Is The Decider also The Deceiver?

The WaPo’s Dan Froomkin and Slate’s John Dickerson wrote items today on one of my favorite subjects: Bush’s dishonesty. Both used the recent example of the president [tag]lying[/tag] about former Treasury Secretary John Snow’s resignation to explore presidential “[tag]fib[/tag]s,” “[tag]misstatement[/tag]s,” and “[tag]deception[/tag]s,” and to question why the word “[tag]lie[/tag]” just doesn’t make it into print very often when it comes to the president.

But the pieces got me thinking: what if we were to have some kind of contest that collected and ranked [tag]Bush[/tag]’s [tag]lies[/tag]?

In September 2003, the Washington Monthly published “The [tag]Mendacity[/tag] Index,” which asked a nominating committee of noted journalists and pundits to pick the most serious presidential untruths from the last four [tag]president[/tag]s. The lists were then presented to a panel of judges, who ranked each deception on a scale of 1 (least serious) to 5 (most serious). Bush, for what it’s worth, “won” by having the most serious lies. That, of course, was nearly three years ago.

Also, David Corn wrote a book called, appropriately enough, “The Lies of [tag]George W. Bush[/tag].” It’s a terrific book, but it was published in May 2004, and the president hasn’t grown more forthcoming since.

So, let me throw out an idea here. Let’s open the floor to nominations for Bush’s biggest lies since he took office in January 2001. The examples can be about any subject. If we can put together, say, 64 of them, I’ll organize them into a March Madness-style bracket, and let readers vote on which ones are the most serious whoppers of them all. It sounds like a fun summer project.

In comments, you can either a) tell me if this sounds like a good project to take on; or b) go ahead and make a nomination. The floor is yours.

Getting 64 should be easy. Getting 6,400 would be easy too.

Here’s a good article from 2002 on some lies from W’s first year. There’s about 10 good ones in this article alone.

  • My vote goes for Bush’s repeated lies about the cost of the Medicare Modernization Act.

    He repeatedly told Congress, America and even his own party that it would not cost over $400 over ten years.

    All along his administration had much higher estimates, but employees who sought to tell Congress were threatened with being fired. The vote also involved unprecedented abuse of the rules and bribery. It helps illustrate the corruption of Bush and the GOP, their beholdeness to lobbyists and the willingness to lie repeatedly.

    http://dir.salon.com/story/news/feature/2004/04/05/medicare/index.html

  • Great idea!

    Among the most mendacious in my mind are Iraqi WMDs and No Child Left Behind.

  • what if we were to have some kind of contest that collected and ranked Bush’s lies?

    Bad idea. Way bad.

    First, there aren’t enough electrons in the Universe. It’s already going to be a hot summer – do you have any idea what this could do to electricity prices?

    Second, this will cause a shortage of storage media on the Internets.

    Thirds, that much bad karma in one spot could lead to a bending of gravity and time, especially as you get closer to no. 1. It could, in fact, cause the entire universe as we know it to wink out of existence, and would could all wind up stuck in the alterna-reality that the Wingers inhabit.

    Include me out.

    😉

  • I like the project. Good to have them all in one place.

    Tim Noah did a three-part series on Bush lies a few years ago, here, here, and here.

    FWIW, I vote for Saddam had “recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa.” It’s one for the ages.

  • “We gave [Saddam Hussein] a chance to allow the inspectors in, and he wouldn’t let them in. And, therefore, after a reasonable request, we decided to remove him from power.” — GWB, 7/14/03

    Big. Fat. Lie.

  • Last spring, photographs of abuse conducted by American soldiers in Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq shocked the world. President Bush assured the nation that, ”torture is never acceptable, nor do we hand over people to countries that do torture.” 1/27/2005
    See http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/?050214fa_fact6

    “It’s essential — (applause.) September the 11th — when the President says something, he better mean it. See, in order to make the world more peaceful, it’s essential that those of us in positions of high responsibility speak clearly and mean what we say….
    Now, by the way, any time you hear the United States government talking about wiretap, it requires — a wiretap requires a court order. Nothing has changed, by the way. When we’re talking about chasing down terrorists, we’re talking about getting a court order before we do so. It’s important for our fellow citizens to understand, when you think Patriot Act, constitutional guarantees are in place when it comes to doing what is necessary to protect our homeland, because we value the Constitution.”
    4/04/2004
    http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2004/04/20040420-2.html

  • I agree wholeheartedly with JC but being one who believes in the rapture I’ll feel when watching the universe (and the wingnuts) bend in agony before winking out, I’m for it.

