George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography

(Ann) #1

Newsweek, 51% of Americans found that "wimp" was a "seriously problem" for Bush.
The magazine offered various sophomoric psychological explanations of how Bush got
that way, mainly concentrating on his family upbringing. Here Bush was allegedly taught
to conceal his sociopathic drives beneath a veneer of propitiation and sharing, as in his
childhood nickname of "Have Half" George.


The Newsweek "wimp" cover soon had Bush chewing the carpet at the Naval
Observatory. Bush's knuckle-dragging son George W. Bush called the story "a cheap
shot" and added menacingly: "...I'd like to take the guy who wrote that headline out on
that boat," i.e., the Aronow-built Fidelity in which Bush was depicted on the Newsweek
cover. Which sounded very much like a threat. George W. Bush also called Newsweek
Washington bureau chief Evan Thomas to inform him that the Bush campaign had
officially cut off all contact with Newsweek and its reporters. The decision to put
Newsweek out of business was made by candidate Bush personally, and aborted a plan
by Newsweek to publish a book on the 1988 campaign. The press got the message:
portray Bush in a favorable light or face vindictive and discriminatory countermeasures.


Bush campaigns have always advanced on a cushion of money, and the 1988 effort was
to push this characteristic to unheard-of extremes. In keeping with a tradition that had
stretched over almost three decades, the Bush campaign finance chairman was Robert
Mosbacher, whose Mosbacher Energy Corporation is one of the largest privately held
independent oil companies in Texas. Mosbacher's net personal worth is estimated at $200
million. During the 1988 campaign, Mosbacher raised $60 million for the Bush campaign
and $25 million for the Republican National Committee. It was Mosbacher who formed
the Team 100 corps d'elite of 250 fatcats, among whom we have seen Henry Kravis. The
trick was that many of these $100,000 contributors were promised ambassadorial posts
and other prestigious appointments, a phenomenon that would reach scandalous
proportions during 1989. In 1984, Mosbacher's son Rob Jr. ran a strong but losing race
for the senate seat vacated by John Tower.


Mosbacher by the mid-1980's had become a director of the biggest bank in Houston, and
a member of the most exclusive clubs in the city. He was a central figure of that cabal of
financiers and oil men which in the postwar years was called "the Suite 8F crowd," and
which has since evolved into new forms. Mosbacher, Baker, and Bush are now at the
center of the business oligarchy that runs the state of Texas.


Mosbacher was also a celebrity. When he was between his second and third marriages
during the early 1980's, he was billed as Houston's most eligible bachelor. His third wife
Georgette, a cosmetics entrepreneur, was the star of the Bush inaugural as far as the
photographers were concerned. The Mosbachers habitually flew around the country in
their own private jet, and maintained homes in New York, Washington DC, and the
expensive River Oaks section of Houston.


During the mid-1980's, Mosbacher reportedly lined his pockets to the tune of $40 to $50
million through a scam called the Houston Grand Parkway. Mosbacher's gains derived
from the Texas Transportation Corporation Act, which provided for the de facto

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