examples, offers no evidence because, of course, anyone who's brighter than a dustmop knows "Islamic extremist groups" have no viable access to American media.

But pathological liars in the Bush administration can say anything they wish, even outrageous and obvious lies like this, knowing the US media will report it virtually without question.   Helen & Harry   PERMANENT LINK
Aug. 24, 2006:
Republicans pressure intelligence agencies to justify attack on Iran
Excerpt: Some senior Bush administration officials and top Republican lawmakers are voicing anger that American spy agencies have not issued more ominous warnings about the threats that they say Iran presents to the United States.

Comment: This news got buried on a Friday at the end of summer, but save it to your hard drives, everyone. Keep it in the same file with the stories from a few months back about the unanimous consensus that Iran is a decade away from a nuclear weapon.

I have a sneaking suspicion that after the elections are out of the way, the crazies in charge are actually going to try to lie us into yet another war.   Madeline Zane   PERMANENT LINK

Comment: Because really, who are you going to trust - intelligence officers who do this kind of work for a living and whose careers depend on getting their facts right...

Or Republican politicians whose careers hang in the balance of the next election?   Rebecca   PERMANENT LINK
July 28, 2006:
Bush executive order let EPA bury info on 9/11 health hazards
Excerpt: With New Yorkers already fuming about reports that the feds downplayed the danger of Ground Zero dust, the White House gave EPA chief Christie Whitman the power to bury embarrassing documents by classifying them "secret."

"I hereby designate the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency to classify information originally as 'Secret,'" states the executive order, which was signed by President Bush on May 6, 2002.
July 14, 2006:
Are you stupid enough to believe one word from Bush & Cheney?
by Helen & Harry Highwater, Unknown News
Excerpt: With the exception of the mentally handicapped and the chronically un-informed, nobody in the world is stupid enough to believe that Bush and Cheney are men of honor steering America's future to the best of their abilities.
July 7, 2006:
Republican Senator who submitted phony transcript
for Congressional Record to mislead Supreme Court
says "no big deal," he and others have done it before
Comment: They've gotten away with so many lies for so long, Republicans can now exist only in an environment of lies.

So hey, why not make up a phony floor debate in the Senate, submit it to the Congressional Record, and then reference it in Supreme Court briefs as evidence of legislative intent?   Helen & Harry   PERMANENT LINK
June 30, 2006:
Newspaper finds defense witnesses for Guantanamo
prisoner, though US said they couldn't be found
Comment: Isn't it obvious, as the lies continue, that virtually everything Bush & Cheney have announced about the 'war on terror' is an un-ending parade of blatant lies?

... Today they're lying to keep a man in prison, to prevent him from having a fair trial. Tomorrow they could be lying to imprison you.   Helen & Harry   PERMANENT LINK
June 29, 2006:
Bush's National Guard to the Mexican border? Another lie.
Excerpt: The Bush administration has been unable to muster even half of the 2,500 National Guardsmen it planned to have on the Mexican border by the end of June.

As of Thursday, the next-to-last day of the month, fewer than 1,000 troops were in place, according to military officials in the four border states of Texas, California, New Mexico and Arizona.
June 24, 2006:
CIA officer edited lies out of Powell's UN
speech, but someone put them back in
Excerpt: In late January 2003, as Secretary of State Colin Powell prepared to argue the Bush administration's case against Iraq at the United Nations, veteran CIA officer Tyler Drumheller sat down with a classified draft of Powell's speech to look for errors. He found a whopper: a claim about mobile biological labs built by Iraq for germ warfare. Drumheller instantly recognized the source, an Iraqi defector suspected of being mentally unstable and a liar. The CIA officer took his pen, he recounted in an interview, and crossed out the whole paragraph. A few days later, the lines were back in the speech.
June 18, 2006:
Memo from US Embassy in Iraq details abductions, threats to women's rights, and "ethnic cleansing"
Comment: This memo from the US embassy in Baghdad might be worth remembering, the next time lying Republicans and TV propagandacasters tell you things are looking up in Iraq, or President Bush claims that "freedom is on the march."   Helen & Harry   PERMANENT LINK
June 13, 2006:
White House lied to public, but Rove saved his hide by coming clean to FBI
Comment: This is probably the end of this entirely sordid episode, and the AP's reporter has summed things up with what seems to me a fairly fair recap -- with one glaring but utterly ordinary exception:

Like virtually all mainstream reporters, AP's Pete Yost is congenitally incapable of typing the words "lie," "lied," or "liar" when referring to anyone in the White House.

So we'll help...   Helen & Harry   PERMANENT LINK
June 10, 2006:
NASA budget eliminates satellites' ability to monitor global climate change
Comment: In a word, bullcrap. This isn't about budget priorities, it's about the Bush-Cheney-rightwing war against any science (any facts, any intelligence) that disputes the Bush administration's Cro-Magnon outlook on everything.   Helen & Harry   LINK
May 11, 2006:
Bush lied repeatedly about scope of NSA spying on Americans
Comment: It is not just international communications. The program includes calls placed within the United States. They are putting into the database every call made in the US.

... They have been lying to us about this, over and over and over again. They've been lying to us about it, and they've been lying to Congress about it.   Rachel Maddow   LINK
May 8, 2006:
Rumsfeld denies making claims Iraq had WMDs
Excerpt: The Pentagon chief denied he had lied and said he had relied on official intelligence reports about Saddam's weapons.

His questioner persisted: "You said you knew where they were."

Rumsfeld: "I did not. I said I knew where 'suspect' sites were."

The record shows that in the weeks preceding the war, Rumsfeld flatly claimed to know the whereabouts of Saddam's WMD arsenal.

On March 30, 2003, 11 days into the war, Rumsfeld was asked in an ABC News interview if he was surprised that American forces had not yet found any weapons of mass destruction.

"Not at all," Rumsfeld said, according to an official Pentagon transcript. "The area in the south and the west and the north that coalition forces control is substantial. It happens not to be the area where weapons of mass destruction were dispersed. We know where they are. They're in the area around Tikrit and Baghdad and east, west, south and north somewhat."
April 27, 2006:
US officials are still lying about suicide attempts at Guantanamo prison

April 25, 2006:
Bush does what he criticized Clinton for doing
Excerpt: In September 2000, then-Gov. George W. Bush criticized President Clinton for proposing to use the strategic oil reserve in response to high prices:

"The Strategic Reserve is an insurance policy meant for a sudden disruption of our energy supply or for war. Strategic Reserve should not be used as an attempt to drive down oil prices right before an election. It should not be used for short-term political gain at the cost of long-term national security."

