THE LAST SMEAR

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Big Alan

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Ben Barnes: John Kerry's Unbelievable Last-Ditch Weapon



By Lowell Ponte



FrontPageMagazine.com | September 8, 2004

"THE LAST SMEAR," THE DOOMSDAY WEAPON that John F. Kerry's sinking campaign desperately hopes can snatch victory from the jaws of defeat, is ready and is scheduled to be launched against President George W. Bush on Wednesday night, September 8, on CBS' weeknight version of "60 Minutes."

This bomb is an already-taped Dan Rather interview with former Texas Lt. Governor Ben Barnes in which Barnes will hint, and deceptive CBS editing will strongly imply, that during the Vietnam War the Bush family pressured him to use politics to get a young George W. Bush into the Texas Air National Guard.

"Barnes comes off as very sympathetic," the American Spectator quotes an unnamed CBS news producer with whom its reporter spoke. "This is a guy who has been under intense, brutal pressure from a family that is very powerful in Texas. You get the impression that he just can't take it anymore."



This story "is clearly the Kerry campaign's response to the Swift Vets controversy," noted one source quoted by the American Spectator. It is an attempt to undermine President Bush's credibility in the same way that testimony by 254 of Kerry's fellow Swift boat veterans undercut his carefully-cultivated Kennedy-esque image of honor and heroism during the Vietnam War.



But before anybody swallows the story Ben Barnes tells, America needs to know some things about Mr. Barnes that CBS and the rest of the establishment media are unlikely to mention.



Ben Barnes was born in 1938 in De Leon, Texas southwest of Fort Worth. After graduating from the University of Texas and earning a law degree from Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Barnes in 1960, at age 22, was elected to the Texas House of Representatives. He served there until 1969, the last four of these years as the youngest Speaker of the House in Texas history. From 1969 until 1973 Barnes was the state's Lt. Governor.



President Lyndon B. Johnson compared the young political wunderkind to Thomas Jefferson and predicted that Ben Barnes would be the next Texan elected President. The leftwing Texas Monthly called Barnes the "golden boy" of Texas politics.



But "after he was involved in a bribery and stock fraud scandal in the early 1970s," wrote leftwing Mother Jones Magazine, Barnes "never held office again. He was involved with a number of banks and thrifts that were mentioned during the S&L crisis, and forced into bankruptcy when the Texas thrift industry cratered in the late 1980s."



By the late 1990s Barnes had become a millionaire lobbyist working for GTech, a company that operated lotteries in 37 states including Texas. The Texas lottery was losing money, in part because of a sweetheart deal in which Barnes received 3.5 cents for every ticket sold – more than $3 million per year. When the Texas lottery commission re-bid GTech's contract, the company sued and – after buying Barnes out for $23 million – hired a new lobbyist. A fired Texas lottery director sued, claiming that he had taken the fall for GTech because Barnes had a National Guard story embarrassing to then-Governor George W. Bush.



Barnes, facing potential charges of yet more wrongdoing, told his National Guard story in a deposition in a successful effort to politically deflect his own responsibility in this matter. In multiple re-tellings since 1999, the details of Barnes' story have changed several times. Its gist is Barnes' claim that when he was the Democratic Lt. Governor he intervened to get Republican Houston Congressman George H.W. Bush's son George W. into the Texas Air National Guard (alongside the sons of Governor John Connally and Senator Lloyd Bentsen, Democrats). Barnes now says he is "ashamed" of this. Trouble is, George W. Bush began the first of six years' service in the National Guard in 1968, but Barnes did not become Lt. Governor of Texas until 1969. Barnes has acknowledged that no member of the Bush family sought his help, but claims he was approached by a Bush family friend (who died three years before Barnes began telling his self-serving story).



Because Barnes' tale rests solely on his word, how good is his word? Given his long past of shady dealings, the shipwreck of his career on scandal, and the changes and inconsistencies of his story, Barnes appears to be less than a credible witness.



