Dick Cheney's Dangerous Son-in-Law

Philip Perry and the politics of chemical security.

In March 2003, when the world's attention was focused on U.S. soldiers heading to Baghdad, twelve senior officials in the Bush administration gathered around a long oak conference table in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, part of the White House complex. They were meeting to put the final touches on a proposed legislative package that would address what was perhaps the most dangerous vulnerability the country faced after 9/11: unprotected chemical ... Full Story »

Posted by Mark Monday

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Dale Penn
3.4
by Dale Penn - Oct. 1, 2008

I found the obvious left leaning bias of this article off putting (and I'm a liberal). There was no apparent rebuttal opportunity offered to those indicted by this piece - and it appears the reader is expected to anticipate this. I am very concerned about the gutting of environmental regulation and have intimately involved on the industry side as a commercial lender. This is an important story that will likely be discounted by many who read it as too biased to be reliable.

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Dale's Rating

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