I'm so sick of all the political ads on TV and everyone having an opinion. I'm just going to sit back and enjoy the show.
BTW, I still think Bush will win and we'll have 4 more years BUSHIT!
To blog or not to blog that is the question.
Challenged about his views on sexual morality, Justice Scalia surprised his audience at Harvard University, telling them: "I even take the position that sexual orgies eliminate social tensions and ought to be encouraged." emphasis added | |
The strongly worded speech, which indicted Kerry as a "tax-and-spend liberal," was timed to deflect criticism of Bush's Iraq policy from such key sources as former Iraq administrator L. Paul Bremer, the U.S. weapons inspector and the State Department. A Bush adviser said the president hopes to change the dynamics of the race with more biting attacks on Kerry's record and trustworthiness and on what Bush charges is Kerry's reluctance to use U.S. military force to defeat terrorism. The strategy is aimed at stoking public fears about terrorism, raising new concerns about Kerry's ability to protect Americans and reinforcing Bush's image as the steady anti-terrorism candidate, aides said.And then like clockwork, the Education Department sends out a nationwide alert to all schools to watch for people spying on schools. Watch out security moms, your kids are in danger. I guess this is an early October surprise. Hold on folks, we're sure to have a late October surprise too.
A federal judge held a reporter in contempt Thursday for refusing to divulge confidential sources to prosecutors investigating the leak of an undercover CIA officer's identity.How about Novak? Can we lock him up and throw away the key?
U.S. District Judge Thomas F. Hogan ordered New York Times reporter Judith Miller jailed until she agrees to testify about her sources before a grand jury, but said she could remain free while pursuing an appeal. Miller could be jailed up to 18 months.
Saddam Hussein made $11 billion in illegal income and eroded the world's toughest economic embargo during his final years as Iraq's leader through shrewd schemes to secretly buy off dozens of countries, top foreign officials and major international figures, according to a new report by the chief U.S. weapons inspector released yesterday.OK. But here's the most interesting bit...
Oil "vouchers" that could be resold for large profits were given to officials including Indonesian President Megawati Sukarnoputri, French Interior Minister Charles Pasqua and former Russian presidential candidate Vladimir Zhirinovsky as well as governments, companies and influential individuals in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, the report said.
Several American companies on the list, compiled from 13 documents kept by Hussein's vice president and oil minister, were given vouchers to purchase billions of dollars of oil at discounted prices. The U.S. companies are not named in the report because of privacy laws, U.S. officials said.What? There are privacy laws that protect you when you break the law? Interesting...I bet you Haliburton (or a subsidiary) was one of them.
President Bush said on Thursday he was "right to take action" in Iraq even though a new U.S. report found that Baghdad had no stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction and that its nuclear program had decayed.
"Based on all the information we have today, I believe we were right to take action and America is safer today with Saddam Hussein in prison," Bush told reporters on the White House South Lawn just before heading off on the campaign trail.
Bush insisted the report showed Saddam was a threat because he was trying to undermine international sanctions.
"He was doing so with the intent of restarting his weapons program once the world looked away," Bush said.
"He was a threat we had to confront," he added.
French officials were prepared to provide as many as 15,000 troops for an invasion of Iraq before relations soured between the Bush administration and the French government over the timing of an attack, according to a new book published in France this week.There are approx 8,000 British troops in Iraq so 10,000-15,000 troops would be small but significant number. It also give the coalition more ligitimacy in the world.
The book, "Chirac Contre Bush: L'Autre Guerre" ("Chirac vs. Bush: The Other War"), reports that a French general, Jean Patrick Gaviard, visited the Pentagon to meet with Central Command staff on Dec. 16, 2002 -- three months before the war began -- to discuss a French contribution of 10,000 to 15,000 troops and to negotiate landing and docking rights for French jets and ships.
My opponent says he has a plan for Iraq. Parts of it should sound pretty familiar -- it's already known as the Bush plan.And then he said...(drum roll please)...
In Iraq, Senator Kerry has a strategy of retreat; I have a strategy of victory.The Bush Zombies then applauded.