    Marketing-wise, though, I think it needs to be huger than 64. It needs to be so massive that it actually makes people laugh even as it’s hitting home. There’s plenty of material. Maybe a little more time and attention to format would make it a devastating document, as well as fun to do (just before the universe snuffs).

  • Excellent Idea.
    Here is one from May 29, 2003.

    “You remember when [Secretary of State] Colin Powell stood up in front of the world, and he said Iraq has got laboratories, mobile labs to build biological weapons,” Bush said in an interview before leaving today on a seven-day trip to Europe and the Middle East. “They’re illegal. They’re against the United Nations resolutions, and we’ve so far discovered two.

    “And we’ll find more weapons as time goes on,” Bush said. “But for those who say we haven’t found the banned manufacturing devices or banned weapons, they’re wrong. We found them.”

    However,

    The Washington Post reported last month that a U.S. fact-finding mission confidentially advised Washington on May 27, 2003, that two truck trailers found in Iraq were not mobile units for manufacturing bioweapons, as had been suspected.

    This one was off the top of my head. I’m sure I can find many more. How long is the nomination period? Should we continue to post nominations to this thread or do you want Emails after today? Also, may I suggest that all nomination contain a link to the original statement and a link to the source which debunks it.

  • Awesome idea.
    Maybe do a sweet 16 too, with more presidents included. Two for each man on opposing side of the brackets. Cause I still think “Read my lips, no new taxes” will take the cake or “I am not a crook.” Plus it would be really funny if Sr took on Jr for the best lie ever.
    This is a really cool idea.

  • “In terms of who will have their life changed the most by [my proposed income-tax] cut, it’s clearly the people at the low and middle end of the income scale, because this represents a huge surge in their income.” (2/5/01)

    “…we can proceed with tax relief without fear of budget deficits, even if the economy softens.” (3/27/01)

    “And [on the morning of 9/11] I was sitting outside the classroom waiting to go in, and I saw an airplane hit the tower – the TV was obviously on…” (12/4/01)

    “I have no ambition whatsoever to use [9/11 or the war on terror] as a political issue.” (1/24/02)

    “I’ve been to war. I’ve raised twins. If I had a choice, I’d rather go to war.” (1/27/02)

    “Our budget will run a deficit that will be small and short term.” (1/29/02)

    “You can’t distinguish between al Qaeda and Saddam.” (9/26/02)

    “The evidence indicates that Iraq is reconstituting its nuclear weapons program…Iraq could have a nuclear weapon in less than a year.” (10/7/02)

    “I’ve not made up my mind about military action [in Iraq].” (3/6/03)

    “Major combat operations in Iraq have ended.” (5/1/03)

    “The liberation of Iraq is a crucial advance in the campaign against terror. We’ve removed an ally of al Qaeda.” (5/1/03)

    “And we gave [Saddam] a chance to allow the [weapons] inspectors in, and he wouldn’t let them in.” (7/14/03)

    “I came to this office to confront problems directly and forcefully, not to pass them on to other presidents and other generations.” (10/9/03)

    “The world is more peaceful and more free under my leadership.” (10/28/03)

    “The ‘Mission Accomplished’ sign, of course, was put up by members of the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln, saying that their mission was accomplished.” (11/2/03)

    “Our military went to Afghanistan…and put the Taliban out of business forever.” (11/24/03)

    “No president has ever done more for human rights than I have.” (1/12/04)

    “The budget I just proposed to the Congress cuts the deficit in half in five years.” (2/8/04)

    “I did show up [for National Guard duty] in Alabama.” (2/8/04)

    “I am satisfied that I never saw any intelligence that indicated there was going to be an attack on America…” (4/11/04)

    “And as to whether or not I make decisions based upon polls, I don’t.” (4/13/04)

  • Marketing-wise, though, I think it needs to be huger than 64. It needs to be so massive that it actually makes people laugh even as it’s hitting home. There’s plenty of material. Maybe a little more time and attention to format would make it a devastating document, as well as fun to do (just before the universe snuffs).
    PW

    😉

    I agree. 64 is the wrong number.