Today, Bush did precisely what he criticized President Clinton for five-and-a-half years ago.
April 14, 2006:
George W Bush is a liar
by Robert Parry, Consortium News
Comment: This is very reasonable, calm, dispassionate and interesting. It recounts evidence conclusively showing that the title is true.   Zebra   LINK
April 13, 2006:
Bush administration goes on-line with Saddam-al Qaeda lies
Salon requires non-subscribers to view a brief advertisement  Excerpt: Lacking evidence of a real-world link between Saddam and the perpetrators of 9/11, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, headed by Bush appointee John Negroponte, has apparently decided to create one in cyberspace -- by seeding its new online Operation Iraqi Freedom Documents archive with suggestive jihadist materials, and by linking the site to an entirely unrelated database of al-Qaida materials.

... Strikingly, many of the interlopers share some key characteristics: Their origins trace to al-Qaida or other jihadist groups, they frequently involve unconventional weapons -- and they have nothing at all to do with either Saddam's regime or prewar Iraq. Also striking is their inclusion in an archive purportedly dedicated to captured Iraqi documents specifically from the Saddam regime; U.S. forces surely captured a wealth of other materials in Iraq that have nothing to do with the regime and that are not included in the archive. The fact that the only such relics to worm their way into the Operation Iraqi Freedom Documents focus on al-Qaida, the jihadist fringe and unconventional weapons strongly suggests an attempt to reinforce the Bush administration's prewar claim of ties between a WMD-hungry Saddam and al-Qaida terrorists.
April 12, 2006:
Bush-Cheney pushed notion of banned Iraqi mobile "biological laboratories." despite evidence to contrary
Excerpt: The claim, repeated by top administration officials for months afterward, was hailed at the time as a vindication of the decision to go to war. But even as Bush spoke, U.S. intelligence officials possessed powerful evidence that it was not true.

A secret fact-finding mission to Iraq -- not made public until now -- had already concluded that the trailers had nothing to do with biological weapons. Leaders of the Pentagon-sponsored mission transmitted their unanimous findings to Washington in a field report on May 27, 2003, two days before the president's statement.

The three-page field report and a 122-page final report three weeks later were stamped "secret" and shelved.
April 10, 2006:
"US home audience" is target of American propaganda about al Qaeda leader Zarqawi

April 9, 2006:
Nothing but lies behind "war on teror"
by Robyn E. Blumner, St. Petersburg Times

April 7, 2006:
Bush can tap domestic calls without warrants too, says Attorney General

April 6, 2006:
Libby's testimony: Bush personally authorized leaking classified information to help 'sell' war
Excerpt: Vice President Dick Cheney's former chief of staff has testified that President Bush authorized him to disclose the contents of a highly classified intelligence assessment to the media to defend the Bush administration's decision to go to war with Iraq, according to papers filed in federal court on Wednesday by Patrick J. Fitzgerald, the special prosecutor in the CIA leak case.
March 27, 2006:
Proof yet again, Bush lied to lead USA to war on Iraq
Excerpt: The Times article reviews for the first time the full text of a confidential memo of a two-hour meeting between President Bush and Prime Minister Tony Blair on Jan. 31, 2003. The memo makes clear that the White House was bent on attacking Iraq two months later no matter what, "even if international arms inspectors failed to find unconventional weapons," writes Don Van Natta, Jr.
March 22, 2006:
Bush lies again: Says he never linked 9/11 to Iraq
Excerpt: In fact, Bush did claim such a connection existed, often generally and specifically in a letter to Congress at the start of the war.
March 18, 2006:
Bush using straw-man arguments in speeches
Excerpt: "It's such a phenomenal hole in the national debate that you can have arguments with nonexistent people. All politicians try to get away with this to a certain extent. What's striking here is how much this administration rests on a foundation of this kind of stuff."
March 14, 2006:
Bush blames Iran for Iraqi resistance ...
... but there's no proof of Iran's involvement, says Chair of US Joint Chiefs


March 10, 2006:
Former Bush domestic policy advisor charged in shoplifting/refund scam
Comment: When he quit his high-level White House position in February, the Bush-Cheney administration claimed that Dr Allen was leaving "to spend more time with his family." In reality, he had been arrested a month earlier, for "refund fraud" -- shoplifting.

There is apparently nothing so trivial that the Bush-Cheney White House won't lie about it.   H&HH   LINK
March 9, 2006:
Rumsfeld's 'history lesson' is a collection of lies
by Arianna Huffington, The Huffington Post

March 7, 2006:
Poll shows Americans expect civil war in Iraq, but
press is "exaggerating" violence, Rumsfeld claims


March 5, 2006:
Lies, lies, and also lies from the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
by The Sailor, Vidiot Speak
Excerpt: "No matter where you look at [Iraq's] military, their police, their society things are much better this year than they were last."
March 3, 2006:
Rice lied, of course, when she said Hamas victory was unexpected
Excerpt: "I don't know anyone who wasn't caught off guard by Hamas' strong showing," said Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, referring to the landslide victory of the Islamic Hamas party in the January 25 Palestinian elections. Hamas won 76 out of 132 seats in the Palestinian legislature, compared to 43 seats for the ruling Fatah party.

... But despite Secretary Rice's odd protestations, no one did a better job of tracking the growing popularity of Hamas than the State Department's own intelligence analysts.

"When the parties [Hamas and Fatah] are directly compared, likely voters tend to see Hamas as more qualified to clean up corruption, resist occupation, and uphold societal values," the analysts reported in a January 19, 2006, pre-election assessment obtained by Secrecy News.
March 2, 2006:
Bush knew, two months before attack on Iraq, Saddam posed no threat

March 2, 2006:
No questions asked by Bush in video of pre-hurricane briefing
Comment: The video is quite incriminating, and shows yet again that the President was lying when he said he hadn't been warned. Of course, the Republicans who control Congress wouldn't care, even if the video shows Bush flipping the Gulf Coast the finger and announcing, "I hope thousands die."   H&HH   LINK
March 1, 2006:
Bush lied about UAE port company being cleared of links to terrorism
Excerpt: "There was no real investigation conducted during the 30-day period," Rep Peter King (R-New York), who has been a vocal critic of the deal, told CNN. "I can't emphasize this enough."
Feb. 26, 2006:
White House lied about Scottish cop's injuries from Bush bicycle crash
Excerpt: John Scott, a human rights lawyer, said: "There's certainly enough in this account for a charge of careless driving. Anyone else would have been warned for dangerous driving.

"I have had clients who have been charged with assaulting a police officer for less than this. The issue of how long the police officer was out of action for is also important. He was away from work for 14 weeks, and that would normally be very significant in a case like this."

According to day-after press reports on July 7th, Bush blamed wet pavement and high speed for the fall. "We were flying," Bush said at a press conference in Gleneagles.

Comment: In reality, Bush carelessly took his hands off the bike's handlebars, causing the accident, and injuring a policeman so seriously he missed more than three months' work.

