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President Sybil Norcroft: Rumors of War, Secession, and Trouble
President Sybil Norcroft: Rumors of War, Secession, and Trouble
President Sybil Norcroft: Rumors of War, Secession, and Trouble
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President Sybil Norcroft: Rumors of War, Secession, and Trouble

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President Sybil Norton Daniels's presidency is tumultuous, to put it mildly. In this, the eleventh book of the series, there are rumors of war and some serious skirmishes, a legal battle over secession moving seriously through the courts, and beaucoup troubles for the harried president--the first woman to hold the office. There is a scandal popularly known as the New Teapot Dome Scandal,' a National Enquirer contrived and photoshopped lurid expose,' a hate crime by New Confederate secessionists that incites riot, and "The Trial of the Century," the National Guard is called out, the draft is reinstated. US missiles deal with a North Korean missile and artillery threat. It will be a wonder if Sybil can juggle all of the balls that keep coming her way."
LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 15, 2022
ISBN9781637470763
President Sybil Norcroft: Rumors of War, Secession, and Trouble
Author

Carl Douglass

Carl Douglass has had a long and complex life. The highlights are having married Vera, having four children, 11 grandchildren, and nine great-grandchildren. He has been a Teamster truck driver, a navy general surgeon, a practicing neurosurgeon, and a mental hospital general medical officer. He has written more than forty books of fiction, and ten nonfiction books. He lives in a quiet, smallish city in the Rocky Mountains with his wife and enjoys life there with her.

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    President Sybil Norcroft - Carl Douglass

    CHAPTER ONE

    As the presidency of Sybil Norcroft Daniels entered its fourth year—the second year of her having been elected president—each of her ongoing struggles grew worse, even as she became more facile at her job. She continued to have to do patchwork fixes of the continually growing secession problem. Iran’s new president, Naveed Ali Mazanderani, was even more intransigent and bellicose than his predecessor. Mazanderani was well known as an Islamist—of the Shia stripe–but just as much an extremist as the new leaders of the Islamic State organization in Syria. He openly boasted of having ICBMs with nuclear warheads of Iranian design and manufacture.

    His common threat besides Death to the Great Satan was that his missile forces were ready at any time to launch the End of Days Weapon if America did not remove its sanctions. And—as if to make President Daniels a believer in eternal life–the dictator of North Korea had miraculously been resurrected from the dead and the generals who had the audacity to suggest that they should succeed him had mysteriously dropped out of mention in public. Kim Jong Un and his sister Kim Yo-jong appeared to maintain their stranglehold on the DPRK with even more than their former excessive power. Kim was beginning to make threatening statements against the United States again.

    In her State of the Union in the first week of February, Sybil mainly touted her successes in dealing with the insurrection, the reconstruction, repair, and maintenance of the nation’s infrastructure, and the reaffirmation of US/UK friendship and partnership. It made her a little displeased with herself that she had not had much to say about the real problems looming over her administration and the citizens of America.

    She muttered inwardly fairly often that she was becoming as much of a double-talking president as her predecessors. It was her basic personality to present and to defend the truth and her authentic self. But she had learned the hard lesson that almost all politicians learn as they move into the passing years in office: you have to go along to get along. You may enter the political arena with refreshing candor and idealism; but you soon learn that you follow the political party’s lead; or you get nowhere. She had lately been finding herself answering reporters’ honest questions with non-sequiturs and sometimes outright lies to save herself personal embarrassment or to protect friends from embarrassment or worse—malfeasance or even outright criminality.

    She had early on become aware that the chances of her historical legacy being that of a stateswoman were slipping away, and she was lowering her own bar by countenancing white lies–a phrase she despised–and using euphemisms when the truth was less than flattering to her.

    "Heavy sigh," Sybil said to herself every time one of her arch enemies spoke in public.

    It was in that frame of mind that President Daniels learned of a scheme that had been going on since she was inaugurated, that was likely to become her Teapot Dome Scandal, the one that had hounded President Warren G. Harding to the end of his presidency and hastened his death. A whistle blower informant acting from within the Department of the Interior came forward with a declaration of malfeasance in office of the departmental secretary, undersecretary, three Interior attorneys, and a consortium of ten major developer cronies who were serious donors to both political parties and who were considered too big to fall.

    President Daniels did not know who the whistle blower was, but she was informed–in no uncertain terms–by the inspector general of the Department of the Interior and by her attorney general that the facts were essentially irrefutable and backed by a wealth of objective evidence secreted out of the department’s files and by hacking into the secretary’s personal e-mails and those of the developer/donors.