More doubt is raised by this partisan Democrat's motives. Barnes promoted an earlier version of his story in 1999 and 2000 in a clear attempt to damage the presidential campaign of George W. Bush. And Barnes apparently has had the same aim in reviving this story, long ago discredited by an investigation by the liberal Los Angeles Times, in 2004. As CNN reported in 1999, "the Los Angeles Times said it found no evidence that either Bush or his father, former President George Bush, had personally tried to influence or pressure anyone to get the younger Bush a place in the Texas Guard."



Ben Barnes has a large vested interest in the outcome of the 2004 election. He is a co-chairman of John F. Kerry's 2004 presidential campaign. Barnes, as CBS News reported in June 2004, has made bundled contributions of more than $500,000 to Kerry's campaign. Barnes owns a home near his friend Kerry's home in Nantucket on the Massachusetts shore.



For many years Barnes and the lobbying firm he founded in Austin, EntreCorp, have made many millions of dollars by acting as the go-between bringing special interest groups and companies together with highly-placed Democrat officeholders. The Center for Responsive Politics has listed Barnes as the third largest all-around Democratic donor in America 1999-2004. So influential and important is Barnes to the Democratic Party, as this column reported last January, that Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle has nicknamed this fat cat money man and lobbyist "the fifty-first Democratic Senator."



If Kerry becomes President, reported the Fort Worth Star-Telegram in July 2004, Ben Barnes is at the top of the list of those close to the Kerry Administration likely to become "gatekeepers and endorsers for…appointees and job-seekers." Given his sticky-fingered past, Barnes would likely also become a toll-collector at this gate, charging everybody he allows through it, and overnight he could become an even wealthier and more influential political lobbyist and "fixer" serving special interest groups, corporations, nations and individuals.



Given Ben Barnes' shady past, dubious reputation and selfish mercenary motive to defeat President Bush and elect Barnes' close friend and partisan ally John F. Kerry, what honest reporter would give credence to an unsubstantiated Barnes tale calculated to damage President Bush in the final days before the November election?



CBS Anchorman Dan Rather, according to the American Spectator, "has been pushing for months" to get his network's most watched news program "60 Minutes" to air this non-credible story in an already-videotaped interview with Ben Barnes. This interview, the Spectator reported in September 2004, has been edited deceptively to imply that the Bush family directly pressured Barnes to get George W. Bush into the Air National Guard. Rather only half succeeded. His Bush-smearing interview will air on "60 Minutes," but on its lightly-watched Wednesday version this week, not its far more widely seen Sunday night version.



(Dan Rather is an extreme partisan who, while Anchor for the CBS Evening News, participated in a Democratic Party fundraiser in Texas. The leftwing slant of CBS itself has been documented by that network's former reporter Bernard Goldberg in his 2002 best-seller Bias: A CBS Insider Exposes How the Media Distort the News.)



What is the truth about George W. Bush and the Texas Air National Guard? He apparently was chosen to defend his nation in this service for a reason so obvious that few notice it. Mr. Bush was accepted by the Guard less than two weeks before his graduation from Yale University, and Guard commanding officers logically concluded that any young Texan bright and hard-working enough to graduate from such a prestigious university had thereby demonstrated both excellence and high character.



Mr. Bush served in the National Guard for six years. During the first four of those years George W. Bush far surpassed the time and work requirements for National Guard service, and during his remaining two years Mr. Bush complied with those basic requirements. (After returning from his four months in Vietnam, metamorphosed radical anti-war leader John Kerry was required to serve for several years in the Naval Reserve, but the establishment media has refused to investigate charges that Kerry shirked this required duty.)



In mid-1968, when George W. Bush joined the National Guard, Democrats controlled the White House and both houses of Congress, and Texas was still a yellow-dog Democratic one-party state that would take another decade to elect its first Republican governor in more than 100 years. The Republican Bush family had no power to twist then-Texas House Speaker Democrat Ben Barnes' arm, even if it wanted to. The notion that Barnes was "pressured" by the "powerful" Bush family to get George W. into the National Guard is absurd. But this phony claim is apparently what CBS, to rescue the desperate Kerry campaign, is preparing to broadcast.



