Everything about Neil Bush totally explained
Neil Mallon Bush (born
January 22,
1955 in
Midland, Texas) is the fourth of six children of President
George Herbert Walker Bush and
Barbara Bush (Barbara Lane Pierce). Neil is the younger brother of President
George Walker Bush, former Florida Governor
Jeb Bush, and the late
Robin Bush who died of leukemia in
1953. He has a younger brother,
Marvin, and a younger sister,
Dorothy. Neil is a businessman based in
Texas.
Early years
Neil Bush was named after a good friend of the family,
Henry Neil Mallon, chairman of
Dresser Industries,
George H. W. Bush's employer. As a child Bush spent some summers and holidays at his family's estate in
Maine, the
Bush Compound.
At age 11, he entered the exclusive private
St. Albans School in
Washington, DC. He struggled through school. A counselor told his mother that it was doubtful the boy had the potential to graduate. He was later diagnosed as having
dyslexia, and his mother spent much time coaching him through his
learning disability. Eventually his grades improved and he graduated from St. Albans in 1973.
After St. Albans, Bush attended
Tulane University, where he earned an economics degree in 1977. He earned an
MBA in 1979.
Silverado Savings & Loan
Neil Bush was a member of the board of directors of
Denver-based Silverado Savings and Loan during the
1980s' larger
Savings and Loan crisis. As his father was
Vice President of the United States, his role in Silverado's failure was a focal point of publicity. According to a piece in
Salon, Silverado's collapse cost taxpayers $1 billion.
The US Office of Thrift Supervision investigated Silverado's failure and determined that Bush had engaged in numerous "breaches of his fiduciary duties involving multiple conflicts of interest." Although Bush wasn't
indicted on criminal charges, a
civil action was brought against him and the other Silverado directors by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation; it was eventually
settled out of court, with Bush paying $50,000 as part of the settlement, as reported in the Style section of the
Washington Post .
Though even then, Neil Bush's fine was paid for by a group of friends. A Republican fundraiser set up a fund to help defer costs Neil incurred in his S&L
dealings. .
Ignite! Learning
In 1999, Bush co-founded
Ignite! Learning, an educational software corporation. Bush has said he started
Austin-based Ignite! Learning six years ago because of his learning difficulties in middle school and those of his son,
Pierce. The software uses
multiple intelligence methods to provide varying types of content to appeal to multiple learning styles.
To fund Ignite!, Bush raised $23 million from U.S. investors, including his parents, as well as businessmen from
Taiwan,
Japan,
Kuwait, the
British Virgin Islands and the
United Arab Emirates, according to documents filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission. Documented investors include
Russian billionaire expatriate
Boris Berezovsky, Berezovsky's partner Badri Patarkatsishvili,
Kuwaiti company head Mohammed Al Saddah, and
Chinese computer executive Winston Wong.
In 2002, Neil Bush commended his brother, George, for his efforts on education as President, but he questioned the emphasis on constant testing to keep federal aid coming to public schools: “I share the concerns of many that if our system is driven around assessments, pencil-and-paper tests that test a kid's ability to memorize stuff, I'd say that reliance threatens to institutionalize bad teaching practices.”
As of
October 2006, over 13 U.S. school districts (out of over 14,000 school districts nation-wide) have used federal funds made available through the
No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 in order to buy Ignite's products at $3,800 apiece.
A
December 2003 Style section article in the
Washington Post reported that Bush's salary from Ignite! was $180,000 per year. has been noted in the media. Berezovsky has been an investor in Bush's Ignite! program since at least 2003.
Bush met with Berezovsky, who has been described as "notorious" and a "wheeler-dealer", in
Latvia. The meeting caused tension between that country and Russia due to Berezovsky's fugitive status. Bush has also been seen in Berezovsky's box at a British soccer stadium for a game,, which prompted some stateside criticism. There has also been speculation in the
English language Moscow Times that the relationship may cause tension in U.S.-Russian bilateral relations, "especially since Putin has taken pains to build a personal relationship with the U.S. president."
Kopin stock trades
In
July 1999, Bush made at least $798,000 on three stock trades in a single day of a company where he'd been employed as a consultant. The company, Kopin Corporation of
Taunton, Massachusetts, announced good news about a new
Asian client that sent its stock value soaring. Bush stated that he'd no inside knowledge and that his financial advisor had recommended the trades. He said, "any increase in the price of the stock on that day was purely coincidental, meaning that I didn't have any improper information."