There is no matter so trivial that the Bush administration won't lie about it.   H&HH   LINK

... None of the coverage at the time suggested the constable was hurt beyond the "minor" injury, and the incident was soon forgotten.
Feb. 24, 2006:
Flashback:US gov't experts debunk evidence of Iranian nuclear weapons program
Comment: We told you to keep this one in your bookmarks. It's a Washington Post article from 6 months ago, saying Iran is ten years away from having its first nuclear weapons. We've heard no facts to contradict it, just posturing and fear-mongering from the usual death merchants.   Madeline Zane   LINK
Feb. 21, 2006:
Rumsfeld was "mistaken" when he said US propaganda in Iraqi press had stopped

Feb. 9, 2006:
Abramoff says he met Bush "almost a dozen" times
Excerpt: Jack Abramoff said in correspondence made public on Thursday that President Bush met him "almost a dozen" times, disputing White House claims Bush did not know the former lobbyist at the center of a corruption scandal.
Feb. 4, 2006:
NASA scientists balk at political edicts from Bush-appointed crony with no science background

Feb. 1, 2006:
Officials now say Bush's "State of the Union" statement about cutting Mid-East oil dependence was pure fiction
Excerpt: One day after President Bush vowed to reduce America's dependence on Middle East oil by cutting imports from there 75 percent by 2025, his energy secretary and national economic adviser said Wednesday that the president didn't mean it literally.

... "This was purely an example," Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman said.

Comment: Sure ... an example of LYING!   Madeline Zane   LINK
Jan. 31, 2006:
Attorney General Gonzales lied under oath about wiretapping program during confirmation hearing

Jan. 27, 2006:
Bush administration response to spying scandal: Lies, lies, and more lies

Jan. 26, 2006:
Bush publicly opposed spying on Americans ... while secretly ordering it

Jan. 24, 2006:
White House got detailed warnings days before Hurricane Katrina hit

Jan. 22, 2006:
'Bizarre,' says Pakistan's Prime Minister of CIA claims that attack killed al Qaeda leaders
Excerpt: "The area does see movement of people from across the border. But we have not found one body or one shred of evidence that these people were there."
Jan. 18, 2006:
White House won't release details of bribemeister Abramoff's visits
Excerpt:  According to Press Secretary Scott McClellan, Abramoff had "a few" such meetings. But the spokesman won't say when or with whom. Nor will he say which interests Abramoff was representing -- or how he got access to the White House.

Comment:  Predictably, McClellan's line about "a few" meetings was yet another lie (see below).   H&HH   LINK

Abramoff had hundreds of White House meetings

Excerpt:  The Associated Press reported Tuesday that Abramoff and his associates had nearly 200 contacts with the White House during Bush's first 10 months in office.
Jan. 17, 2006:
Three more rescue workers die of 9/11 air pollution poisoning

Jan. 17, 2006:
White House smear distorts facts of legal Clinton-Gore search

Jan. 15, 2006:
Republicans lie about Knight-Ridder's Alito coverage
by Clark Hoyt, Knight-Ridder Newspapers
Excerpt:  The controversy erupted again last week at Alito's confirmation hearings. After Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., referred to the Knight Ridder story, Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., introduced a critique of the story by the Republican staff of the Judiciary Committee into the record. Kyl said that the story, "has, to my understanding, been rather completely discredited." The first paragraph of the Republican critique, however, said that the story was based on "dozens" of Alito's opinions, creating the false impression that Henderson and Mintz didn't examine the judge's entire body of published work.

The Republican National Committee circulated a blistering personal attack on Henderson to some reporters, taking quotes out of context in an attempt to portray him as biased.

The RNC said Henderson "admitted he was previously an editorial writer," as though that part of a distinguished reporter's career was a secret that he'd been trying to hide. The RNC statement linked Henderson to editorials he didn't write.

This hysteria over a carefully researched article that documents the obvious -- that Samuel Alito is a judicial conservative -- is the latest example of a disturbing trend of attacking the messenger instead of debating difficult issues.

Fact-based reporting is the lifeblood of a democracy. It gives people shared information on which to make political choices. But as people in new democracies risk their lives to gather such information, in this country fact-based reporting is under more relentless assault than at any time in my more than 40 years in Washington.
Jan. 13, 2006:
Bush authorized domestic spying before 9/11
Excerpt:  According to a declassified document, the National Security Agency's vast data-mining activities began shortly after Bush was sworn in as president, and the document contradicts his assertion that the 9/11 attacks prompted him to take the unprecedented step of signing a secret executive order authorizing the NSA to monitor a select number of American citizens thought to have ties to terrorist groups.
Jan. 11, 2006:
Right-wingers are lying about judge's light sentence for child rapist

Jan. 2, 2006:
Huge surge in coalition
airstrikes against Iraq
US cuts off funds
for rebuilding Iraq
            with dots connected by Madeline Zane

Dec. 30, 2005:
Pentagon claims policy of paying for propaganda is legal

Dec. 28, 2005:
'Swift Boat'-esque group buys TV ads to bolster Bush-Cheney's Iraq lies

Dec. 27 2005:
Bush lie-check: Bush got the FISA changes he asked for after 9/11

Dec. 21, 2005:
Officials say Bush's illegal wiretap program unnecessary, court OK is easy to get
Excerpt:  "It's total hubris. It's arrogance by the people doing this," said a second senior U.S. counter-terrorism official. "This is a 24-hour thing, and you can get these kinds of warrants immediately. I think they are just being lazy."
Dec. 20, 2005:
"Dr Germ," "Chemical Sally," and other "deck-of-cards" Iraqis released from prison

Dec. 16, 2005:
Bush ordered NSA to spy without warrants in US
New York Times sat on the story for a year, at the Bush administration's request
Dec. 10, 2005:
US manufactured Iraq • al Qaeda connection by torturing "informant" until he said what they wanted

Dec. 10, 2005:
Pentagon vastly under-reporting war injuries
Salon requires non-subscribers to view a brief advertisement  Excerpt:  But by Dec. 8, 2005, the military had evacuated another 25,289 service members from Iraq and Afghanistan for injuries or illnesses not caused directly by enemy bullets or bombs, according to the U.S. Transportation Command. That statistic includes everything from serious injuries in Humvee wrecks or other accidents to more routine illnesses that could be unrelated to field battles.

Yet those service members are not included in the Pentagon's casualty reports. That's odd. The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines a casualty as "a military person lost through death, wounds, injury, sickness, internment or capture or through being missing in action."

"We don't do Webster's," Jim Turner, a Pentagon spokesman told me in 2004 as I was reporting on counting casualties. In a written statement, the Department of Defense told me that the casualty reports describe casualties to fit the "understanding of the average newspaper reader."
Dec. 7, 2005:
Pentagon lied to Congress about dangers of anthrax vaccination

Dec. 6, 2005:
Bush administration objects to media describing Alito as conservative

Dec. 6, 2005:
Dead Marines were partying, not "on patrol"
Excerpt:  Why did the U.S. military mislead the media and the families of ten Marines killed near the Iraqi city of Falluja while "on patrol" last week about how they were killed? The military announced on Tuesday that it actually happened at a "promotion" ceremony and they were not on foot patrol as initially reported.