    Personally, I think 666 is the right number.

  • I’d have to vote for the often repeated lie that force strength is a decision for the commanders on the ground in Iraq.

    Yes, there are some whoppers that led up to the war, but this one is probably the most directly responsible for tens of thousands of deaths. First, the US public would probably not have stomached a quarter of a million troops deployed for years instead of Rummy’s ‘small force for 6 months’ BS. Second, had commanders gottent the troops they knew they really needed, they wouldn’t be facing an insurgency with an almost limitless supply of munitions today.

    As runners up, I’d pick the whopper that the military recognized him as a great pilot and that he proudly did his service. In the great scheme of things, the cost to the country is small, but they give a crystal clear view of the man’s character (or lack thereof).

    -jjf

  • The lie:

    “[Hank Paulson] will work closely with Congress to help restrain the spending appetite of the federal government and keep us on track to meet our goal of cutting the deficit in half by 2009.” — George W. Bush, May 30, 2006

    The truth:

    May: Record YTD Increase in National Debt

    For the first eight months of the 2006 fiscal year (starts Oct 1st), the National Debt has increased $424.1 Billion. The previous record was $413.2 Billion for the first eight months of fiscal 2004.

  • Boy, Catch 22 and Moron covered a lot of great ground, as did several others. Great strart, but I see a gap from early 2005 until now. I would add only for now his lie in the press conference that he had no idea who leaked Valerie Plame’s identity, but he’d do everything he could to find out and the leaker(s) would be fired. But that one’s grown old too.
    Great idea, let the Madness begin! And you ought to seed them.

    “Let’s play another song boys, this one has grown old and bitter!”
    Leonard Cohen

  • Oh man this is a great idea! It might be difficult to organize the brackets though. You wouldn’t want ‘No one expected terrorists to fly airplanes into buildings’ to go up against ‘No one expected the levees to fail’ in round one.

    Maybe there should to be some sort of pre-vote to establish a lie’s ranking, kind of like the final coach’s poll.

    My nomination would be the Niger/SOTU lie. That one probably did more damage than any other 4 put together.

    Just curious: Are you thinking of doing it here, or opening a new, dedicated site?

  • In August, 2001 Bush announced his stem cell policy: that federally funded research could be done on cell lines developed before August, 2001, but research on new lines could not be funded. He went on to state that there were over 60 such lines, surely more than enough for researchers to use. Bush was hailed for this decision, a 21st century Solomon balancing scientific research with his pro-life stance. Unfortunately there weren’t 60 viable lines, but approximately 25, a fact HHS secretary Tommy Thompson admitted within a few weeks of Bush’s speech (and almost all those lines are now known to be contaminated and unusable). Bush knew, or should have known that there were far fewer than 60 cell lines. After all the head of the NIH works for him and a quick phone call would have answered this question. But 60 cell lines sounds better than 24 so that’s what he said.

    It’s not Iraq or the Medicare Prescription Bill, but it’s the same mentality.

  • Just curious: Are you thinking of doing it here, or opening a new, dedicated site?

    In all honesty, this was just a spur-of-the-moment idea and I hadn’t thought about that. At this point, my plan is to do it here.

  • Does it have to be something by W. himself or can it refer to things that he tacitly approves (by not refuting) that come from his administration? I’m thinking of things like Rumsfeld’s “We know where the WMDs are”.

  • I like his misleading naming convention: “Clear Skies” for more pollution…”Healthy Forests” for increased Logging…”Terrorist Surveillance Program” for warrantless wiretapping.

  • Great idea.
    And I agree… 666 is the right number.
    For example, check out this mother lode of Bush lies.