When asked in
January 2004 about the stock trades, Bush contrasted the
capital gains he reported in 1999 and 2000 with the capital losses on Kopin stock he reported ($287,722 in all) in 2001. In 2001 Kopin joined a broad decline in high-tech stock valuations.
Foundation for Interreligious and Intercultural Research and Dialogue
Bush was a founding director, along with
Pope Benedict XVI (then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger), of the Foundation for Interreligious and Intercultural Research and Dialogue. The foundation promotes ecumenical understanding and publishes religious texts and was founded in 1999. Bush is no longer on the board of the foundation.
Other business engagements
In 2002, Bush signed a consulting contract that paid $2 million dollars in stock over five years to work for
Grace Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp., a firm backed by
Jiang Mianheng, the son of former Chinese President
Jiang Zemin, plus $10,000 for every board meeting he attends.
Bush serves as co-chairman of a company called Crest Investment. Crest pays him $60,000 a year to provide miscellaneous consulting services.
Bush frequently travels to the Middle East, Europe and Asia to negotiate deals and raise capital for various businesses. According to court filings from his divorce, in 2000 he was paid $1.3 million for such work. This includes $642,500 as a commission for introducing an Asian investor to the owners of an American high-tech company.
Anti-Ritalin campaign
In 2002, Neil Bush told the
New York Post that he "endured his own
Ritalin hell seven years ago when educators in a Houston private school diagnosed his son, Pierce, (then) 16, with
Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) and pushed medication."
In a
September 26,
2002, episode of
CNN Interview, Bush told
Connie Chung:
You know, we've a knee-jerk reaction in this education system where, if the kid doesn't perform well, then the reaction is to try to assign a label. The label is followed by a drug. The drug allows the kid to sit cooperatively, to pay attention, to focus in school.
Bush spent years researching the issue and found that "the educators were wrong" about his son. "There is a systemic problem in this country, where schools are often forcing parents to turn to Ritalin," he said. "It's obvious to me that we've a crisis."
Also that year, Bush testified before a hearing of the
United States Congress to speak out against over-medicating children for learning disorders.
He has suggested that many parents fall for the ADD and
ADHD diagnoses and subsequent medicating of their children because it explains why they aren't doing well in school, saying "it's the system that's failing to engage children in the classroom. My heart goes out to any parents who are being led to believe their kids have a disorder or are disabled."
Neil Bush (along with filmmaker
Michael Moore) is credited in the cast of a 2005 documentary called
The Drugging of Our Children directed by
Gary Null. In the film's trailer Bush says: "Just because it's easy to drug a kid and get them to be compliant doesn't make it right to do it".
Marriage, divorce, and remarriage
Bush and his former wife of 23 years, Sharon Smith, are the parents of three children;
Lauren, Pierce, and Ashley. The couple
divorced in
April 2003.
Bush's divorce deposition gained public attention when he admitted to several sexual encounters with high-priced escorts in
Thailand and
Hong Kong. Among other divorce testimony aired in the press, Bush's friend John Spalding announced that Sharon had extracted hair samples from her estranged husband in order to place a
voodoo curse on him. Sharon Bush later confirmed the forcible hair removal, but she stated that she took the hair to be tested for evidence of drug use. At various times, she publicly spoke of her fear of retribution by Bush, or by the Bush family.
Bush remarried in
Houston, Texas, on
March 6,
2004, to Maria Andrews. Andrews spent time volunteering with charitable organizations with Bush's mother, Barbara. Robert Andrews, Andrews' ex-husband, sued Sharon Bush in
September 2003 for
defamation after she alleged that her ex-husband was the father of Andrews' two-year-old son.
Speaking at a Saudi Arabian economic forum in
January 2002, Bush referred to growing
anti-American sentiment in Arab countries and said the two peoples must communicate better. Some of his comments on the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict have brought him controversy.
The
White House appears unfazed by his globe-trotting. "The president knows his brother will always do the right thing," press secretary
Ari Fleischer said."
In Asia, Bush accompanied
Sun Myung Moon on his world peace tour.
In 2006, for being the 1,000th customer of Ignite! Learning, Alamo Junior High School teachers, students and administrators were visited by Bush. Asked by students if he'd like to run for president, Bush said he'd be sticking to his business venture. He told kids if they
Googled him, they'd see reasons people wouldn't want to vote for him. "The idea of being president isn't something realistic for me," Bush said, adding that students could accomplish anything. He said he takes a lot of shots from the media, particularly in his home town. "It's unjustified, but it comes with the territory of being in the first family," he said.
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