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"Mark S. Holden" wrote in message ...
Dwight Stewart wrote: "-=jd=-" wrote: Convincing anyone is none of my concern, but I do reserve the right to wonder aloud how a reasonable and prudent person would ignore the mounting list of indicators pointing to obvious forgeries. (snip) Then I trust you won't mind if I reserve the right to wonder aloud why you are so determined to establish, and publically declare, these documents to be forgeries. Possibly because they are fake? Would you like voters to rely on forged documents when deciding who to vote for? I think the fact someone apparently faked them is more significant than what they say. The allegations about GWB are old - people have had close to 4 years to evaluate how he performs as President. You may or may not like what he's done, but it has more to do with how he will perform if he is re elected than what he may or may not have done over 30 years ago. What's new about these memos is that state that Bush's superior officers were aware that Bush was performing unsatisfactorily, that they were being pressured to let Bush slide through and that they were expected to falsify Bush's records. Those who worked with the memos' author, Killian, are saying that while the memos may not be authentic, what they say is accurate. Killian's secretary is saying that she did type memos for Killian that said the same things that these memos are saying. Killian's immediate superior officer has said that Killian expressed the same thoughts to him that are in the memos. I think that's the story. Why were they being pressured? Who was pressuring them? We know from the memos that Lt. Colonel Staudt was pressuring them. Was anybody pressuring Staudt? What do we know, what isn't disputed, of Bush's stint in the TANG? Staudt, as Bush's unit commander in 1968 staged a special ceremony for the press so he could have his picture taken administering the oath (after the official oath had been given by a Guard captain earlier.) Staudt was excited about his VIP recruit, this direct appointment, because at his staged ceremony, Bush's father, the congressman, was standing prominently in the background. The 147th, Col. Staudt's Texas unit, was infamous as a way out of Vietnam combat for the politically well connected and celebrity draft avoiders: Both of Sid Adger's sons, Democratic Senator Lloyd Bentsen's son, Republican Senator John Tower's son, and at least seven players for the Dallas Cowboys had been signed into the unit. What made Bush's unfair, favored Guard appointment doubly reprehensible was his total lack of qualifications. Rapid selection into the Guard was reserved for applicants with exceptional experience or skills such as prior Air Force ROTC training, or special engineering, medical, or aviation skills. Tom Hail, a historian for the Texas Air National Guard, had reviewed the Guard's records on Bush for a special exhibit on his service after Bush became governor. Asked about Bush's direct appointment without special skills, Hail said, "I've never heard of that. Generally they did that for doctors only, mostly because we needed extra flight surgeons." Charles Shoemaker, an Air Force veteran who later joined the Texas Air National Guard and retired as a full colonel, said that direct appointments were rare and hard to get, and required extensive credentials. Asked about Bush, he said, "His name didn't hurt, obviously. But it was a commander's decision in those days." When Bush completed basic training, his commander approved him for a "direct appointment." That made him a 2nd Lieutenant without having to go through the usual (very difficult) Officer Candidate School. This special procedure also got Bush into flight school, despite his very low scores on aptitude tests: 25% on a pilot aptitude test (the absolute lowest acceptable grade) and 50% for navigator aptitude. Bush did score 95% on the easier and subjectively graded officer quality test, but the class average is generally 88%. http://www.interventionmag.com/cms/m...icle&sid= 861 In 1968, Bush's father was a newly minted Congressman with a highly coveted seat on the House Ways & Means Committee. Very unusual for such an inexperienced congressman to get on that committee. Very powerful. Just as a reference point, at the time of those memos (1973), Bush had left Congress and was named by Nixon to the Chairmanship of the RNC. This was during the trial for the Watergate plumbers – Deep Throat had just told Woodward that "lives were in danger." Staudt retired around 1972 with the rank of Brigadier General. That's a hefty promotion (2 grades) in such a short time. It's not unheard of, but it is unusual. It's more likely to happen during wartime, on the battlefield. Google Staudt - what he was doing right after he left the Guard raises an eyebrow: "NEIGHBORHOOD DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM Walter B. Staudt is Executive Director of the Neighborhood Development Program, which is In the process of completing a huge drainage project for the western part of Beeville during the latter part of May this year (1973). Forty-two city blocks of property are being drained with storm sewers during heavy rains under this project, and the streets will be paved after the sewer pipes have been laid. The NDP also has started building and repairing houses in a plan to eliminate shacks from the area. One new residence has been completed and six others have been started at the time of this writing. This is a Federal Agency, and the total expenditure on the drainage, paving, and housing program for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1973, is $1.250,000." This, and a whole lot more. Read all about it at: http://www.beeville.net/TheHistorica.../Chapter16.htm Immediately after leaving the National Guard, Buck Staudt was running a company that was receiving federal funds to develop an oil and gas town in Texas. Was Bucky Staudt laying a retirement nest egg by saving politicians' sons from having to go to Viet Nam, letting them hide out in his "Champagne Unit," in exchange for federal funding contracts? Why else would he be so excited to have Congressman Bush's son in his unit? This wasn't a rock star. Did he stage redundant swearing in ceremonies for all of his VIPs' sons? Staudt didn't take in these VIPs sons, save their asses from having to go to Viet Nam, for nothing. There's more to this story. |
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