|
Voice
of the White House
In
recent past issues, we have carried comments from a very well-iniformed
source inside the White House. Some of these remarks, most
especially one about Bush’s physical and mental problems, drew an
enormous number of viewers and hundreds of inquiries, most
especially from foreign press entities. Our source was the first to
expose, and we were the first to make public, the accusations that
the President of the United States was a man that suffered from
serious psychological problems. He also revealed ongoing plans to
attack Iran. Since our
initial publication of his postings, there has been increasing
interest in the subject and herewith, we present additional input
from inside the White House. If you have a weak stomach, do not read
the following material. Not being able to either confirm of deny any
of this information, we present it without comment or endorsement.
October
28, 2004: “Well, things are rapidly winding down to the election.
Plans here are to fight fiercely for each and every vote and use any
method imaginable if it gets Bush elected. Rove has come up with a
long list of dirty tricks from stealing ballots, intimidating
potential voters, messing with computer generated results, dragging
everyone involved into various courts to tie things up for months,
bribery, theft, character assassination are all part of Fat Karl’s
trick box. Around the White House, Rove has awesome and absolute
power and has no
difficulty about using it to wreak havoc on anyone who gets in his
crosshairs. Two weeks ago, give or take a day or so, I personally
heard Rove say, concerning Pat Robertson’s remark about having
warned Bush about the consequences of
invading Iraa”. 'We will fuck him. Do you hear me? We will
fuck him. We will ruin him. Like no one has ever fucked him!'"
Rove used to work for Donald Segretti, Nixon’s hit man who went to
prison after Watergate. We know that in 1970, Fat Karl broke into
the campaign offices of an Illinois Democrat, Alan Dixon, and stole
boxes of his letterheads and envelopes. On these Fat Karl forged up
nasty letters which he then sent out to everyone in the district.
And another typical bit of Rove filthiness for you: In 2000 when it
looked like McCain might beat Bush in the primaries, Rove has
laughingly admitted, in my presence and others, that he hired a
front telemarketer to call all over South Carolina asking responders
if they would vote for McCain if they knew that he had a bastard
child by a black woman. I have a thick file of Fat Karl’s dirty
businesses and of course, with such an evil, distorted and criminal
background, why are we surprised that Fat Karl is a devout
Pentecostal Christian? We are not. Goes with the territory, and
birds of a feather flock together.”
October
30, 2004: “In view of your interest in Rove, I have dug into my
files and put together a piece on Fat Karl that might give you and
your readers an insight into the Gods and Monsters that now
effectively run the United States. Karl has always gotten a legion
of toadies to do his dirty work but he has left enough of a trail
behind him to eventually destroy his career for good…but not
before he trashes anyone and anything that annoys him or interferes
with his precious boyfriend, Georgie the Weasel.
Karl Rove: The éminence
grise of the White House
Rove, Karl C. b. December 25, 1950, in
Denver Colorado, manages the Office of Political Affairs, the Office
of Public Liaison, and the Office of Strategic Initiatives at the
White House. Rove attended the University of Utah, the University of
Texas at Austin and George Mason University. No academic degree. He
has taught at the LBJ School of Public Affairs and in the Journalism
Department at the University of Texas at Austin.
In 1980
he married Valerie
Wainright, a wealthy Houston woman from the Bush social circle. Was
divorced and married his second wife, Darby, in 1986. They have a
son, 16.
He resides at 4925 Weaver Terrace, NW, Washington, DC 20016.
White House email address: karlrove@NCR.disa.mil
From his official biography
Born
on Christmas Day 1950 in Denver, Colorado, as one of five siblings,
Karl C. Rove grew up in both Colorado and Utah, where his father was
employed as a geologist. On his 19th birthday, his father abandoned
the family and soon afterwards, Rove found out that this man was not
his biological father. He was informed of this by his family. His
mother committed suicide in Reno, Nevada in 1980.