    At any rate here is my favorite.
    It is an indirect line.
    Form this Scottie McClellan press gaggle:

    Q But have you been able to more clearly determine whether the President ever met Abramoff at any of these White House —

    MR. McCLELLAN: Actually, I talked about this earlier today, maybe you weren’t here earlier this morning, but — when I talked to some of your colleagues.

    Q I thought you said he might have been, but I’m just wondering —

    MR. McCLELLAN: Yes, I said it’s possible that they would have met at a holiday reception or some other widely attended gathering. The President does not know him, nor does the President recall ever meeting him.

    LOL… What are you benching buff guy (that I don’t know)?
    LOL…
    LOL…

  • Does it have to be something by W. himself or can it refer to things that he tacitly approves (by not refuting) that come from his administration?

    That’s a good question, but if we start to include the lies from those around him (Cheney, Rice, Rumsfeld, McClellan, Fleischer, etc.), we’d quickly come up with way too many examples.

    For this project, it’s just Bush. Maybe when we’re done with this one, we’ll do something similar for the rest of the cast.

  • Too many to choose from. Great idea, though.

    My problem is distinguishing a lie, which implies some awareness of its untruth, versus merely passing on misinformation fed to him. We know the goons around him are lying goons. Which of the lies uttered by Bush are known by Bush to be lies and which are just faith-based repetition of what the manipulators behind the throne tell him?

  • I agree with Joe W. The worst of the multitude of lies was the Niger SOTU lie that has caused the death and dismemberment of so many. I have never forgiven him or Colin Powel for going along with that whopper.

    This is a great idea. I am sure we can come up with 666. We could probably come up with more if we included his rotten cabinet. What about Condi saying no one dreamed anyone would attack a skyscraper with an airplane? This is going to be therapy for some of us.

  • On July 18, 2005, CBS quoted Bush as saying that if anyone on his staff committed a crime in the CIA leak case, that person will “no longer work in my administration.” Amazing. That was one of the few that I misunderestimated. I was sure he didn’t mean it, but even I didn’t guess that he, himself!, was the leaker in chief.

  • For my nomination I would definitely choose this one:

    “[W]e gave him a chance to allow the inspectors in and he wouldn’t let them in. And, therefore, after a reasonable request, we decided to remove him from power.”
    – George W. Bush, July 14, 2003.

    This one really threw me when he said it, because not only was it false, but everyone knew it was false. I mean we were there when it happened. And when no one in the main stream media particularly cared, I got a queasy feeling in my stomach that’s never left. Since then, as far as I’m concerned, we’ve been living in wonderland; if the President can get up on stage and call the sky yellow, and there isn’t a blip in the media, what sort of a world are we living in? The only reason not to call it a lie, is it’s in the public record it’s false, so it’s hard to imagine who it’s fooling.

    –Rick Taylor

  • “I do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States.”

    – January 20, 2001 George W. Bush

  • I forgot to add that he really meant to say this:

    “I do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the Constitution of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect, and defend the office of President of the United States.”

  • How about his fighting the “War on Terror” by reducing not increasing homeland security funding to high-risk cities and states such as New York City.

    He’s all talk and highly publicized photo ops with no substantive action to secure our borders, reduce the nation’s dependence on foreign oil, or capture Osama Ben Landin.

  • Wow… what a list.

    It’s really a tribute to just how comprehensively dishonest he’s been that the first one I thought of–“the bulk of my tax cuts goes to people who are middle-class or poorer”–hasn’t even been mentioned yet, as far as I could see.

    W.P.E.

  • How about the moment in the 2000 debate when he claimed that Christ’s teachings had touched his heart? I can’t speak for J.C., but all Bush’s actions in office suggest that Bush has no idea what He was all about.

  • I think Racerx may have already come up with the winner, since without the Royal Buffoon lying when he took the Oath of Office, he would not be in any position to have any of his other lies have any significant meaning for us.

