A former high-ranking Republican official, also a well-respected
author, tells the American people to stop listening to Bush
administration lies about Iraqi war and claims the mainstream media
will not publish anything he writes against Bush or his
policies.
A former Assistant Secretary of the
Treasury under President Reagan stepped back into the political
spotlight this
week, expressing doubt about the official 9/11 story
and claiming "if they lied to us about Ruby Ridge, Waco and weapons
of mass destruction in Iraq, why should we believe them
now."
Paul Craig Roberts, listed by Who’s Who
in America as one of the 1,000 most influential political thinkers
in the world, has evolved over the years into a major Bush basher as
well as neo con critic. Roberts said he hasn’t changed his political
ideology or jumped from the Republican-conservative ship but "just
can’t respect a party leadership who doesn’t respect the
truth."
He is another in the long list of
"Republican faithful," including top-ranking government and military
officials who have left or been pushed out Washington, since Bush’s
neo con followers continue demonstrating a lack of desire and
patience to compromise even with conservatives refusing "to toe the
neo con line."
Expressing doubt about the government’s
official version of 9/11but deferring detailed criticism to the
experts, Roberts concerns come on the heels of recent criticism
leveled by Morgan Reynolds, a former chief economist in the Bush I
administration.
Reynolds is the highest-ranking public
official so far to step forward and criticize the government account
of 9/11, calling the government story "bogus" and saying the WTC
most likely fell from a controlled demolition.
Saying 9/11 is only a part of a
mysterious but deadly neo- con puzzle, Roberts looked back at
history for some answers
"They (neo cons) are making such
fatalistic mistakes and are about as insane as Hitler and the Nazi
Party when they invaded Russia in the dead of the winter," said
Roberts who now, as a hobby, syndicates a national newspaper column,
adding to his long and impressive list of academic, journalistic and
political credentials.
Serving under President Reagan in
1981-82, Treasury Secretary Regan credited him with having a major
role in the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981. He was then awarded
the Treasury Department’s Meritorious Service Award for "his
outstanding contributions to the formulation of United States
economic policy."
Roberts is given much of the credit for
structuring and drafting a major portion of the famous Kemp-Roth
bill as well as having a leading role in developing bipartisan
support for a supply-side economic policy. In 1987, the French
government recognized him as "the artisan of a renewal in economic
science and policy after half a century of state interventionism,"
inducted him into the Legion of Honor.
Even with his impressive background,
Roberts, once a former columnist for Business Week and a thorn in
the side of liberals back then, said "the times have drastically
changed," adding his views are no longer welcome in the mainstream
media if they are critical of Bush or any of his
policies.
" It’s like the Nazis removing dissent
without using the Gestapo," said Roberts, whose articles are
circulated widely on the Internet and appear regularly in the
American Free Press, an alternative publication. "Most publications,
like the Washington Times, for example, will not print anything
critical of Bush, his strategies and, definitely, anything seriously
opposing the war is off base."
Although professing to know "a little
about engineering" from his undergraduate days at Georgia Tech,
Roberts deferred formulating any serious conclusions about the fall
of the WTC, but expressed doubt as to the credibility of the entire
official version based on past government lies uncovered at Waco,
Ruby Ridge and the threat of WMD in Iraq.
Roberts said the recent statements made
by Reynolds, however, reveals just how flimsy and unbelievable the
government story comes across.
"This is not some kind of conspiracy nut
or kook talking. He is a man with extremely qualified credentials,
whose opinions I respect," said Roberts referring to Reynolds’
comments which have been highly publicized across the
country.
"The real story is not Morgan Reynolds or
myself, but why have so many former Republican conservatives and top
ranking officials who disagree with the neo cons been systematically
run out of Washington? And, also, why is the media so intent on
covering up the Bush-neo con agenda and all the mistakes surrounding
it?
"I guess the real story about 9/11 is
about what the people are actually saying. I’ve gotten hundreds of
emails in response to my columns and many of them talk about not
getting the truth from the government or the media about what really
happened at the World Trade Center. I know many qualified engineers
and scientists have said the WTC collapsed from explosives. In fact,
if you look at the manner in which it fell, you have to give their
conclusions credibility."
Besides 9/11 and blasting the neo con
economic agenda as suicide for America, Roberts in his latest column
seriously attacks the Bush Iraq war policy. Without mincing words,
he wrote:
" The reasons they (the American people)
were given by their president, vice president, secretary of defense,
national security adviser, secretary of state, and the sycophantic
media were nothing but a pack of lies."
Accusing Bush of also lying to the
American people in his recent June 18 radio address, he
added:
"Bush again lied to the American people
when he told them that the U.S. was forced into invading Iraq
because of the Sept. 11 attack on the WTC.
"Bush, the greatest disgrace that America
has ever had to suffer, actually repeated at this late date the
monstrous lie for which he is infamous throughout the world: ‘We
went to war because we were attacked, and we are at war today
because there are still people out there who want to harm our
country and hurt our citizens.’"
Roberts’ other impressive credentials
include being awarded a John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for
Political Economy, a Senior Research Fellow at the Hoover
Institution, Stanford University, and Research Fellow at the
Independent Institute.
In 1992, he received the Warren Brookes
Award for Excellence in Journalism and, a year later, the Forbes
Media Guide ranked him as one of the top seven journalists in the
country. He was also Distinguished Fellow at the Cato Institute from
1993 to 1996 while also from 1982 through 1993, holding the William
E. Simon Chair in Political Economy at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies.
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