President Bill Clinton, a master at extracting donor cash in exchange for political favors, once told a group of Methodist ministers: "If you all will take a sinner like [Ben] Barnes, you might take me."



If people can be C-BSed into believing a disreputable sinner like Ben Barnes, America might yet suffer the devastation of a President John Kerry.

Mr. Ponte hosts a national radio talk show Saturdays 6-9 PM Eastern Time (3-6 PM Pacific Time) and Sundays 9 PM-Midnight Eastern Time (6-9 PM Pacific Time) on the Liberty Broadcasting network (formerly TalkAmerica). Internet Audio worldwide is at LibertyBroadcasting .com. The show's live call-in number is 1-866-GO LOWELL (1-866-465-6935). A professional speaker, he is a former Roving Editor for Reader's Digest.
 
NBC and perky Katie are going to have a 3 day love feast with Kitty Kelley trying to destroy Pres Bush. Barnes with Rather. And the Libs say there is no media bias? I think all so called news people, not opinion shows, should wear a button saying who they will/did vote for. No one on Fox news would mind, but all the others would howl.
 
Everyone in America sould read this post and all of the other unbiased articles, not the crap the media keeps forcing down our throats!
 
CircleA":2vmggkj3 said:
check this out



'60 Minutes' Documents on Bush Might Be Fake

http://www.cnsnews.com//ViewPolitics.asp?Page=\Politics\archive\200409\POL20040909d.html

can't even believe what is written anymore (if we ever could when it comes to politics)


Alex


This news agency is about as credible as one of my college newspaper reporters. How do you radicals find this conspiracy theory trash? Makes me laugh at the lengths you'll go to to protect this spoiled rich Nam dodging dog.
 
Liberal Cattlemen oxymoron
Socialist Cattlemen Unbelievable

I here a lot talking about an old war record. We need to worry about todays War record. Not Yesterdays . I am more interesred in Kerry's voting record. On every turn he has voted to place our young men in harms way.
Just wonder how many of your High school buddies served and didn't come back. What was your draft number, still rememember mine
1A 256

[/b]We Are At WAR Today.
 
BlackPowder - it has been along time since you blessed us with your insightful views. And we were thankful!

Now you attempt to insult me - whom you don't even know - by calling me a radical and accuse me of some conspiracy "stuff". When in reality the conspiracy most likely falls on the other side of the fence. Far too many people are disputing the documents.

It would be one thing IF the president was the ONLY one to ever join the guard to avoid over seas or combat duty. But his is not the case, and I am SURE - REAL SURE, that if you had the opportunity you dang sure would have taken it.

Alex
 
CircleA":3o5hjday said:
It would be one thing IF the president was the ONLY one to ever join the guard to avoid over seas or combat duty. But his is not the case, and I am SURE - REAL SURE, that if you had the opportunity you dang sure would have taken it.

Alex

How does anyone of us know that President Bush Joined the l Guard to avoid overseas combat duty.
His unit was not deployed. Many others went and fought. He had no idea if his unit would be deployed or not.
 
How does anyone of us know that President Bush Joined the l Guard to avoid overseas combat duty.
His unit was not deployed. Many others went and fought. He had no idea if his unit would be deployed or not.

No one seems to understand that around here la4angus. I have pointed that out as well.
 
Funny the John F'en Kerry supporters love to focus on John F'en Kerry's 4 months of service in Nam and go nuts when G. W. Bush supports bring up his 20 year Senate record.

In 5 years of service G. W. missed one physical.

The document was typed in MS Word. MS Word was not available in 1972.

Tod

BLACKPOWER":2bjg9w2h said:
CircleA":2bjg9w2h said:
check this out



'60 Minutes' Documents on Bush Might Be Fake

http://www.cnsnews.com//ViewPolitics.asp?Page=\Politics\archive\200409\POL20040909d.html

can't even believe what is written anymore (if we ever could when it comes to politics)


Alex


This news agency is about as credible as one of my college newspaper reporters. How do you radicals find this conspiracy theory trash? Makes me laugh at the lengths you'll go to to protect this spoiled rich Nam dodging dog.
 
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