And Paul Lukasiak can prove it!
He's examined all the records and concludes:
An examination of the Bush military files within the context of US Statutory Law, Department of Defense regulations, and Air Force policies and procedures of that era lead to a single conclusion: George W. Bush was considered a deserter by the United States Air Force.He also says:
1) Bush’s personnel files were tampered with to disguise what had occurred.With all the evidence that he and others have found, it is galling that the major news media refuse to deal with this issue. It's particularly galling because the Bush campaign has the nerve to question Kerry's service record and quibble about such things as whether he was really wounded badly enough to deserve his Purple Hearts.2) The person upon whom the media has relied upon for its interpretation of Bush’s military records (an individual who was specifically engaged by the 2000 Bush campaign to “clear” Bush) was directly involved in providing Bush with favorable treatment as a member of the Texas Air National Guard, and
3) This person has lied about the nature of Bush’s records, and made claims regarding Bush’s obligations as a member of the United States Armed Forces that have absolutely no basis in fact.
George W. Bush and his cheerleaders go on and on about patriotism, yet he apparently has gotten away with shirking his military obligations. Lies were told and strings were pulled for yet another spoiled rich brat, but after the shrill accusations against Clinton, the lies about Max Cleland, and the innuendos about John McCain, you'd think Bush's actual desertion might merit some attention, or perhaps even get some of his loudest supporters to think about exactly who and what Bush is.
But no. The ever-complacent media simply ignores this issue, which in my estimation should be on the front page with all the supporting documents.
Michael Moore was completely correct when he called W a deserter. Maybe he'll make a movie about it some day. (A girl can dream, can't she?)
Comments