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Bush and the Neocon's 'Surge' to Nowhere

By Robert Dreyfuss, Tomdispatch.com. Posted January 6, 2007.


Bush is still the Christian-crusader President, still lodged inside a bubble universe filled with neocon advisors -- and that means more troops in Iraq, even if the idea doesn't make a lick of sense.
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Bush and the Neocon's 'Surge' to Nowhere
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Every now and then, you have to take a lesson or two from history. In the case of George Bush's Iraq, here's one: No matter what the President announces in his "new way forward" speech on Iraq next week -- including belated calls for "sacrifice" from the man whose answer to 9/11 was to urge Americans to surge into Disney World -- it won't work. Nothing our President suggests in relation to Iraq, in fact, will have a ghost of a chance of success. Worse than that, whatever it turns out to be, it is essentially guaranteed to make matters worse.

Repetition, after all, is most of what knowledge adds up to, and the Bush administration has been repetitively consistent in its Iraqi -- and larger Middle Eastern -- policies. Whatever it touches (or perhaps the better word would be "smashes") turns to dross. Iraq is now dross -- and Saddam Hussein was such a remarkably hard act to follow badly that this is no small accomplishment.

A striking but largely unexplored aspect of Saddam Hussein's execution is illustrative. His trial was basically run out of the U.S. embassy in Baghdad; Saddam was held at Camp Cropper, the U.S. prison near Baghdad International Airport. He was delivered to the Iraqi government for hanging in a U.S. helicopter (as his body would be flown back to his home village in a U.S. helicopter).

Now, let's add a few more facts into the mix. Among Iraqi Shiites, no individual has been viewed as more of an enemy by the Bush administration than the radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. American troops fought bloody battles with his Mahdi Army in 2004, destroying significant parts of the old city of Najaf in the process. American forces make periodic, destructive raids into the vast Baghdad slum and Sadrist stronghold of Sadr City to take out his followers and recently killed one of his top aides in a raid in Najaf. The upcoming Presidential "surge" into Baghdad is, reputedly, in part to be aimed at suppressing his militia, which a recent Pentagon report described as "the main threat to stability in Iraq."

Nonetheless at the crucial moment in the execution what did some of the Interior Ministry guards do? They chanted: "Muqtada! Muqtada! Muqtada!" In all press reports, this has been described as a "taunting" of Saddam (and assumedly of Iraqi Sunnis more generally). But it could as easily be described as the purest mockery of George W. Bush and everything he's done in the country. If, in such a relatively controlled setting, the Americans couldn't stop Saddam's execution from being "infiltrated" by al-Sadr's followers -- who are also, of course, part of Prime Minister Maliki's government -- what can they possibly do in the chaos of Baghdad? How can a few more thousands of U.S. troops be expected to keep them, or Badr Brigade militiamen out of the streets, no less the police, the military, and various ministries?

Consider the "new way forward," then, just another part of the Bush administration's endless bubbleworld. And check out exactly what madness to look forward to in next week's presidential address via Robert Dreyfuss, a shrewd reporter and the author of the indispensable Devil's Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam. -- Tomdispatch.com editor Tom Engelhardt

The Surge to Nowhere
Traveling the Planet Neocon Road to Baghdad (Again)

By Robert Dreyfuss

Like some neocon Wizard of Oz, in building expectations for the 2007 version of his "Strategy for Victory" in Iraq, President Bush is promising far more than he can deliver. It is now nearly two months since he fired Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, installing Robert Gates in his place, and the White House revealed that a full-scale review of America's failed policy in Iraq was underway. Last week, having spent months -- if, in fact, the New York Times is correct that the review began late in the summer -- consulting with generals, politicians, State Department and CIA bureaucrats, and Pentagon planners, Bush emerged from yet another powwow to tell waiting reporters: "We've got more consultation to do until I talk to the country about the plan."

As John Lennon sang in Revolution: "We'd all love to see the plan."

Unfortunately for Bush, most of the American public may have already checked out. By and large, Americans have given up on the war in Iraq. The November election, largely a referendum on the war, was a repudiation of the entire effort, and the vote itself was a marker along a continuing path of rapidly declining approval ratings both for President Bush personally and for his handling of the war. It's entirely possible that when Bush does present us with "the plan" next week, few will be listening. Until he makes it clear that he has returned from Planet Neocon by announcing concrete steps to end the war in Iraq, it's unlikely that American voters will tune in. As of January 1, every American could find at least 3,000 reasons not to believe that President Bush has suddenly found a way to put Humpty Dumpty back together again.