While
in a Utah high school, Rove was seen as an intelligent but
loud-mouthed, highly opinionated eccentric and was not popular with
his peers. School records indicate that Rove was highly
argumentative with both his teachers and his peers and was known to
use “vulgar and suggestive” language to
female students. He
had no girlfriends but spent all of his time in obsessive pursuit of
various political offices in the school . It was remarked by
students and faculty sponsors alike that Rove was intensely fixated
on political activities “to the point of obsession” and that his
methods of seeking school offices were highlighted by
“unprincipled campaigns, noteworthy by their viciousness”
towards any rival. Rove always wore jackets and ties in school and
displayed an attitude of pompous self-importance that made him even
more unpopular with staff and students alike. He had no interest in
women, student social or sporting events but dedicated all of his
school time in political activity. It was noted that when he
obtained a position, he apparently lost all interest in it and
merely applied himself to gaining the next higher position.
Rove
had very little pocket money and was accused several times of
stealing money from student’s personal lockers. His family had no
strong political affiliations but Karl became fixated on Richard
Nixon before he was ten and was a very loud and persistent supporter
of him.
Like
George W. Bush Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, Rove managed to
avoid the Vietnam draft with a college deferment, but dropped
out of the University of Utah in 1971, never obtaining a
degree. While at the University of Utah, Rove began his real-life
political career as the executive director of the College Republican National Committee. He held
this position until 1972 when he became the National Chairman of the
College Republicans (1973-1974). As chairman, Rove had access to
many powerful politicians and government officials during the Watergate
scandal, including then CIA
director George H. W. Bush. For the next few years, he
worked in various Republican circles and assisted George
H. W. Bush's 1980 presidential campaign. Rove's greatest
claim to fame at the time was that he had introduced Bush to Lee Atwater. A signature tactic of Rove was to attack an
opponent on the opponent's strongest issue.
Another tactic used since high school, was to launch smear campaigns
against any political rival no matter how insignificant. Rove early
on was a master at slander, usually imputing sexual deviations to
his opponents but always being careful to divorce himself from the
resulting reactions. Reports in his school files indicate that he
was repeatedly warned by school authorities about these allegations
of sexual deviancy but Rove always very smugly denied being their
author. A school district psychiatrist wrote that Rove was sexually
inadequate and had developed an “almost pathological hatred” of
so-called “normal” students. The general consensus of Karl Rove
in high school is that he was very bright but obsessive about
gaining some kind of control over his fellow students and doing so
by publicly humiliating them. Rove was termed “arrogant,
untruthful and very destructive” in his interpersonal reactions
while in school.
When
Rove went on to college, he only increased his intense focus on
almost any kind of politics but now manifested an intense attraction
to ultra-conservative politics while studying at the University of
Utah, where he described himself as a "diehard Nixonite"
often expressing violent hatred for what he termed "all those
Commies" in Vietnam. He also expressed fury and contempt for
fellow students who did not support the war and began circulating
forged newspaper articles claiming criminal arrests for sexual
deviancy on the part of campus liberals. Rove was a "Young
Republican" back when being a Young Republican wasn't cool (a
historical era ranging from 1959 through the present). As a student
at the prestigious University of Utah, Rove teamed up with a young
Lee Atwater to seize control of the College Republicans political
club in the early 1970s.
Lee
Atwater was later to become notorious as the man who sealed Michael
Dukakis's defeat in the 1988 presidential election with a blatantly
racist television advert demonising the Democratic candidate for
offering a weekend prison release to a violent black prisoner in
Massachusetts. Atwater and Rove became lifelong friends as well as
colleagues, sharing a very similar outlook including a passion for
Machiavelli's The Prince, the ultimate political document
about the ends justifying the means. In his campaign to seize the
nationwide College Republicans by running for the chairmanship in
1973, Rove quickly reverted to type and left a mass of destruction
behind him as he elbowed, kicked, bit and otherwise damaged any
person standing in his way. His hallmark then, as now, was the
launching of vicious and almost always invented, slander against his
perceived enemies. Prime
among these accusations were allegation of sexual aberrations, a
subject that Rove has always been obsessed with. In the College
Republican race, Rove challenged the legitimacy of every delegate
who voted for his opponent, and came up with an entirely bogus
alternate slate of delegates he claimed had greater standing. The
matter was ultimately decided in Rove's favor by the then head of
the Republican National Committee, George H. W. Bush. Both men have
remained unwaveringly loyal to each other since although the senior
Bush has been careful not to identify himself with Rove’s savage
malice.
