Ivo Skoric on Fri, 25 Jan 2002 00:07:01 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: Bush: His Mother-In-Law Lost More Than $8,000 in Enron |
Ok. Bush family gained more than it lost from Enron developments. But mother-in-laws can be very annoying people if they are not satisfied. So, Bush is playing the right hand. Now, that he can't possibly hope for another contribution from Enron, he is pissing on its grave to please his mother-in-law. He got it both ways, didn't he? ivo Date sent: Wed, 23 Jan 2002 10:57:05 -0500 Send reply to: International Justice Watch Discussion List <JUSTWATCH-L@LISTSERV.ACSU.BUFFALO.EDU> From: Miroslav Visic <visic@PIPELINE.COM> Organization: New World Disorder Subject: Bush: His Mother-In-Law Lost More Than $8,000 in Enron To: JUSTWATCH-L@LISTSERV.ACSU.BUFFALO.EDU He thinks he can get away with this? $8,000 is a rounding error in comparison to over $500,000 that ENRON gave him! besides, what does he have to do with investments of his mother-in-law? It's her money. He lost nothing, he only gained from Enron. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Bush Says His Mother-In-Law Lost More Than $8,000 in Enron Corp. Investment CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) -- An angry President Bush revealed that his own mother-in-law was among Enron Corp. stockholders who lost money on the failed company -- about $8,100 worth. Bush said he was ``outraged ... that employees didn't know all the facts about Enron. My own mother-in-law bought stock last summer and it's not worth anything now.'' Bush did not say how much stock Jenna Welch purchased, but said ``she did not know all the facts'' about Enron's financial situation. ``A lot of the stockholders didn't know all of the facts. And that's wrong,'' he said. White House aides said later that Mrs. Welch bought 200 shares of Enron stock at $40.90 a share on Sept. 21, 1999. She sold the lot on Dec. 4, two days after Enron declared bankruptcy and its stock price plunged to 42 cents a share. She lost just under $8,100. Bush, on a trip to West Virginia on Tuesday to promote his economic stimulus -program, said again he had no intention of releasing details of Enron contacts with White House aides who developed his energy plan, saying if ``somebody has an accusation of wrongdoing, let me know.'' Thousands of Enron employees who bought company stock for their retirement accounts saw their savings evaporate as Enron tumbled toward bankruptcy. Shareholders suffered heavy losses as Enron stock, valued at nearly $90 a share in the fall of 2000, fell below $1. Bush noted that Congress is investigating the Enron debacle, ``but Congress also needs to stay focused on the American people. We're in a war. We've got to make sure our homeland is secure and we've got to make sure that people can find work.'' Bush said he did not think the emerging Enron investigation would distract from his agenda. ``All the facts will come out on Enron,'' Bush said, noting the administration has launched a criminal investigation and is reviewing pension policies in the wake of the company's bankruptcy. ``Our administration has done exactly the right thing,'' he said. ``There have been a couple of contacts and my Cabinet said no help here.'' -- ________________________________________________________________________________ "I did not have business relations with that man, Kenneth Lay!" George W. Bush _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold