| Betreff: [reality101] Salon.com: Bush was wired |
| Von: "Pendragon" |
| Datum: Wed, 13 Oct 2004 12:04:41 -0700 |
| An: |

Left:
President Bush drives his pickup truck at his Crawford, Texas, ranch in August
2002. Right: Bush gestures toward John Kerry during the presidential debate in
St. Louis last Friday.
Technical expert: Bush was wired
A Bush spokesman tells Salon there is nothing to the
story. But as the final presidential debate looms, speculation grows about the
mysterious bulge.
- - - - - - - - - - - -
By
Dave Lindorff
Oct.
13, 2004 | Speculation
continues to run wild about President Bush's mystery bulge. Since Friday, when
Salon first raised
questions about the
rectangular bulge that was visible under Bush's suit coat during the
presidential debates, many observers in the press and on the Internet have
wondered aloud whether the verbally and factually challenged president might be
receiving coaching via a hidden electronic device.
Now a technical expert who designs and makes such devices
for the U.S. military and private industry tells Salon that he believes the
bulge is indeed a transceiver designed to receive electronic signals and
transmit them to a hidden earpiece lodged in Bush's ear canal.
"There's no question about it. It's a pretty obvious one
-- larger than most because it probably has descrambling capability," said Alex
Darbut, technical and business development vice president for Resistance
Technology in Arden Hills, Minn. Darbut examined photographs of the president's
back taken from the Fox News video feed at the first presidential debate in
Coral Gables, Fla., as well as 2002 photos of the president driving and working
in a T-shirt on his Crawford ranch, which were posted on the White House Web
site.
Darbut speculates that the device the president wears is
provided by the Secret Service, noting, "They're not going to have him driving
around the countryside on his ranch without being in instant contact with him."
No one in the White House or Bush campaign, however, has
offered such an explanation. In fact, the Bush camp has shed little light on the
mysterious protuberance, turning aside questions with dismissive humor or rising
tones of exasperation. The president is "a regular guy," White House chief of
staff Andy Card told Salon's Tim Grieve before the second debate last week.
"Maybe his suit had a little lump in it or something." Campaign spokeswoman
Nicolle Devenish took the same line with the New York Times on Saturday: "It was
most likely a rumpling of that portion of his suit jacket, or a wrinkle in the
fabric." But Devenish, the Times dryly noted, "could not say why the 'rumpling'
was rectangular." Campaign spokesman Scott Stanzel brushed aside a questioner in
a Washington Post chat session by saying, "I think you've been spending a little
too much time on conspiracy Web sites."
On Tuesday, in response to repeated questions from Salon,
the Bush camp finally issued a flat denial. Campaign spokesman Reed Dickens
denied that Bush has ever used an electronic device to aid his public speaking,
insisting the president was wearing "nothing during the debates." When asked
about the pictures taken at the Bush ranch, Dickens said the president has never
used any devices except for cutting tools and earplugs to protect his ears from
the high-decibel chainsaw. Nor has the Secret Service outfitted Bush with a
hidden communications device, according to Dickens: "He doesn't need something
like that because the Secret Service is always with him. They ride in the truck
in the back. Wherever he goes, they're with him."
Despite the official denials, the bulge brouhaha is still ballooning. On
Tuesday, the New York Daily
News produced a master
tailor named Frank Shattuck who, after viewing photos from both debates,
confirmed, "There's definitely something there, in between the shoulder blades.
I can't say what it is, but it's not hidden very well. They should have come to
me. I can hide a pistol under the breast."
In Orlando, Florida, TV station WFTV polled its viewers,
asking, “Do you believe the accusations that President George W. Bush was wired
during the presidential debate?” Of 35,000 respondents, only 42 percent answered
no, while 36 percent replied yes, and 22 percent said possibly.
Meanwhile, blogs, chat rooms, bulletin boards -- and
Salon's letters pages -- continue to buzz with discussion about Bush's possible
electronic enhancement. Reports are flying around the Web about earlier
televised events where audio glitches allegedly permitted TV viewers to hear
someone directing what Bush to say, including his public remarks at the Sea
Island G-8 summit meeting in June, his D-day anniversary speech in France, and a
New York speech following 9/11.
One thing is certain: During the final presidential
debate in Tempe, Ariz., on Wednesday night, all eyes will be on Bush's back.
salon.com
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