Loose connections
New York
Not that I had any doubts about how pig-headed, stubborn and ungrateful George W. Bush is, but confirmation of it never hurts. A friend of long standing revealed to me how Brian Mulroney, the ex-prime minister of Canada, and Tony Blair both went to see W in order to plead Conrad Black’s case during the closing days of the Bush presidency. The two men went separately, and neither asked for a Black pardon. They were after a commutation of Lord Black’s outrageous and unfair sentence of six years in a tough prison. ‘I don’t pardon well-connected folk,’ was the answer, which sounds good, just like weapons of mass destruction did, except for the fact that the moron did pardon a black guy caught with 21 pounds of liquid cocaine because his well-connected friend Carly Simon asked him to.
Conrad Black instructed his newspapers to back Bush all the way in 2000, and throughout his disastrous presidency — one that has just about obliterated the Republican Party for the duration — he remained solidly behind him. Once the US government froze his assets, Lord Black could not come up with the funds required by shark-like lawyers inside the loop to represent him. I went with Mark Steyn to see Conrad in Palm Beach just before his incarceration, and Mark, who followed the case daily, told me that he had never encountered such a weak defence team in a major case. This is because Black had to rely on friendly Canadian lawyers to take up his case. They were unfamiliar with the American system and ‘were all over the place’. What Lord Black should have got was the sentence which the rat Radler got — something like 18 months in a country club.
More articles from: Taki | this section
Post this entry to: del.icio.us | Digg | Newsvine | NowPublic | Reddit
Advertisement
GASCONY, SW France, near Condom-en-Armagnac 13th Century stone house, 21st Century luxury for 12 in 5 en-suites. 50 acres +
IF YOU ARE PLANNING A CHAMPAGNE RECEPTION and looking for some light entertainment, you can now hire London's busiest steel
BOSC LEBAT, SW France. Only 45 minutes from Toulouse Airport with daily flights from most provincial airports avoiding the horrors
Spectator Business | Apollo Magazine
Corporate | Advertising | Privacy | Terms
Spectator, 22 Old Queen Street, London, SW1H 9HP
All Articles and Content Copyright ©2009 by The Spectator | All Rights Reserved
Gil
May 16th, 2009 10:11am Report this commentTaki, what happened to your claims of a couple of months ago about Madoff and Mossad? You did mention it and we do want to hear whether you've uncovered any fresh evidence? We take you seriously as a commentator so do please oblige.
And this killer sentence of yours certainly had us laughing:
'There is more greed in Wall Street than there are Holocaust deniers in Riyadh'
So witty, ex-con.
David Watkins
May 16th, 2009 1:02pm Report this commentEnough whining about Bernie Madoff, Taki! He's clearly a bad man, but not worse than other swindlers, for some of whom - Conrad Black for example - you have warm sympathy. In one respect he's better. All his dupes were rich folk - maybe not rich by your standards, but certainly by mine - who persuaded themselves that Madoff would make them much richer without any effort on their part. So they were primarily victims of their own reckless greed - as Americans say, "you can't con an honest man".
OTOH most of the shareholders in Hollinger International, robbed by Black, I'd guess are no richer than I am and didn't aspire to more than a fair return on their savings. I daresay Black is likeable. So probably is Madoff, and his determination to protect his wife and family and take the whole blame on himself shows that he has at least retained the important virtues of steadfastness and loyalty.
fogey
May 17th, 2009 5:34am Report this commentHow interesting that one of the big wheels who tried to save His Lardship Lord Crossdresser from a long spell in the hoosegow was Tony BLiar! When the poodle went to his master and begged to have the crook pardoned, Bush made one of the rare few correct decisions he ever made in his life.
His Lardship deserved a few months for stealing millions and obstruction of justice, but many years for sheer stupidity: is there anything more stupid than getting caught stealing from the RICH in, of all places, the USA?
D. Gordon
May 17th, 2009 4:31pm Report this commentTaki,
Sadly for Canadians, their former Prime Minister,Brian Mulroney is currently facing his own problems in Canada. Hardly a man who can vouch for anyone these days. Let's see if Mulroney returns the $2m settlement he took from Canadian tax payers for his "questioning" his reputation a few years ago.
NDSV
May 19th, 2009 7:19pm Report this commentWell said Taki, I do miss your columns, I'm sorry I stopped my subscription after Conrad lost the Spectator and real commentators like Mark, Theodore and Barbara got dumped and replaced by light weight toilet paper.
Monty A. Stewart
May 20th, 2009 4:40am Report this commentLord Conrad Black got his comeuppance and should be thankful he's in a "club med" prison in Florida, instead of Sing Sing or San Quentin. As I see it, there is no difference between stealing from the rich as compared to stealing from the poor. Conrad Black's crime was perhaps more complex than Bernie Madoffs' but no less destructive to the victims. Mr. Black just figured he was smarter than everyone else, so much so, that it was the obstruction conviction that really sent him down the river. How stupid can one be, to be caught on camera loading boxes full of documents relating to Hollinger Intl into your car. Mark Stein may feel some sympathy for Mr. Black's situation, but I hope that Mr. Black serves out his six and one-half year term, realizing that no one is above the law.
GK
May 20th, 2009 5:58pm Report this commentIt is necessary to comprehend that the title of the column is
'High Life' not accurate life and
that the accusation about connections with secret services
is just an accusation more for such a vilified man and makes no big difference.
Back to top