His
highly aggressive and completely unprincipled ad homonym attacks on
anyone in his way won the 22-year-old Rove a walk-on role in the
Watergate saga that was consuming the nation. A report was published
in the Washington Post on August 10, 1973, titled "[Republican
party] Probes Official as Teacher of Tricks", gave an account,
based on tape recordings, of how Rove and a colleague had been
touring the country giving young Republicans political combat
training, in which they recalled their feats of Republic
partisanship , such as Rove's Chicago theft at the Dixon
headquarters. In the autumn
election season of 1970, a chubby, simpering and
bespectacled teenager turned up at the Chicago campaign
headquarters of Alan Dixon, a Democrat running for state treasurer
in Illinois. No one paid the newcomer much attention when he
arrived, or when he left soon afterwards. Nor did anyone in the
office make the connection between the mystery volunteer and 1,000
invitations on campaign stationery that began circulating in
Chicago's red-light district and soup kitchens, promising "free
beer, free food, girls and a good time for nothing" for
all-comers at Dixon's headquarters.
The
incident marked the genesis of the Rove-Bush axis and it was in
Washington that Rove met the younger Bush. He literally fell in love
with the future President’s son. "Huge amounts of charisma,
swagger, cowboy boots, flight jacket, wonderful smile, just charisma
- you know, wow," Rove recalled years later. In 1977, Rove was
sent to Texas, in theory to run a political action committee, but
according to one Texan political consultant who knew him at the
time, "It was really to baby-sit Bush back when Bush was
drinking". The younger Bush, as is well known, was a heavy
binge drinker and while intoxicated, was known to be completely
self-destructive, cursing family friends, urinating in public, once,
even in the White House during the Reagan administration. Bush’s college records, as well as law enforcement reports,
indicate that Bush’s drinking caused several minor accidents and
that when apprehended he cursed and threatened police officers,
claiming that his father would “get them” if they didn’t let
him go. There was also the question of sexual orientation. Bush was
known to associate with openly gay students and is known to have
developed an “especially intimate” relationship with one student
while at the Harvard Business School.
While
trying to keep George W. Bush out of trouble, Rove set up a direct
mail political operation, calling it Rove & Company. Its purpose
was to identify potential Republican voters and target them with
pro-Republican campaign literature and voter registration forms.
Rove’s
direct-mail political consulting business and worked on Republican
campaigns in Texas. He tapped into oil money and other corporate
interests and helped a succession of candidates to clean out the old
Democratic order in the South. One campaign, for a spot on the
Alabama state supreme court, was so nasty it led to a year-long
court battle in which Rove accused his opponent - who had led in the
initial vote tally - of systematic vote fraud and thereby prevented
a batch of all-important absentee ballots from being counted at all.
This same underhanded tactic was repeated again in Florida in the
200 presidential election, an election controlled with an iron hand
by Karl Rove and run according to his dictum of always attacking the
other side by every means available including slander, fraud ,
intimidation and outright blackmail
They
talked about a run for Texas governor in 1990, but decided to wait
until the senior Bush was no longer President. .In 1994, Rove
persuaded Bush to run for Governor of Texas. They waited until
George H./W. Bush was not longer in office because the senior Bush
disliked and disapproved of Rove’s vicious personal attacks on his
opponents. It was Rove who decided to oppose a very popular
incumbent, Ann Richards, and Rove developed a political strategy
based on appalling venom, often accusing Richards of being a
practicing Lesbian, which she was not.
Every
day for two years, the Bush campaign put out negative stories about
Governor Richards, hinting she was soft on crime and overly fond of
homosexuals, culminating in a devastating revelation that a
prominent Richards appointee had lied about her college education.
From the start, Rove kept Bush away from unscripted situations,
offering him just three or four key talking points which the
candidate repeated ad nauseam until the electorate not only
memorized them but also started to believe them. Rove also became
adept at handling the media, rigorously controlling their access and
never shying away from calling a dissenting reporter at home and
screaming.
Although
Rove is
conventionally religious, he does not share Bush's religiosity, but
the two men have a similar antipathy to East Coast intellectual
types and a preference for political discourse that is simple,
forceful and appealing to the gut more than the head. One of Rove's
favorite books is The Dream and the Nightmare, an excoriation
of the progressive values of the 1960s by a neoconservative thinker
called Myron Magnet. Magnet blames poverty on liberal permissiveness
and suggests the problem is best left to Christian charities - an
embryonic form of what Rove and Bush would come to call
"compassionate conservatism". Rove is a master coiner of
such political labels. "Compassionate conservatism"
manages to appeal both to the religious right and also to some
moderates.