What's astonishing about the debate over Iraq is that the President -- or anyone else, for that matter, including the media -- is paying the slightest attention to the neoconservative strategists who got us into this mess in the first place. Having been egregiously wrong about every single Iraqi thing for five consecutive years, by all rights the neocons ought to be consigned to some dusty basement exhibit hall in the American Museum of Natural History, where, like so many triceratops, their reassembled bones would stand mutely by to send a chill of fear through touring schoolchildren. Indeed, the neocons are the dodos of Washington, simply too dumb to know when they are extinct.

Yet here is Tom Donnelly, an American Enterprise Institute neocon, a co-chairman of the Project for a New American Century, telling a reporter sagely that the surge is in. "I think the debate is really coming down to: Surge large. Surge small. Surge short. Surge longer. I think the smart money would say that the range of options is fairly narrow." (Donnelly, of course, forgot: Surge out.) His colleague, Frederick Kagan of AEI, the chief architect of the Surge Theory for Iraq, has made it clear that the only kind of surge that would work is a big, fat one.

Nearly pornographic in his fondling of the surge, Kagan, another of the neocon crew of armchair strategists and militarists, makes it clear that size does matter. "Of all the ‘surge' options out there, short ones are the most dangerous," he wrote in the Washington Post last week, adding lasciviously, "The size of the surge matters as much as the length. … The only ‘surge' option that makes sense is both long and large."

Ooh -- that is, indeed, a manly surge. For Kagan, a man-sized surge must involve at least 30,000 more troops funneled into the killing grounds of Baghdad and al-Anbar Province for at least 18 months.

President Bush, perhaps dizzy from the oedipal frenzy created by the emergence of Daddy's best friend James Baker and his Iraq Study Group, seems all too willing to prove his manhood by the size of the surge. According to a stunning front-page piece in the Times last Tuesday, Bush has all but dismissed the advice of his generals, including Centcom Commander John Abizaid, and George Casey, the top U.S. general in Iraq, because they are "more fixated on withdrawal than victory." At a recent Pentagon session, according to General James T. Conway, the commandant of the U.S. Marines, Bush told the assembled brass: "What I want to hear from you now is how we are going to win, not how we are going to leave." As a result, Abizaid and Casey are, it appears, getting the same hurry-up-and-retire treatment that swept away other generals who questioned the wisdom on Iraq transmitted from Planet Neocon.

That's scary, if it means that Bush -- presumably on the advice of the Neocon-in-Chief, Vice President Dick Cheney -- has decided to launch a major push, Kagan-style, for victory in Iraq. Not that such an escalation has a chance of working, but there's no question that, in addition to bankrupting the United States, breaking the army and the Marines, and unleashing all-out political warfare at home, it would kill perhaps tens of thousands more Iraqis.

Personally, I'm not convinced that Bush could get away with it politically. Not only is the public dead-set against escalating the war, but there are hints that Congress might not stand for it, and the leadership of the U.S. Armed Forces is opposed.

Over the past few days, a swarm of Republican senators has come out against the surge, including at least three Republican senators up for reelection in 2008 in states that make them vulnerable: Gordon Smith of Oregon, whose remarkable speech calling the war "criminal" went far beyond the normal bland rhetoric of discourse in the U.S. capital, along with John Sununu of New Hampshire and Norm Coleman of Minnesota. In addition, Saxby Chambliss of Georgia, less vulnerable but still facing voters in 2008, has questioned the surge idea. And a host of Republican moderates -- Chuck Hagel (NE), Dick Lugar (IN), Susan Collins (ME) -- have lambasted it. (Hagel told Robert Novak: "It's Alice in Wonderland. I'm absolutely opposed to the idea of sending any more troops to Iraq. It is folly.") Even Sam Brownback, one of the Senate godfathers of the neocon-backed Iraqi National Congress, has expressed skepticism, saying: "We can't impose a military solution." According to Novak, only 12 of the 49 Republican senators are now willing to back Sen. John McCain's blood-curdling cries for sending in more troops.

Meanwhile, says Novak, the Democrats would not only criticize the idea of a surge but, led by Senator Joe Biden, chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, might use their crucial power over the purse. "Biden," writes Novak, "will lead the rest of the Democrats not only to oppose a surge but to block it." Reports the Financial Times of London: "Democrats have hinted that they could use their control over the budget process to make life difficult for the Bush administration if it chooses to step up the military presence in Iraq." A Kagan-style surge would require a vast new commitment of funds, and with their ability to scrutinize, put conditions on, and even strike out entire line items in the military budget and the Pentagon's supplemental requests, the Democrats could find ways to stall or halt the "surge," if not the war itself.

Indeed, if President Bush opts to Kaganize the war, he will throw down the gauntlet to the Democrats. Unwilling until now to say that they would even consider blocking appropriations for the Iraq War, the Democrats would have little choice but to up the ante if Bush flouts the electoral mandate in such a full-frontal manner. By escalating the war in the face of near-universal opposition from the public, the military, and the political class, the president would force the Democrats to escalate their own -- until now fairly mild-mannered -- opposition to the war.