Comment: Is there any lie too small for military and Bush administration officials to tell? Have they told us the truth about anything, ever?   Helen & Harry Highwater   PERMANENT LINK
Dec. 3, 2005:
Congressional investigators: EPA lied about how dirty air would get under "Clean Sky" plan
Excerpt:  A Bush administration analysis of air pollution legislation uses assumptions that boost the benefits of its own proposal while overstating the costs of alternatives, according to a report by the Congressional Research Service.
Dec. 1, 2005:
Bush lied in speech about Iraqi security forces

Dec. 1, 2005:
Lynne Cheney lies, says her husband Dick didn't lie about Iraq-9/11 connection

Nov. 22, 2005:
Iraqis stand united at last:
Shi'ites, Kurds, and Sunnis call call for U.S. withdrawal timetable
Comment: Correct me if I'm wrong here, but didn't we say that if the Iraqis asked us to leave, that's when we would know it was time to, you know, LEAVE?   Madeline Zane   PERMANENT LINK

Comment: That's what President Bush said. And that's what then-Secretary of State Colin Powell said. But it's not like this is the Bush administration's first lie about Iraq, or even in the first few hundred.   Helen & Harry Highwater   PERMANENT LINK
Nov. 22, 2005:
Iraq link to 9/11 debunked within days, but report remains unseen beyond White House

Nov. 20, 2005:
Iraqis are faking their deaths, says US Air Force commander

Nov. 12, 2005:
Bush is lying again:
Congress had far less information than White House had


Nov. 11, 2005:
"We do not torture," Bush declares
while White House works to defeat torture ban


Nov. 9, 2005:
White House alters official transcript of press conference

Nov. 9, 2005:
Alito refused to recuse himself from case after promising he would in confirmation hearings

Nov. 6, 2005:
Iraq-al Qaeda link was "intentionally misleading" and DIA document shows White House knew it

Oct. 31, 2005:
Vietnam War was based on spy agency's lies, and 40 years later feds still keep it secret

Oct. 23, 2005:
82% of Iraqis "strongly opposed" to US-British occupation, poll shows

Oct. 16, 2005:
Pentagon refuses to pay promised bonus for Nat'l Guard and Reserves who re-enlisted

Oct. 14, 2005:
Bush's 'unscripted' teleconference with troops: Another lie
Comment: Is there anything, anything at all, any tiny aspect of anything Mr Bush or anyone in the upper levels of his administration has ever said, planned, promised, or done, that doesn't boil down to a lie?

Is there any limit to the depths they'll stoop? It's not enough to send American soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines, and National Guardsmen to fight, kill, and die for vague causes which aren't worth a single American military casualty. No, that's not enough. While uniformed Americans are in Iraq risking their lives for bullshit, Bush uses their living bodies as propaganda props.   H&HH   PERMANENT LINK
Oct. 12, 2005:
The polls and the terror alerts: A series of odd coincidences

Oct. 12, 2005:
Federal report on outsourcing delayed, gutted, rewritten, then released only after FOIA request

Oct. 11, 2005:
During fake photo op, Bush denies doing fake photo ops

Oct. 10, 2005:
Firm that produced illegal Medicare propaganda gets contract to "educate" seniors on prescription drug plan

Oct. 8, 2005:
The man who took on George Bush and won
(the Nobel Peace Prize, that is)

by Anne Penketh, The Independent [London, UK]

Sept. 9 , 2005:
Media spreads at least eight Bush administration lies about Katrina

Aug. 24, 2005:
Telling the truth about racial profiling gets Justice Dept official demoted

Aug. 23, 2005:
US gov't experts debunk evidence of Iranian nuclear weapons program

Aug. 15, 2005:
Bush's bizarre accounting hides development of National Forests

Aug. 3, 2005:
Before invasion, CIA trained Iraqi saboteur-torture teams

June 21, 2005:
Another little lie from the White House

June 17, 2005:
Bush administration lied to British officials about napalming Iraq
Aug. 8, 2003:
US official said it was "patently false," but US forces did use napalm in Iraq
June 12, 2005:
In 2002, British officials were told of need for Iraq war ‘excuse'

June 12, 2005:
FDA suppressed vital data on prescription drugs

June 12, 2005:
Feds wildly exaggerate terror prosecution records (again)

June 10, 2005:
White House employed oil industry non-scientist to rewrite environmental reports

June 1, 2005:
Amnesty International responds to Bush's trash talk

May 29, 2005:
The war basically began in May 2002, months before going to the
U.N., and a year before Americans knew their nation was at war :

Bombing raids tried to goad Saddam Hussein into war


May 27, 2005:
It's legal again, to fire gov't workers for being gay

May 23, 2005:
Tillman's parents angry about being lied to

May 15, 2005:
Condoleezza Rice's latest enormous lie

May 10, 2005:
"Flimsy evidence" behind terror alerts,
ex-Homeland Security Sec'ty Ridge now admits


May 8, 2005:
Latest "high-ranking" al Qaeda capture was another nobody, another lie

May 4, 2005:
Officials lied, lied, and lied some more about Tillman's death

May 1, 2005:
Downing Street memo reveals Bush administration
planned war months before Americans knew


May 1, 2005:
British documents show U.S. government's commitment to war on Iraq a year in advance

April 29, 2005:
Guantanamo staged fake interrogations for PR benefit

April 15, 2005:
Terrorism on the increase again; Bush administration orders report quashed

April 14, 2005:
White House ad lies about cancer risks from tobacco, marijuana
Excerpt:  "Quite a few people think that smoking pot is less likely to cause cancer than a regular cigarette. You may even have heard some parents say they'd rather their kid smoked a little pot than get hooked on cigarettes. Wrong, and wrong again. ... One joint can deliver four times as much cancer-causing tar as one cigarette."

... "As a parent, I'm appalled that the White House is actually telling parents not to worry about a drug that's proven to be both deadly and highly addictive," Fox said. "I'd much rather my kids not smoke anything, but the data is crystal clear that of the two drugs, tobacco is far more carcinogenic and far more addictive. And the message to kids is even worse. The ad says, in effect, 'If you've already tried marijuana, cigarettes are no big deal because they have one-quarter the tar.' That's a message that could literally kill."
April 14, 2005:
U.S.-touted "terror case" evaporates into more Bush administration lies

April 7, 2005:
Homeland Security memo reveals terrorism records being sanitized

April 3, 2005:
U.S. relied on 'drunken liar' to justify war on Iraq

March 29, 2005:
Sanchez committed obvious perjury

March 29, 2005:
Feds will lie about RFID tags in passports

March 27, 2005:
New details on F.B.I. aid for Saudis after 9/11

March 25, 2005:
TSA "misled the public" about passenger data tracking

March 23, 2005:
Gov't document contradicts Bush, Cheney,
says bin Laden escaped from Tora Bora
Excerpt:  A US government document confirms for the first time that the al Qaida leader was camped out at the Tora Bora mountain hideout before managing to escape.