In
March 2001, Rove met with
executives from Intel,
successfully advocating a merger between a Dutch company and an Intel company supplier.
Rove owned $100,000 in Intel Co. stock at the time. In June 2001, Rove met with two
pharmaceutical industry lobbyists. At the time, Rove held almost
$250,000 in drug industry stocks. On 30 June 2001,
Rove divested his stocks in 23 companies, which included more than
$100,000 in each Enron,
Boeing, General
Electric, and Pfizer.
Rove was one of the biggest holders of Enron stock among White House
staffers, with between $100,000 and $250,000 worth of shares when he
was appointed. He was required to sell them when the Bush
administration took office On
30 June 2001,
the White House admitted that Rove was involved in administration
energy policy meetings, while at the same time holding stock in
energy companies including Enron. Rove
also recommended the Republican strategist Ralph Reed (former
executive director of the Christian Coalition) to Enron for a
consulting contract as Bush was considering whether to run for
president.
Although
it has become a common belief that the U.S. attack on Iraq was
instigated by the extreme right of the Republican party or the
macninations of the very pro-Israeli neo-cons, the actual movitating
force behind what has deveoped into a terrible debacle was Karl
Rove. He believes, and has stated, that a wartime president is
impossible to attack and that if Bush were seen as a wartime
president, he would be guaranateed
two full terms. In spite of many negative reports on the
feasibility of such an attack by US intelligence agencies, to
include the CIA and the Pentagon, Rove easily persuaded Bush to
abandon his military activities in Afghanistan for a much more
dramatic pounce on oil-rich Iraq.
A
former U.S. Ambassador , Joseph Wilson was one of the biggest
political liabilities the White House faced in 2003. Wilson had been
dispatched to Niger early in 2002 to investigate whether Iraq was
trying to buy uranium there. Turns out, they weren't. He reported
this information to the White House, which promptly ignored it. Bush
cited the uranium story in his 2003 State of the Union address,
Cheney cited it repeatedly, and the State Department cited it in
several of its endless justifications for why the U.S. just had to
invade Iraq. When Wilson wrote an op-ed piece for the New York
Times, he incurred the spiteful fury of Karl Rove and shortly after
this article was publish, with attendant negativity for the
President, a leak to a right wing White House friendly reporter
disclosed that Wilson’s wife was a serving CIA agent. As this is a
clear violation of federal law, a desultory investigation was
launched but without result. Many individuals attached to the White
House have put the blame for this squarely on Rove, who denies it.
It is a hallmark of his destructive activities that he always hides
behind others and piously claims to be the injured party.
Then,
just a few short weeks after the fall of Baghdad, Rove had the
President dress up in a flight suit and land on the aircraft carrier
USS Abraham Lincoln beneath the slogan "Mission
Accomplished", in what appeared to be a brazen photo op for the
presidential re-election campaign. Hindsight and the mounting body
count have taught us that this was a rare Rove play gone wrong. But
it also speaks volumes about the cynicism of an operation willing to
create political sales pitches out of the very gravest issues of war
and peace, life and death.
By
his own account, Rove's sights are set even further into the future
than Bush's re-election. He has spoken about strategic shifts of
power that happen every so often in American history. The precedent
he often refers to was set over a century ago by William McKinley,
another Republican with brilliant advisers, who narrowly defeated a
populist Democrat (William Jennings Bryan) in 1896 and established a
Republican hegemony that lasted more than three decades.
Rove
has stated in closed Republican circles that it is his aim to reduce
the Democratic Party to a virtual cipher and that he intends to
oversee a Republican lock on all three branches of government.
The
Republicans now control the Presidency, the Senate, and the House of
Representatives. Rove's task now is to consolidate that dominance of
the White House and Capitol Hill and then use it to recast the
Washington's third source of power, the Supreme Court, from its
current cautious conservatism to a more activist and strongly right
wing Republicanism. As the Republican party has virtually been
preempted by both the radical political and even more radical
Christian, right, Rove caters heavily to these groups. Their
ferocity appeals to his own and their tight organization make it far
easier for Rove to control and direct.
|