    In any event, my nomination is based on being a baby boomer, and it is the Buffoon’s lies connected with the BamboozlePalooza Campaign: that the Social Security Trust Fund does not exist; that the IOUs held by the Trust Fund are worthless pieces of paper; that the Trust Fund will be bankrupt by 2018 (when the payouts will for the first time exceed the taxes paid in); that waiting even one more year will add $600 billion to the cost to “save” Social Security; or, the big one, his promise during the 2000 Campaign to keep the S.S. Trust Fund in “a lock box” to protect it from being used by Congress to fund current non-S.S. spending.

    Two other nominations: “I’m a Compassionate Conservative.” And, “We will hunt down Osama and take him out, dead or alive.”

    On a related note Mr. C.B., it might later be fun to have another contest of the biggest and/or best “oops” committed by Bush, when he accidentally or unintentionally told or revealed the actual truth about his goals, his intentions, or his true nature/identity. Four examples: “Here I am before the haves and the have-mores; they call you the elite, I call you my base.” And, “I really have no idea where Osama is. To tell you the truth, I really don’t spend that much time worrying about him.” And, all of the times that Bush has been captured on audio- or video-tape flipping someone off or using vulgar langage to describe them. And, best of all, the “deer in the headlights” look frozen on his face in the Florida classroom when he was told that the second Tower had been hit and that the country was under attack, followed up by running away for the next 12 hours all across the country while guarded by thousands of our military personnel.

    So, later on, how about yet another contest for the “oops”?

  • Smiley said in #30:

    My problem is distinguishing a lie, which implies some awareness of its untruth, versus merely passing on misinformation fed to him. We know the goons around him are lying goons. Which of the lies uttered by Bush are known by Bush to be lies and which are just faith-based repetition of what the manipulators behind the throne tell him?

    Bush has a responsibility to determine what is true before he acts upon what he is told. He has been wrong on far too many occasions to maintain any benefit of doubt. Dumb, random luck would have Bush telling the truth 50% of the time. I doubt there are enough days left in his term to get his average that high.

  • it might later be fun to have another contest of the biggest and/or best “oops” committed by Bush, when he accidentally or unintentionally told or revealed the actual truth about his goals, his intentions, or his true nature/identity.

    “They never stop thinking about new ways to harm our country and our people and neither do we”.

  • I’m with RacerX in comment #35, but just so that I feel like I added something, how about:

    “It’s hard work”

    ;->

  • And in case its not obvious, I think its a great idea and actually prefer the bracket approach. Additionally, I second the idea of seeding the bracket.

  • JoeW (Joe Walsh?) #31:

    I don’t give him the benefit of the doubt. My comment was based on the fact that many of the lie nominees were from speeches or other prepared remarks. Do you really think Dubya personally vets the accuracy of what his speech writers tell him to say? I think that’s Karl’s job. And then he says what Karl, and a few others (cough, Cheney, cough) tell him to say. As to the responsibility thing, Bush and Rove, and especially Cheney, do not take that responsibility seriously. It’s all about politics (and showing up Dad). It’s Karl’s job to make it happen. Junior’s future is secured (ex-president. Who wants to bet that the media will treat him as some sort of senior statesman after 2008?). Now, the lies in his off-the-cuff statements? Those are many and those are lies. It’s hard to tell the difference sometimes, and it makes my head hurt, but there’s a difference.

  • Great Idea!!

    I’d even like to see the focus expanded to include the Republican Congress. Why not dust off the Contract with America, and do a performance audit of the party in power?

  • At first I thought I’d go for the one about “nobody wants to be a wartime president” after he got us into his quagmire of choice. But I think, by far, his #1 lie was when he put his hand on the Bible and swore to uphold the Constitution.

  • 750 “signing statements” later, I have to agree with Frak.

    Probably doesn’t qualify, but his whole life has been one long lie, hasn’t it?

  • Aw, Racerx, I wrote mine before I read yours! Does that mean I don’t win the t-shirt…?

  • Well, Racerx beat me to the punch about Bush lying about his oath of office. Maybe I can get extra credit for mentioning that Bush retold the same lie in January 2005.

  • I used to have an entire site devoted to such a venture called http://www.whoslying.org. I stopped after I figured out the reason the press keeps letting the same lies get repeated over and over is not because it’s difficult to be informed and catch them, but due to blatant, inentional dishonesty on the part of journalists. They know the lies. They tell them. But my favorite:

    “Saddam wouldn’t let our inspectors in.”

