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In reply to the discussion: Why aren't Bush and Cheney in prison? [View all]Octafish
(55,745 posts)61. Ms. Elizabeth De La Vega has INTEGRITY.
Tomgram:
Elizabeth de la Vega, Bringing Bush to Court
Posted by Tom Engelhardt
TomDispatch at 11:08am, November 27, 2006.
Keep in mind, I've run Tomdispatch.com for only a few years, but I've been a book editor in mainstream publishing for over 30 years. Sometime last spring, I was on the phone with former federal prosecutor Elizabeth de la Vega talking about books she might someday write, when she suddenly said to me, "You know what I'd like to do?" When I asked what, she replied, "What I've done all my life."
"What's that," I wondered innocently enough.
"I'd like to draft an indictment of President Bush and his senior aides, and present the case for prewar intelligence fraud to a grand jury, just as if it were an actual case of mine, using the evidence we already have in the public record. That's the book I'd like to do."
With those three decades of publishing experience, I never doubted that this was an idea whose time should come -- and now it has. De la Vega has drawn up that indictment -- a "hypothetical" one, she hastens to add -- convened that grand jury, and held seven days of testimony. Yes, it's a grand jury directly out of her fertile brain and the federal agents who testify are fictional, but all the facts are true. She understands the case against the Bush administration down to the last detail; and she's produced, to my mind, the book of the post-election, investigative season: United States v. George W. Bush et al.
It's a Tomdispatch.com book project, produced in conjunction with Seven Stories Press, a superb independent publisher, and officially published on December 1st. I think it's simply sensational. It makes a "slam dunk" case for the way we were defrauded into war; despite the grim subject matter, it's a beautifully designed little book, a pleasure to hold in your hand; and, because de la Vega is a natural as a writer, it's also thoroughly enjoyable reading. With genuine pride, I'll be turning the Tomdispatch.com website over to excerpts from the book this week, beginning with the posting of De la Vega's introduction on the Enronization of American foreign policy today. The actual "indictment" will be posted on Wednesday; the first day of grand jury testimony on Thursday.
I assure you, this is must-read event; no less important, this is a must-buy book that must be given over the holiday season to friends, relatives, those who politically disagree with you, and even perhaps sent to Congressional representatives. Please get the investigative ball rolling by purchasing the book at Amazon.com or, if you want to give all involved a few extra cents, directly at the Seven Stories website.
Today, United States v. George W. Bush et al remains in the realm of fiction, but tomorrow, if you lend a hand who knows? Tom
CONTINUED to Ms. De La Vega and her book: A Fraud Worse than Enron
Unlike the warmongers who've profited from their positions of power for decades, she stands up for what is right and lawful. Wow. What a concept, justice.
Elizabeth de la Vega, Bringing Bush to Court
Posted by Tom Engelhardt
TomDispatch at 11:08am, November 27, 2006.
Keep in mind, I've run Tomdispatch.com for only a few years, but I've been a book editor in mainstream publishing for over 30 years. Sometime last spring, I was on the phone with former federal prosecutor Elizabeth de la Vega talking about books she might someday write, when she suddenly said to me, "You know what I'd like to do?" When I asked what, she replied, "What I've done all my life."
"What's that," I wondered innocently enough.
"I'd like to draft an indictment of President Bush and his senior aides, and present the case for prewar intelligence fraud to a grand jury, just as if it were an actual case of mine, using the evidence we already have in the public record. That's the book I'd like to do."
With those three decades of publishing experience, I never doubted that this was an idea whose time should come -- and now it has. De la Vega has drawn up that indictment -- a "hypothetical" one, she hastens to add -- convened that grand jury, and held seven days of testimony. Yes, it's a grand jury directly out of her fertile brain and the federal agents who testify are fictional, but all the facts are true. She understands the case against the Bush administration down to the last detail; and she's produced, to my mind, the book of the post-election, investigative season: United States v. George W. Bush et al.
It's a Tomdispatch.com book project, produced in conjunction with Seven Stories Press, a superb independent publisher, and officially published on December 1st. I think it's simply sensational. It makes a "slam dunk" case for the way we were defrauded into war; despite the grim subject matter, it's a beautifully designed little book, a pleasure to hold in your hand; and, because de la Vega is a natural as a writer, it's also thoroughly enjoyable reading. With genuine pride, I'll be turning the Tomdispatch.com website over to excerpts from the book this week, beginning with the posting of De la Vega's introduction on the Enronization of American foreign policy today. The actual "indictment" will be posted on Wednesday; the first day of grand jury testimony on Thursday.
I assure you, this is must-read event; no less important, this is a must-buy book that must be given over the holiday season to friends, relatives, those who politically disagree with you, and even perhaps sent to Congressional representatives. Please get the investigative ball rolling by purchasing the book at Amazon.com or, if you want to give all involved a few extra cents, directly at the Seven Stories website.
Today, United States v. George W. Bush et al remains in the realm of fiction, but tomorrow, if you lend a hand who knows? Tom
CONTINUED to Ms. De La Vega and her book: A Fraud Worse than Enron
Unlike the warmongers who've profited from their positions of power for decades, she stands up for what is right and lawful. Wow. What a concept, justice.
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The wealthy don't usually buy justice, but instead pay to deprive others of justice.
Dark n Stormy Knight
Jun 2014
#12
Absolutely. They're so powerful they got Newsweak to print a retraction 23 years after the fact.
Octafish
Jun 2014
#13
CIA whistleblower John Stockwell on the implications of the presidency of George H.W. Bush...
Octafish
Jun 2014
#66
Rothschilds are so Old Money they're maybe the Oldest, apart from those stone money in Yap...
Octafish
Jun 2014
#15
''No one could have imagined them taking a plane, slamming it into the Pentagon...the (WTC)...''
Octafish
Jun 2014
#60
"United States v. George W. Bush et al." by Elizabeth De La Vega, a former federal prosecutor.
canoeist52
Jun 2014
#6
Because the Democratic Party Leadership is no longer interested in prosecution of war criminals
Exposethefrauds
Jun 2014
#7
If it weren't for the nazis we would not have the modern police state or military we have today!
Exposethefrauds
Jun 2014
#105
If you have the time..."Elizabeth de la Vega - Making a Case For Impeachment "
canoeist52
Jun 2014
#9
Some guy keeps posting "Money trumps peace". Sums it up better than I could. nt
raouldukelives
Jun 2014
#33
Here's my question: What punishment is appropriate for those who are protecting them?
FiveGoodMen
Jun 2014
#40
Isn't everyone who hasn't -- and continues not to -- even try to investigate and prosecute
FiveGoodMen
Jun 2014
#82
Same reason Nixon didnt go to prison, or Reagan, both having committed treason to get elected
randys1
Jun 2014
#51
Instead of prison, just put Bush, Cheney and the gang on a plane to Iraq and dump them on the
aint_no_life_nowhere
Jun 2014
#59
That is ridiculous, there are those who presided over the Nuremberg trials and have weighed in
Jefferson23
Jun 2014
#93
Understandable..blunt and coarse is on point and should not always be avoided. n/t
Jefferson23
Jun 2014
#99
Because B613 is in charge, and there is nothing we can do, and there is nothing Pres Obama
rhett o rick
Jun 2014
#100