What do you get when you cross the guilt of promoting a corrupt administration, the boredom of retirement, and the cold reality of needing a paycheck?
Scott McClellan's new book.
On June 2, 2008 the world will hear what it pretty much already knew about the lies of the Bush administration, but this time from the doughy flaps of the man who was for three years paid to spread them:
Former White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan writes in a surprisingly scathing memoir to be published next week that President Bush “veered terribly off course,” was not “open and forthright on Iraq,” and took a “permanent campaign approach” to governing at the expense of candor and competence.
So if you're one of the solid 20-ish% of the country not yet convinced of this president's dishonesty and ineptness by (a) intelligence, (b) intuition, (c) evidence, (d) Al Franken, or (e) the cumulative effects of our nation's decline over the last 7.25 years, enjoy this dose of reality.
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