    Or how about saying he want’s to crack down on the leakers in the Plame case? How about the trip to Mars? The National Guard on the border (are they going?)

  • My two all-time “favorites” have the distinction of being (a) uttered by Bush himself, (b) demonstrably, factually incorrect (as opposed to merely deceptive or misleading), and (c) related to a vital issue of national importance.

    The first is the quote about the weapon inspectors not being let in that several people have already cited.

    The second is the following: “Any time you hear the United States government talking about wiretap, it requires — a wiretap requires a court order.”

    Indeed, Bush made this claim on multiple occasions. A lie.

  • Google Trends gives a time series graph for any search terms which you wish to input. It also allows you to compare the graphs of two or more sets of terms. Further, it annotates the graph with links to new stories in which the set of terms appears. Here are the graphs for the the two sets {bush lies} and {bush liar}. Note that it doesn’t give any news stories with these terms.

  • this is sad, not funny.

    we’re missing the entire point about his pathological lying. he virtually lies all the time, whenever he opens his mouth. he lies automatically .. and he lies when he doesn’t need to.

    why the hell lie about john snow ? everybody and his dog knew snow was leaving, and no one outside of Treasury wonks particularly cares. this is one instant where bush could have pathetically tried to reverse the stream of bullshit that flows from his pie-hole, and coughed up some feeble truth, for once.

    but it’s impossible: his instincts won’t let him.

    sadly: most people outside the beltway already know and understand this …

    ( remember the pew survey from march ? The single word most frequently associated with George W. Bush today is “incompetent,”and close behind are two other increasingly mentioned descriptors: “idiot” and “liar.” All three are mentioned far more often today than a year ago.)

    —-

    and sadly, yet again, the people who should have pointed this out long ago, and led the righteous tide of anger over the idea the commander in chief of the nation stands up and LIES like a rug publicly, every day of his life, were again too whipped, emasculated and cowardly to do their jobs and point out the obvious truth.

    yep, the mealy ‘journalists’ that — in spite of their newfound “courage” — still won’t get up on their hind legs and call a spade a spade, even though an eight year old could have casually observed this administration for the past five years and easily concluded it was built on a pure foundations of lies.

    you want to build a list ? fire up the nexus lexus, check out ALL the reporting that’s been done on this corrupt dictator, and find out how many times the word “liar” has been used, and by whom. the rest of them go on the list, and we get to ask them how they have ANY credentials as a reporter when they can’t even recognize a pathological liar when he’s ten feet tall, thirty feet away and a chronic repeat offender.

    that’s the list i want.

  • “I am a uniter, not a divider” .
    Saddam wouldn’t let weapons inspectors into Iraq.
    I have to get ready for work or I could do this all night.

  • Dumbya uncorked a whopper about the Medicare prescription drug benefit program botched rollout: “Anytime Washington passes a new law, sometimes the transition period can be interesting.” That was something of an understatement. The White House was flooded with complaints about retirees who could not obtain their drugs at promised discount. Isn’t he living in Washington? Isn’t he part of Washington

  • How about George W. Bush stating originally that he is a compassionate conservative. The truth: He is incapable of compassion for all but the very rich and lies about everything including when he was sworn in as president–twice–that he would uphold and preserve the Constitution of the U.S. As best he can he does just the opposite!!

  • Biggest lie? I will faithfully execute the office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States.”

  • How about the nonsense that anyone who allowed 152 executions during his six-year term as governor of Texas could say, during a debate in Arizona on 13 October 2004, “I think it’s important to promote a culture of life. I think a hospitable society is a society where every being counts and every person matters.”

  • Just to cut him a little slack, anytime Bush opens his mouth, he has no idea of what he will say from start to finish. Every sentence is a rambling event of randomized rollodex talking points. Whatever comes into his mind amid stammering pauses is what comes out next. Bush cannot really separate what is real from what he wants to be real. There may be a real pathology here for anyone interested in putting him on the couch.