    She was caught between a rock and a hard place. If she came down hard on the miscreants, she would surely lose them as donors and would gain the lasting enmity of the politicians who were the recipients. Not a few of those politicians also stood to gain major financial windfalls from their investments in the schemes. If she allowed or encouraged the truth to come out in all its ugly glory, she would spare herself criticism; but the scandal would forever taint her political legacy, even though she herself would be legally established as having had no foreknowledge or direct or even indirect involvement in the schemes. She could not be implicated as having profited from the venture; she had not even received political donations from anyone involved… thankfully.

    When she was fully informed of the criminality and venality of what became known as the Other Teapot Tempest, Sybil privately moaned to herself, quoting the Master of the House from Les Miserable, "What to do? What to do? What’s a poor Christian to do?"

    Simply put, the scandal was this: Congress passed a bill allowing for the drilling of undersea oil reserves off the coasts Hawaii and Florida providing loans totaling $989, 376, 000. The government’s purpose was to ensure that the national petroleum repository was filled to the brim to ensure against future OPEC economic attacks and to keep US petroleum businesses healthy. The law was complicated and lengthy, but it forbad the sale of rights to any company or individual lacking a bond guaranteeing full payment to the government if the business venture failed to progress or to repay speculators for their full investments. That particular clause was placed because of several speculative offshore offerings that used government money as startup loans and to offset initial production costs.

    For a variety of reasons, every one of the ventures permitted and financed by the US government failed; the principles defaulted and filed bankruptcy. As a result, innocent private investors and the trusting government were left holding the worthless paper while the speculators—most of whom oversold their capabilities—had absconded or filed bankruptcy. Some committed outright fraud, counting on obtaining government money, never making even a pretense of beginning work, and walked away with the money and intentionally left the government to deal with the unconscionable consequences.

    In addition, other clauses expressly forbad drilling in certain fragile areas or where local governments had established prohibitive laws. Most of the perpetrators simply ignored that requirement, just as had been the practice in the past in an industry rife with wild cowboys and charlatans.

    In this Other Teapot Tempest, government auditors and FBI investigators were able to make viable legal cases and were proceeding towards arrests and arraignments. Examples of the fraudulent actions included: offshore drilling contractor Excelsior Corporation which obtained federal funds to be able to guarantee that there would be sufficient money for the actual building and drilling contractors to proceed. A month later, Excelsior withdrew, citing the recent sharp decline of oil price due to the oil oversupply and drop in demand caused by COVID-19, as the reason.

    The federal investigators found a pile of paperwork in neat folders in the company’s office—none of which was a true account of risk, loss, or profit. Worse, there was no record of loan payments. The principles of the company were nowhere to be found; their names, addresses, telephone numbers, and e-mail addresses, were all phonies. The only genuine document in the pile was the filing for bankruptcy, except that the spaces for the names of the officers of the corporation were left blank.

    A genuine provider of drilling services to oil and gas companies, Rand-Carter Ltd, announced after Excelsior’s disappearance that it had analyzed its situation of falling oil prices and concluded that oil prices and the Covid-19 effect on economies would negatively affect its business and results gravely in the sort-run.

    Rand-Carter applied for Chapter 11 bankruptcy as the result of the downturn and the profound uncertainty surrounding the degree and duration of the disruptions, and the general inability to predict with any reasonable accuracy the magnitude, pace, or duration, of any recovery. The company officers worked with the investigators and agreed to testify against the Excelsior Corporation. The government agreed to allow Rand-Carter additional time to put its affairs in order in the hope that conditions would improve enough to make drilling once again profitable. No one said anything about the small investors, many of whom had lost all their savings.

    Several cabinet departments became involved and worked to persuade OPEC to raise its prices across the board by 2022. Saudi Arabia, Russia, and the United States, signed the agreement, but made it contingent upon Mexico and South America signing the agreement. Therein lay another egregious layer of fraud.

    Additional investigation by OPEC’s fraud division in conjunction with the FBI turned up a company previously unknown to the American and Saudi petroleum contracting world. The company—which had been in existence on paper for just short of a year—was called AmiAramco Petroleum Ltd to take advantage of the similarity in naming to Saudi Arabia’s national oil company Saudi Aramco. The company received $100 million from the US government as start-up money for its drilling joint venture. Their plans included commencement of

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