When George Bush jumped out of an airplane last spring, his sky-diving feat was big news. But this country's media outlets have failed to inform the public about far more important activities by the former president.
Last November, four months before his leap with a parachute, Bush traveled to South America -- where he provided a major boost for the launch of a newspaper that belongs to the Rev. Sun Myung Moon.
Since leaving the White House, Bush has been quite helpful to Moon. However, the news media have lacked curiosity about Bush's ties to the shadowy power-broker who heads the Unification Church. Moon's global empire combines cult-like authority over "Moonies" with extensive media holdings.
"President Bush has no relationship with Rev. Moon or the Unification Church," Bush spokesman Jim McGrath assured me in a recent interview. But the facts tell a very different story.
On Nov. 23, 1996, Bush walked to the podium at the Sheraton Hotel in Buenos Aires and delivered a speech to 900 guests invited by Moon to celebrate the opening of his regional daily paper, Tiempos del Mundo. As Moon beamed a few feet away, Bush lauded his host.
"I want to salute Rev. Moon, who is the founder of The Washington Times and also of Tiempos del Mundo," Bush said. He praised the Washington newspaper for fostering "sanity" -- and added that Moon's new paper in Argentina "is going to do the same thing."
The 15-year-old Washington Times doesn't rank among the top 100 U.S. dailies in terms of circulation. Yet, financed by the Unification Church's deep pockets, it wields enormous influence in the nation's capital. Elevating innuendo into "news," the paper excels at smearing liberals and centrists.
During the last couple of years, Bush has spoken at high-profile Moon events on three continents. He went to Asia in September 1995, giving several speeches for a group led by Moon's wife, Hak Ja Han Moon. In Tokyo, Bush addressed a gathering of 50,000 Moon followers. Ten months later, in Washington, Bush spoke at a Moon-sponsored conference.
Instead of growing, press attention to the Bush-Moon links has gone from scant to almost non-existent. Bush's role in Buenos Aires last fall barely got reported in the United States.
But this month, former Newsweek correspondent Robert Parry will shine some light with an extensive report, "The Dark Side of Rev. Moon." It's about to appear in I.F. Magazine, a new periodical named in memory of the late journalists I.F. Stone and George Seldes (the editor of the muckraking newsletter In Fact).
A few samples of Parry's findings:
Here in the United States, it remains to be seen whether the national media will finally focus on the Rev. Sun Myung Moon and his tacit alliance with George Bush.
(If you'd like to read Robert Parry's full report on the subject, you can subscribe to I.F. Magazine by calling 1-800-738-1812 or visiting the web site at www.delve.com/consort.html.)
An important question about American journalism hovers in the air: Who's afraid of the Rev. Moon?
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