    Related more to his personal life than national policy was the story about how he passed out, fell off the couch, and bumped his head after “choking on a pretzel”. So, the country is not safe with him on or off the couch.

    Also, don’t forget that he campaigned in 2000 on reducing greenhouse gases. Now they are trying to get more economic growth per unit of CO2 output. We are releasing more CO2 but we are richer and stronger in the process.

  • The biggest lie was the George W. Bush claim that for him ” 9-11 changed everything”. It did not at all change his desire to invade Iraq. When WJC warned GWB on his inauguration day of terrorism dangers, GWB “corrected” him to say the real danger was Saddam Hussein. 9-11 became the new GWB excuse for foolish thinking that should have changed after 9-11.

  • First and foremost, Bush lies each time he calls himself President of the United States. Just ask Cheney.

  • I think Catch 22 got the best one, about his lie in 2004 saying that all wiretaps were conducted only after obtaining warrants. He is so willing to lie about ‘national security’ because he is afraid to tell the American people the truth.

    I remember hearing that the PATRIOT Act provision to request library records was NEVER USED when the PATRIOT Act was being renewed. Turns out, in fact it was being used and the librarians were under gag orders not to tell. That’s another lie of the same order and type.

    “Nobody could have forseen the breaching of the levies” – David Swan

    Only competent engineers 😉

    Bush’s lie was to stand under the lights in New Orleans that were only operating because they brought in generators, and which turned off when he left.

  • All you need in this life is ignorance and confidence; then success is sure.
    Mark Twain, Letter to Mrs Foote, Dec. 2, 1887

  • Wow! Awesome list so far!

    Did W ever state the Iraqi reconstruction would pay for itself or was that Wolfie?

    He completed his National Guard Service

    Limiting Medical Malpractice rewards will control healthcare costs
    “For the sake of affordable and accessible health care in America, we must have a limit on what they call non-economic damages — I propose a cap of $250,000,”

    Bush predicted that, without such changes, “excessive jury awards will continue to drive up insurance costs, will put good doctors out of business, will run them out of your community and will hurt communities like Scranton, Pennsylvania. That’s a fact.”

    So many…So many….

  • 72 comments?! That has to be a record for The Carpetbagger Report.

    Looks like you touched a nerve Mr. Carpetbagger! I see several comments from us regulars, but also quite a few from names I haven’t seen before. Welcome netizens! You have found one of, if not the, finest political blogs in the blogosphere.

    As for an on-topic remark, how about when Bush recently appeared with Blair and when asked about any mistakes he said he regretted saying “Bring it On” and “Wanted Dead or Alive”? Does anyone really think he regrets that? I don’t.

  • Its the Republican Party, No its “dumbya’s republican’t party” As in: Can’t balance the budget; can’t stop lying; can’t prosecute a war effectively; can’t stop getting soldiers killed; can’t stop raising the national debt ceiling; can’t manage federal emergencies; can’t find Osama bin Laden; can’t control our borders; can’t protect the ports; can’t stop smearing and leaking; can’t answer tough questions from the media; can’t put country on the right track; can’t find weapons of mass destruction; can’t stop illegal warrantless domestic spying and eavesdropping; can’t stop stealing; can’t stop trampling on our constitutional rights, can’t stop flouting Congress and the courts; can’t stop gutting our social infrastructure, can’t stop pandering to the Radical Religious Right,; can’t stop rising energy costs; can’t stop failing our schools; can’t stop appointing incompetent cronies…..

  • The average american tax cut will be $1,089

    http://www.factcheck.org/article145.html

    Comment by David Swan — 6/2/2006 @ 9:43 am

    Actually, this is more or less true – which ever number they use (I believe the link pointed out that the $1089 changed to $1586) is going to be reasonably accurate. In the same way that, if Bill Gates walked into a bar, the average income for all the bar patrons at the time is in excess of a million dollars (unless the bar holds more than 5,000 people). That’s the problem I see with this contest – a bunch of misleading, but factually accurate, statements will be considered lies. And once the PowerTools start kerning the top 64 lies, CB will get SwiftBoated, and nobody wants that.

    So I would suggest that CB consider a panel of judges to select the 64 most outrageous lies among the submissions. I think there’s more than 64 listed here already!