Both President George Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney have repeatedly claimed that they did not know whether bin Laden was at Tora Bora when it was attacked by US forces in December 2001.

The document, obtained by the Associated Press under freedom of information legislation, says the unidentified terrorism suspect "assisted in the escape of Osama bin Laden from Tora Bora".

... The issue was a source of contention during last year's presidential election and both Mr Bush and Mr Cheney referred to a column written by the former commander of US forces in Afghanistan, who said bin Laden "was never within our grasp" as evidence of their claims.

General Tommy Franks wrote in the New York Times: "We don't know to this day whether Mr bin Laden was at Tora Bora in December 2001."
March 22, 2005:
EPA lied about mercury findings
Excerpt:  When the Environmental Protection Agency unveiled a rule last week to limit mercury emissions from U.S. power plants, officials emphasized that the controls could not be more aggressive because the cost to industry already far exceeded the public health payoff.

What they did not reveal is that a Harvard University study paid for by the EPA, co-authored by an EPA scientist and peer- reviewed by two other EPA scientists had reached the opposite conclusion.
March 20, 2005:
Bush administration lied to Allies about North Korea

March 20, 2005:
U.S. "fixed" facts to make case
for war, says U.K. Intelligence Chief


March 10, 2005:
Secret FBI report questions al Qaeda's abilities
Excerpt:  "Al-Qa'ida leadership's intention to attack the United States is not in question," the report reads. (All spellings are as rendered in the original report.) "However, their capability to do so is unclear, particularly in regard to 'spectacular' operations. We believe al-Qa'ida's capability to launch attacks within the United States is dependent on its ability to infiltrate and maintain operatives in the United States."

And for all the worry about Osama bin Laden's sleeper cells or agents in the United States, a secret FBI assessment concludes it knows of none.

The 32-page assessment says flatly, "To date, we have not identified any true 'sleeper' agents in the US," seemingly contradicting the "sleeper cell" description prosecutors assigned to seven men in Lackawanna, N.Y., in 2002.
March 6, 2005:
Bush administration used fake torture story to influence public

Feb. 20, 2005:
Greenspan stands with Bush liar administration
by Paul Krugman, The New York Times
Excerpt:  The way privatizers link the long-run financing of Social Security with the case for private accounts parallels the three-card-monte technique the Bush administration used to link terrorism to the Iraq war. Speeches about Iraq invariably included references to 9/11, leading much of the public to believe that invading Iraq somehow meant taking the war to the terrorists. When pressed, war supporters would admit they lacked evidence of any significant links between Iraq and Al Qaeda, let alone any Iraqi role in 9/11 -- yet in their next sentence it would be 9/11 and Saddam, together again.

Similarly, calls for privatization invariably begin with ominous warnings about Social Security's financial future. When pressed, administration officials admit that private accounts would do nothing to improve that financial future. Yet in the next sentence, they once again link privatization to the problem posed by an aging population.
Feb. 17, 2005:
Ridge, pollsters met during Bush campaign

Feb. 11, 2005:
With the Bush administration, everything is a lie
by Billie Newman, Unknown News

Feb. 11, 2005:
Bush budget didn't cut "safety net" programs, lies White House spokesman

Feb. 10, 2005:
Species-protection data suppressed,
many scientists report
Excerpt:  Scientists in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service say they've been forced to alter or withhold findings that would have led to greater protections for endangered species, according to a survey released Wednesday by two environmental groups.

The scientists charge that top regional and national officials in the agency suppressed scientific information to avoid confrontations with industry groups or to follow the Bush administration's political policies.
Jan. 25, 2005:
Cheney lies about Iraq, Iran
Excerpt:  At this point, the focus is no longer on the bogus WMD rationale used to promote the attack on Iraq, intelligence analysts say. It's the claims the vice president is now making regarding Iran's nuclear capability -- and, given the deliberate distortions on Iraq, whether anyone should believe him.

Appearing January 20 on MSNBC's Imus in the Morning, Cheney warned that Iran has "a fairly robust new nuclear program." And besides, it sponsors terrorism. Sound familiar?
Jan. 25, 2005:
Military still lying about Guantanamo suicide attempts
And media still won't question obvious lies


Jan. 7, 2005:
Education Dept. paid commentator to rave about "No Child Left Behind"

Jan. 2, 2005:
Video of Rumsfeld lying again   VIDEO LINK   

Dec. 18, 2004:
Rumsfeld gave "marching orders" for torture, then lied about it

Dec. 10, 2004:
Rumsfeld lied about armor production

Dec. 5, 2004:
U.S. military lied about Tillman's death

Dec. 2, 2004:
Bush "abstinence only" program lies to kids about sex, HIV dangers

Dec. 1, 2004:
U.S. military lied about Abu Ghraib torture

Dec. 1, 2004:
Pentagon uses U.S. media to mislead public
Use our Los Angeles Times login xoxounknown@ yahoo.com and password unknownnews Excerpt:  "Troops crossed the line of departure," 1st Lt. Lyle Gilbert declared, using a common military expression signaling the start of a major campaign. "It's going to be a long night." CNN, which had been alerted to expect a major news development, reported that the long-awaited offensive to retake the Iraqi city of Fallouja had begun.

In fact, the Fallouja offensive would not kick off for another three weeks. Gilbert's carefully worded announcement was an elaborate psychological operation -- or "psy-op" -- intended to dupe insurgents in Fallouja and allow U.S. commanders to see how guerrillas would react if they believed U.S. troops were entering the city, according to several Pentagon officials.
Nov. 24, 2004:
Bush administration lied about 2002 Venezuelan coup

Nov. 23, 2004:
Big surprise: Bush lied about "expanding Pell grants"
US aid for college students slashed


Nov. 21, 2004:
Bush "honored" with "Doublespeak" Award

Nov. 19, 2004:
U.S. wildly overstated foreign fighter numbers in Iraq

Nov. 8, 2004:
Halliburton admits bribing Nigeria while Cheney was in charge

Nov. 4, 2004:
Bush lied about Al-Qaqaa munitions

Oct. 25, 2004:
Unintentionally revealing Bush ad hypes non-existent danger
The President who cried "wolf!"

by Helen & Harry Highwater, Unknown News

Oct. 25, 2004:
Cheney-Bush lies are believed:
Study shows Bush supporters remarkably ignorant of facts


Oct. 6, 2004:
Truth first casualty of Cheney debate style
Excerpt:  It's a wonder that millions of TV screens didn't shatter as U.S. Vice-President Dick Cheney's nose poked right through them last night. ...

