NEWBURY PARK, Calif., Aug. 31 /PRNewswire/ -- In "George Dub-ya Bush, The Phony Fighter Pilot," the author, Hugh E. Scott, Vietnam veteran, ex-Air Force pilot and registered Republican, tells how he found an official Bush biography on the Internet that claimed the president flew National Guard jets almost six
years -- 44 months more than USAF records indicated.
Because the exaggeration appeared to be unused GOP campaign material designed to win swing votes in 2000, Scott tipped the Boston Globe. Impressed, it ran the story on 02/28/04 under the headline "Bush Bio on Web Inflates Guard Service." Written by Walter V. Robinson, the article gave credit to Scott as its source.
Since sons often emulate their fathers, Scott exposes Dub-ya's daddy, Bush 41, as a cowardly WWII aviator who bailed out of his damaged Avenger before radioman John Delaney and tail gunner Ted White could jump, causing them to die. A retired Continental Airlines captain, Scott is the only investigative journalist since 1988 to interview Chester Mierzejewski, 83, honorable and
highly decorated Avenger tail gunner who saw Big George bail out and blew the whistle on him before the presidential election.
Scott charges that Bush 41 and his first offspring were never qualified to be Commanders-in-Chief. To make the case against Bush 43, Scott uses USAF documents, newspaper archives, Bush family autobiographies and authorized bios to show that George W. received a commission during the Vietnam War without any officer training, grounded himself by failing to take his annual flight physical, went AWOL in Alabama to work for the GOP, boozed until age 40 instead of preparing for national leadership, lied about his missing Guard
service to get elected and tried to ruin the reputation of primary opponent Senator John McCain.
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