    As for the lies emanating from this clueless wonder, I would suggest:

    An act of war has been committed on this country;

    All I can tell you is that Osama bin Laden is a prime suspect, and the people who house him, encourage him, provide food, comfort or money are on notice. Last Tuesday — last week, I spoke clearly about our nation’s policy. And that is, we’re going to find those who — those evil-doers, those barbaric people who attacked our country and we’re going to hold them accountable, and we’re going to hold the people who house them accountable; the people who think they can provide them safe havens will be held accountable; the people who feed them will be held accountable.

    And the Taliban must take my statement seriously.;

    and

    In 2002, our economy was still recovering from the attacks of September the 11th, 2001, and it was pulling out of a recession that began before I took office.

    Good suggestions from everyone else too.

  • “And once the PowerTools start kerning the top 64 lies, CB will get SwiftBoated, and nobody wants that.”(: Tom 🙂

    “So I would suggest that CB consider a panel of judges to select the 64 most outrageous lies among the submissions. I think there’s more than 64 listed here already!”(: Tom 🙂

    Of course we wouldn’t want anybody else to be “SwiftBoated” either, so perhaps it should be a secret panel of judges.

    Also, we don’t necessarily have to limit the number of lies to 64, any power of 2 will work. If there are enough lies offered, we could go with 128, 256, 512, 1024, 2048, 4096, 8192, 16382, 32768, or even 65534. Each increment would only add 1 more round of voting.

  • I like the idea, but in honor of the upcomming World Cup shouldn’t you ditch the March Madness style competition and go with a World Cup style. Then you could have an opening round of competition within several groups (the “WMD” group, the “DHS and other Natural Disasters” group, the “Insurgency” group, the “Ken Lay Who?” group, the “I want to get to the bottom of this Plame thing” group, the “Osama Who?” group, etc.) Then the top two winners in each group can advance to the single elimination rounds.

  • I’d love to see this positioning stick: “He’s the Deceiver”.

    As some of you may know, church-going folks know “Satan” by the name of “The Deceiver”.

    There was a great blog entry a while back (I think the comments here or on dKos) about Colin Powell having choked out a reference to Saddam “deceiving” the UN, probably under pressure from Rove, who is very familiar with the dog-whistle terminology here. As would have Powell if he grew up going to African-American churches in the Bronx (he’s Methodist, IIRC).

    What better than to take the wind out of the fundamentalist wingnuts by making very clear Shrub’s record of DECEIVING us. And using that word– not lied– DECEIVED. I suppose any holy-roller out there would wince at hearing that… and wince is exactly what we want them to do whenever they think of Shrub or the Repugs.

  • Yes,

    Plans for 06/06/06:

    JUNE 6: The Cost of Truth: The Price of Lies, Joseph Wilson, Ambassador, whistleblower, and author of The
    Politics of Truth, shares his first-hand perspective on the now widely-known story about the handling of information in the
    run-up to war in Iraq and the outing of his CIA agent wife, Valerie Plame. Media critic and provocateur Larry Beinhardt leads a Q & A probing the perils of media spinning and government coercion. Part of the First Person Arts Festival,7-9pm, $30-$75, Gershman Y, 401 S. Broad St., 267-402-2055.

  • Bush’s entire 60 cities / 60 days “fix” social security tour. I especially liked his implication that the trust fund was a myth – only a mass of IOU’s (which just happened to be backed by the full faith and credit of the government which Bush ostensibly headed at the time he derided the assets of the trust fund).

    Sorry if this is a repeat. I’m doing a drive-by and did not have time to read all the posts prior to mine.

    Cheers!

  • Comment #18 had my fave for the most egregious lie of all:

    “I’ve not made up my mind about military action [in Iraq].” (3/6/03)

    More than a year earlier, I knew they’d made their minds up to go into Iraq when they started pooh-poohing the importance of catching bin Laden.

  • Personally, I think your blog is great! I also wanted to share something that is giving me an astounding monthly income with no work and it’s free for a limited time. I figure the more people try this the better. I also hate hype and bull and liars.

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