Cheney lied about presiding over Senate

Cheney lied about having never met Edwards

Excerpt:  "Now, in my capacity as vice president, I am the president of Senate, the presiding officer. I'm up in the Senate most Tuesdays when they're in session. The first time I ever met you was when you walked on the stage tonight," Cheney told Edwards during the debate.

On Feb. 1, 2001, the vice president thanked Edwards by name at a Senate prayer breakfast and sat beside him during the event. On April 8, 2001, Cheney and Edwards shook hands when they met off-camera during a taping of NBC's "Meet the Press," moderator Tim Russert said Wednesday on "Today." On Jan. 8, 2003, the two met when the first-term North Carolina senator accompanied Elizabeth Dole to her swearing-in by Cheney as a North Carolina senator, Edwards aides also said.
Oct. 6, 2004:
Bush continues to mislead on WMD

Oct. 4, 2004:
Rice misleads again on Iraq's nuclear program

Sept. 30, 2004:
Summary of Bush lies from debate

Sept. 24, 2004:
Administration distorts who benefits from tax cut

Sept 10, 2004:
Cheney repeats Saddam-al Qaeda lie for thousandth time
Excerpt:  At a town-hall style forum in the swing state of Ohio, Cheney described Saddam as a "man who provided safe harbour and sanctuary to terrorists for years" and a man who "provided safe harbour and sanctuary as well for al Qaeda."

The commission that investigated the September 11, 2001 attacks has said it had not discovered any evidence of a "collaborative" relationship" between the fallen Iraqi government and al Qaeda.
Sept. 2, 2004:
Longtime family friend remembers Bush as lazy ne'er-do-well with no National Guard connection

Aug. 30, 2004:
Bush misleads on global warming

Aug. 30, 2004:
Bush still fudging the numbers on Kerry's tax votes

Aug. 29, 2004:
Bush's un-earned medal reported in mainstream media (in U.K.)

Aug. 27, 2004:
Rumsfeld misleads about prison abuse

Aug. 26, 2004:
Bush wore military ribbon he did not earn

Aug. 25, 2004:
More Bush connections to smear ads

Aug. 20, 2004:
Despite Bush claims, 'Swift Boat' liars campaign connected to administration

Aug. 14, 2004:
Another disingenuous attack from Dick Cheney

Aug. 13, 2004:
al Qaeda may use meds imported from Canada for nefarious plot
Excerpt:  Are there any depths to which these guys won't sink? What's next? Alleged al-Qaeda infiltration of labor unions? Email from Osama to the NAACP?
Aug. 4, 2004:
Report proves Bush knew he was lying about Iraq

Aug. 3, 2004:
Bush criticism of frivolous lawsuits hypocritical
Bush v. Enterprise Rent-A-Car over fender bender


Aug. 3, 2004:
The Bush administration's lies that led to war
A brief but throurough list of the deceptions


Aug. 3, 2004:
Halliburton fined $7.5m for accounting fraud under Cheney's watch

July 30, 2004:
The Bush administration's top 40 lies about war and terrorism

July 23, 2004:
Ashcroft publicly misleads 9/11 Commission

July 19, 2004:
Feds' claims of terror prosecutions don't add up (again)

July 18, 2004:
U.S. agency overstated mass graves in Iraq by eighty times
Excerpt:  Downing Street has admitted to The Observer that repeated claims by Tony Blair that '400,000 bodies had been found in Iraqi mass graves' is untrue, and only about 5,000 corpses have so far been uncovered.

The claims by Blair in November and December of last year, were given widespread credence, quoted by MPs and widely published, including in the introduction to a US government pamphlet on Iraq's mass graves.

In that publication -- "Iraq's Legacy of Terror: Mass Graves" produced by USAID, the US government aid distribution agency, Blair is quoted from 20 November last year: 'We've already discovered, just so far, the remains of 400,000 people in mass graves.'
July 15, 2004:
Powell's U.N. speech was a load of hooey, and he knew it
Colin Powell:  "My colleagues, every statement I make today is backed up by sources, solid sources. These are not assertions. What we're giving you are facts and conclusions based on solid intelligence. ..."
July 8, 2004:
Edwards "4th most liberal"? Another lie, of course

June 23, 2004:
Terrorism worldwide increases
Government issues 'correction' to earlier, misleading report


June 22, 2004:
The lies that killed and keep on killing
by Madeline Zane, Unknown News

June 22, 2004:
Latest Iraq-al Qaeda "evidence" proves false

June 17, 2004:
Cheney caught in another lie

June 15, 2004:
Cheney again claims Iraq linked to al-Qaida
Excerpt:  "He was a patron of terrorism," Cheney said of Hussein during a speech before The James Madison Institute, a conservative think-tank based in Florida. "He had long established ties with al Qaida."

Comment: Mr. Cheney is a habitual liar: As stated ad nauseum, there is no credible evidence linking Hussein or Hussein's Iraq with al-Qaida in any significant way.   H&HH   PERMANENT LINK
June 2, 2004:
A huge, murderous lie:
Bush likens war on terror to World War II


May 31, 2004:
Cheney coordinated Halliburton's Iraq contract, says Time
Excerpt:  "As vice president, I have absolutely no influence of, involvement of, knowledge of in any way, shape or form of contracts led by the Corps of Engineers or anybody else in the federal government," Cheney told NBC's "Meet the Press" in September, Time said.
May 25, 2004:
Bush's speech last night: Counting the lies and delusions
by George W. Bush, with corrections by Helen & Harry Highwater, Unknown News

May 25, 2004:
Bush ad falsely implies Kerry
would repeal wiretaps of terrorists


May 24, 2004:
When will reporters call Bush a liar?
by Jason Sazman, The Topeka [KS] Capital-Journal

May 24, 2004:
Bush spokesman even lies about the weather

May 18, 2004:
White House is trumpeting programs it tried to cut

May 10, 2004:
Bush administration has used 27 rationales for war in Iraq, study says

May 3, 2004:
From the duh department
U.S. claims of foreign fighters in Iraq "insurgency" are mostly bogus


April 26, 2004:
Rumsfeld repeatedly lied about "Iraqis already under arms"

April 26, 2004:
Lies, lies & more lies about the PATRIOT Act

April 26, 2004:
More Bush distortions of Kerry defense record

April 26, 2004:
Latest Bush lies on Kerry's record

April 25, 2004:
57% of Americans believe Saddam
gave substantial support to al-Qaeda


