Monday, June 30, 2008

T-Bonehead's Pocketbook Twitch

T.(homas) Boone Pickens, better known as T-Bonehead Pickens to me, grew up in Amarillo, TX where I witnessed his savagery and cruelty toward employees and townspeople alike. This Prince of Darkness began his career as a geologist for Phillips 66 Petroleum Company. In his self-serving autobiography, Boone, that should have been entitled, T-Bonehead, the Great Man mocked his Phillips 66 contemporaries for being afflicted with the "Bartlesville Twitch." Bartlesville, OK was the corporate headquarters of Phillips 66 and T-Bonehead was referring to the lack of courage shown whenever a decision was to be made in Amarillo. According to T-Bonehead, the Phillips employee would always glance over a shoulder in the direction of Bartlesville whenever a decision was to be made. Ironically, T-Bonehead ruled Mesa Petroleum (his Amarillo company) in a way that made the worst of the Robber Barons appear saintly. T-Bonehead's employees had their own twitch and it was aimed at the Great Man himself. The latest news about the Prince of Darkness relates to T-Bonehead's running off at the mouth about the Swiftboating of John Kerry in 2004. T-Bonehead offered $1M to the person(s) who could deliver proof that Kerry was falsely defamed in 2004. Now, T-Bonehead has reneged on his offer. No big surprise because the The Prince of Darkness was always big hat, no cattle. In fact, T-Bonehead has gone so far as to announce that he is not going to make any such offers in the future. In fact, T-Bonehead is not going to make any political contributions in 2008. If this is (fari & balanced) tartuffery, so be it.

[x NY Fishwrap]
T. Boone Pickens Says No Deal On Swift Boat Bounty
By Kate Zernike

T. Boone Pickens is not giving up his million dollars.

That’s how much he had offered to pay anyone who could disprove any of the accusations the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth made against Senator John Kerry in the 2004 presidential election — attacks Mr. Pickens, the billionaire Texas oilman, helped finance.

A group of Swift boat veterans sympathetic to Mr. Kerry sent Mr. Pickens a letter last week taking him up on the challenge. In 12 pages, plus a 42-page attachment of military records and other documents, they identified not just one but ten lies in the group’s campaign against Mr. Kerry. They offered to meet with him to provide Mr. Kerry’s journals and videotapes from Vietnam and a copy of his full military record certified by the Navy — a key demand of Mr. Pickens and veterans who believe Mr. Kerry lied about his service to win his military decorations.

Mr. Pickens replied with a one-page letter, thanking the veterans for their research and their service, but politely saying there had been a misunderstanding. “Key aspects of my offer of $1 million have not been accurately reported,” he wrote.

When he offered the reward at an American Spectator dinner in November, blogs sympathetic to Mr. Pickens reported that he challenged anyone to disprove “anything” the Swift boat group said.

In his letter, Mr. Pickens explained that his bet actually applied to only the television ads the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth bought, and not to their bestselling book or the media interviews that generated more attention than the ads themselves.

“In reviewing your material, none of the information you provide speaks specifically to the issues contained in the ads,” he wrote, “and, as a result, does not qualify for the $1 million.”

It was pretty much the same response he had given to Mr. Kerry, a Massachusetts Democrat, who seized the challenge immediately after Mr. Pickens made it last year.

He offered more generous compliments in his letter to the veterans, and suggested that they take up their issues with John O’Neill, the founder of the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth. (Mr. O’Neill, who first debated Mr. Kerry about the war in Vietnam on the Dick Cavett show in 1971, does not cede anything.)

As for this this presidential cycle, Mr. Pickens says he will not give any money to partisan causes.

[Kate Zernike is a national correspondent for The New York Times.]

Copyright © 2008 The New York Times Company


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