April 21, 2004:
Pentagon deleted Rumsfeld comment

April 13, 2004:
Ashcroft's many lies to Congress about 9/11

April 10, 2004:
Feds won't allow Mad Cow testing
Comment: When USDA says America's beef is safe, they're lying. If you'd like to live a long and healthy life, don't take them at their word.   H&HH   PERMANENT LINK
April 8, 2004:
Brief summary of yesterday's lies in
opening statement of Condoleezza Rice's testimony


April 7, 2004:
Bush campaign ad lies about Kerry's positions

April 1, 2004:
Whistleblower canned after exposing Bush administration's
'whitewash' of major environmental disaster


March 28, 2004:
Condoleezza Rice on 60 Minutes:
A curious collection of quickly debunked lies about 9/11


March 25-26, 2004:
Rice contradicts CIA, Cheney, Armitage, herself
She has time for CNN, but no time for 9/11


March 23, 2004:
Bush ad mischracterizes Kerry's votes on taxes

March 12, 2004:
Bush threatened to fire official for telling truth

March 11, 2004:
White House gets GAO OK to lie
GAO rules banning "misleading information" don't apply to Drug Czar


March 9, 2004:
Bush's latest attack on Kerry is even more dishonest than the last

Feb. 26, 2004:
Bush lies abpout Kerry's Senate votes

Feb. 25, 2004:
Some Bush lies about Kerry's record

Feb. 23, 2004:
Bush's Council of Economic Advisers re-writes
economic history to blame Clinton for recession


Feb. 22, 2004:
Federal report on racial disparities in health care
covered up racial disparities in health care


Feb 20, 2004:
Bush exaggerates tax cuts, can't keep figures straight

Feb. 19, 2004:
White House "deliberately, systematically" distorts science, scientists say

Feb. 18, 2004:
Bush's neverending trail of lies

Feb. 17, 2004:
Groups ask White House to stop lying about Medicare

Feb. 13, 2004:
Bush ad lies about Kerry "special interest" money

Feb. 13, 2004:
Reserve pilots remember Bush as the man who wasn't there

Feb. 13, 2004:
President's "commission" on intelligence failures smells like a cover-up
by John W. Dean, FindLaw

Feb. 13, 2004:
How dare you question Mr. Bush's honesty?
by Paul Krugman, The New York Times

Feb. 10, 2004:
Doubts, dissent removed from public report on Iraq
Excerpt:  The public version of the U.S. intelligence community's key prewar assessment of Iraq's illicit arms programs was stripped of dissenting opinions, warnings of insufficient information and doubts about Saddam Hussein's intentions, a review of the document and its once-classified version shows.

What that comparison showed is that while the top-secret version delivered to President Bush, his top lieutenants and Congress was heavily qualified with caveats about some of its most-important conclusions about Iraq's illicit weapons programs, those caveats were omitted from the public version.
Feb. 6, 2004:
Co-Chair of Bush intelligence "investigation" has propaganda, whitewash track record

Feb. 1, 2004:
Wolfowitz lies about women's rights in Iraq
He suggests they'll have some


Feb. 1, 2004:
US officials knew in May Iraq possessed no WMD
Which means, it was $600-million for a knowing lie
Jan. 30, 2004:
A recurring lie: America attacked because Iraq wouldn't let inspectors in?

Jan. 27, 2004:
Bush officials repeatedly mischaracterize findings of mad cow risk study
Excerpt:  When officials misstate conclusions of ... any scientific work, they undermine their own credibility, said Frank Ackerman, a Tufts University economics professor, author and critic of the Bush administration's selective use of science in rule-making.

"If you tilt entirely toward saying that a study with a zillion caveats has made definitive proof of a conclusion which can't be found in the study, then it looks like you made up your mind beforehand," Ackerman said.
Jan 23, 2004:
Cheney's Iraq deceptions leave NPR speechless

Jan 23, 2004:
Cheney still lying about Hussein/al-Qaida connection

Jan. 22, 2004:
Lies from the 2004 State of the Union address

Jan. 10, 2004:
Bush planned Iraq attack months before Sept. 11, Former Treasury Secretary says

Jan. 8, 2004:
Bush rewards companies that cut off seniors' drug coverage
Exactly what he promised he wouldn't do


Jan. 7, 2004:
Carnegie study states the obvious: Bush lied to take America to war

Jan. 5, 2004:
First Lady lied about Bush poem
She now says he didn't write that awful "roses are red" thing


Dec. 24, 2003:
Rumsfeld backed Saddam even after chemical attacks

Dec. 21, 2003:
U.S. officials are lying about terrors stats (again)

Dec. 18, 2003:
White House scrubs websites and lies about it

Dec. 16, 2003:
White House admits pre-9/11 warnings; Bush still denies it
Excerpt:  At his press conference yesterday, President Bush was asked about charges that he had received warnings prior to the September 11th attacks that a terrorist incident was imminent. He answered that even asking such a question was "an absurd insinuation." It was the same sentiment expressed by Bush's National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, who said in May of 2002 that "[no one predicted] that they would try to use an airplane as a missile, a hijacked airplane."

The problem for the president and the administration is that the White House has previously admitted that the president had personally received such specific warnings. ...
Dec. 15, 2003:
Before authorizing attack on Iraq,
Senators were told Iraqi weapons could hit U.S.


Dec. 5, 2003:
Is the President a pathological liar?
by David Corn, Los Angeles Weekly
Excerpt:  I obviously believe Bush has lied often and consistently about grave matters, but I have shied away from labeling Bush "pathological" and the like.

Now I wonder about that.

What forced this reconsideration was a speech Bush delivered in late November to several thousand troops at Butts Army Air Field in Fort Carson, Colorado. On this occasion, Bush served up the usual rah-rah about the war on terrorism. But as he was hailing the U.S. military, he remarked, "Working with a fine coalition, our military went to Afghanistan, destroyed the training camps of al Qaeda and put the Taliban out of business forever."

Out of business forever?
Dec. 5, 2003:
Did Bush enhance his bulge for carrier photo op?
by Jerome Doolittle, Bad Attitudes
Excerpt:  You learn in flight school to cinch those straps tight -- while you're seated in the cockpit -- in the event that you have to eject or bail out. But every kid learns, quickly, that you don't stand up with those straps tight; it pinches your nuts. And yes, Bush would have been very familiar with that.
Dec. 3, 2003:
After super-secret photo op in Baghdad, Bush aides lied about trivial details

Dec. 2, 2003:
"I came to this office to solve problems and not pass them on to future presidents and future generations." --George W. Bush

Dec. 2, 2003:
Firefight leaves 46 Iraqis dead (my ass)

Nov. 27, 2003:
Bush to troops in Iraq:
"You are defending the American people from danger..."
Comment: The only American people being defended from danger by U.S. troops in Iraq are the U.S. troops in Iraq -- and they're only in danger because they're there.   H&HH   PERMANENT LINK
Nov. 27, 2003:
FDA admits it's seen no bad drugs from Canada
Comment: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) says it's "unsafe" for Americans to buy Canadian prescription drugs at vastly cheaper prices than they can be bought in America, but the lie is so obvious I feel silly even pointing it out.

It isn't "unsafe," it's just unprofitable for giant U.S. pharmaceutical corporations, and the FDA is THEIR spokesman, not YOURS.   Rebecca   PERMANENT LINK
Nov. 26, 2003:
Fight abroad or at home, Bush says
(A pathological liar gives a pathological speech)
# Bush continues to shamelessly lie and wag the dog while shedding phony crocodile tears for deaths of his cannon fodder...
=Liberez L'Ours=

"We're fighting the terrorists on the streets of Afghanistan and Iraq so we do not have to fight them on the streets of our own cities ... "

# That's a lie. The only terrorists fighting on American streets are the FBI, DEA, ATF, and ETC.
=Grandma & Grandpa=

"This war began on Sept. 11, 2001 ..."

# That's another lie (yawn). Anyone who's not hypnotized knows Iraq had no significant connection to international terrorism.
=Grandma & Grandpa=

"Freedom is not America's gift to the world freedom is the almighty God's gift to every person who lives in the world."

# I've never seen evidence Bush knows what the word 'freedom' means, but evidence he's against it accumulates every day of the year.
=Grandma & Grandpa=

Under White House rules, reporters were not allowed to interview soldiers before, during or after the president's speech.

# ... while censoring freedom of the press with the heavy hand of "freedom"
=Liberez L'Ours=


Cheney still lying, too

"In Iraq, a ruthless dictator cultivated weapons of mass destruction and the means to deliver them. He gave support to terrorists and had a relationship with al Qaeda -- and his regime is no more."

# Same old bull. Saddam Hussein had no weapons of mass destruction, and had no means to deliver the weapons he didn't have. There's no credible evidence Hussein gave any support to international terrorists, no evidence al-Qaida was anything but another enemy to the Iraqi regime.
=H&HH=
Nov. 25, 2003:
Bush-Cheney rhetoric "almost absurd,"
says national security expert
Excerpt:   "Iraq has now become the central front in the war on terror," he said at a Bush-Cheney fund-raiser in Cleveland and at a fund-raising reception for Rep. Anne Northrup in Louisville, Ky. "We are aggressively striking the terrorists in Iraq, defeating them there, so we do not have to face them on the streets of our own cities."

It's a line that generates applause. It's also a line that makes several military and intelligence analysts cringe.
Nov. 24, 2003:
Commerce official denies U.S. protectionism
(blatantly lying, of course)


Oct. 20, 2003:
CIA analyst says, sure, Bush lied his ass off about Iraq

Oct. 14, 2003:
Fake letter from soldier in Iraq was desperate PR move
by Randolph T. Holhut, Albion Monitor

Sept. 29, 2003:
Cheney, Bremer, Wolfowitz lie about poll results
showing Iraqis' love for American invaders


Sept. 26, 2003:
Bush is not a good tapdancer, continues to contradict himself on WMD

Sept 17, 2003:
Two years of lies about Sept. 11:
The new Warren Commission

by Helen & Harry Highwater, Unknown News

Sept. 17, 2003:
Cheney sees "possible" connection
between Saddam Hussein, Sept. 11
... but even Rumsfeld knows better
Sept. 17, 2003:
Mr. Vice-President: Please stop lying
Editorial, Star-Tribune [Minneapolis-St. Paul]
Sept. 12, 2003:
Victims of White House lie about 9-11 pollution
sign up for study of how bad their health got f***ed up


Aug. 29, 2003:
Rice and Rumsfeld lied about occupied Germany
to make occupied Iraq seem less a quagmire


Feb. 24 - Aug. 25, 2003:
Attack of the drones

Aug. 15, 2003:
US officials are lying about suicide attempts at Guantanamo prison

Aug. 9, 2003:
White House ordered EPA to lie about toxicity of 9/11 dust
The follow-up news
Aug. 8, 2003:
US official said it was "patently false," but US forces did use napalm in Iraq

June 11, 2003:
Promise to investigate war bombing
of Baghdad market was a lie


July 20, 2003:
US air raids starting in mid-2002 were preparation for 2003 invasion of Iraq

June 27, 2003:
Ten appalling lies we were told about Iraq
by Christopher Scheer, AlterNet
Excerpt:  The mainstream press, after an astonishing two years of cowardice, is belatedly drawing attention to the unconscionable level of administrative deception. They seem surprised to find that when it comes to Iraq, the Bush administration isn't prone to the occasional lie of expediency but, in fact, almost never told the truth.
April 23, 2003:
The lie that cost $16.9 billion (so far)
Rebuilding Iraq won't cost U.S. more than $1.7 billion


Feb. 21, 2003:
Justice Dept's stats on terrorism
prosecutions are largely lies


Feb. 15, 2003:
US claims on Iraq called into question
Inspectors pick holes in Powell allegations


Jan. 16, 2003
White House promises 'smoking gun intelligence' on Iraq

Nov. 22, 2002:
Bin Laden tape "faked," say Swiss experts

Oct. 7, 2002:
Too many lies to count
A speech by President George W. Bush, in Cincinnati, Ohio


May 31, 2002:
White House flip-flops on nation-building

May 23, 2002:
Rice lied about nature of pre-9/11 warnings

Jan. 17, 2002:
Bush lied about Ken Lay's support
during Texas Governor's race


Sept. 28, 2001:
White House lied about threat to Air Force One
The fact that top officials, at a time of extraordinary crisis and public anxiety, lied to protect the president's image has immense implications. If, within 24 hours of the terror attacks, the White House was giving out disinformation to deceive the American public and world opinion, then none of the claims made by the government from September 11 to the present can be taken for good coin.

If Bush lied about his activities on the day of the attacks, why should anyone assume he has not lied about the government's investigation, the identity of the perpetrators, the motives and aims of US war preparations, and the intent and scope of expanded police powers demanded by his administration to wiretap, search and seize, and detain suspects?
Sept 23-24, 2001:
U.S. to publish terror evidence on bin Laden
Comment: So far as we know, no public documentation of the evidence against bin Laden and al-Qaida has ever been released by the State Department, or any office of U.S. government.

For any other crime, from shoplifting to serial killers, suspects are assumed innocent until proven guilty. For this crime -- the murder of thousands -- President Bush announced who was guilty almost immediately, and America went to war.

Bin Laden and al-Qaida are terrorists and murderers; there's ample evidence of that. But so long as the evidence comnnecting them to September 11 remains classified, too secret for citizens to see, every mention of bin Laden and al-Qaida as the masterminds of Sept. 11 is, essentially, taking the Bush administration at its word.   H&HH   PERMANENT LINK
May 8, 2001:
George W. Bush on "frivolous lawsuits"
Bush v. Enterprise Rent-A-Car



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