However, it's possible -- just possible -- that what the President is planning to announce will be something a bit more Machiavellian than the straightforwardly manly thrust Kagan wants. Perhaps, just perhaps, he will order an increase of something like 20,000 American troops, but put a tight time limit on this surge -- say, four months. Perhaps he will announce that he is giving Iraqi Prime Minister Maliki that much time to square the circle in Iraq: crack down on militias and death squads, purge the army and police, develop a plan to fight the Sunni insurgency, find a formula to deal with the Kurds and the explosive, oil-rich city of Kirkuk which they claim as their own, un-de-Baathify Iraq, and create a workable formula for sharing the fracturing country's oil wealth.

By surging those 20,000 troops into a hopeless military nowhere-land, Bush will say that he is giving Maliki room to accomplish all that -- knowing full well that none of it can, in fact, be accomplished by the weak, sectarian, Shiite-run regime inside Baghdad's fortified Green Zone. So, sometime in the late spring, the United States could begin to un-surge its troops and start the sort of orderly, phased withdrawal that Jim Baker and the Carl Levin Democrats have called for.

Levin suggested as much as 2006 ended. "A surge which is not part of an overall program of troop reduction that begins in the next four to six months would be a mistake," said Levin, who will chair the Armed Services Committee. "Even if the president is going to propose to temporarily add troops, he should make that conditional on the Iraqis reaching a political settlement that effectively ends the sectarian violence."

That may be too much to ask for a Christian-crusader President, still lodged inside a bubble universe and determined to crush all evil-doers. And it may be too clever by half for an administration that has been as utterly inept as this one.

At the same time, it may also be too much to expect that the Democrats will really go to the mat to fight Bush if, Kagan-style, he orders a surge that is "long and large." Maybe they will merely posture and fulminate and threaten to... well, hold hearings.

If so, it will be the Iraqis who end the war. It will be the Iraqis who eventually kill enough Americans to break the U.S. political will, and it will be the Iraqis who sweep away the ruins of the Maliki government to replace it with an anti-American, anti-U.S.- occupation government in Iraq. That is basically how the war in Vietnam ended, and it wasn't pretty.

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See more stories tagged with: neocons, bush, iraq, surge

Robert Dreyfuss is the author of Devil's Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam. He covers national security for Rolling Stone and writes frequently for The American Prospect, Mother Jones, and the Nation. He is also a regular contributor to TomPaine.com, the Huffington Post, Tomdispatch, and other sites, and writes the blog, The Dreyfuss Report, at his website.

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out now
Posted by: rsaxto on Jan 6, 2007 2:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Bushies have such a talent for making things worse in all sectors that it is downright scary. Surge is the worst thing they could do so of course it is the thing they are pushing. Withdrawal is the best thing they could do so of course they will fight tooth and nail and American deaths piled on top of Iraqi deaths against withdrawal. It is a classic case of criminal minds making criminal mistakes. The best thing for America and for Iraq that Bush/Cheney could do would be to resign so of course that is the last thing they would ever think of doing. Mess of potamia it is and will remain because the Bushies are stuck in an idiot rut.

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» CRUSADER-RACIST Bush Posted by: citizenjoe
» RE: CRUSADER-RACIST Bush Posted by: alterstate
» Yes inferior races. Posted by: citizenjoe
» RE: out now Posted by: fearlessmanateehunter
Ooh, hello sailor
Posted by: HeroesAll on Jan 6, 2007 4:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is just the sort of treatment that the stupid Bush junta ideas deserve.

"I think the debate is really coming down to: Surge large. Surge small. Surge short. Surge longer. I think the smart money would say that the range of options is fairly narrow." (Donnelly, of course, forgot: Surge out.)

Magnificent. Inarguable. Priceless.

"Of all the ‘surge' options out there, short ones are the most dangerous," he wrote in the Washington Post last week, adding lasciviously, "The size of the surge matters as much as the length. … The only ‘surge' option that makes sense is both long and large."

Ooh -- that is, indeed, a manly surge.


Game, set, and match. The whole article is justified by this reposte. And I think that, in all seriousness, there is a very phallic context to what's going on here. The Los Bush Boys want to feel that they're strong and manly, and can beat any contender. Never mind that they're contesting via proxy. Never mind that the odds are heavily in their favour, in terms of firepower (rather like an entire rugby team tackling a toddler). Never mind that they've already inflicted massive damage. They want to have their way with the world.

If only one could convince them to get a little psychotherapy to deal with their inadequacies. Perhaps they could be introduced to the world of strap-ons and rubber goods. Perhaps they could learn to love crochet. Perhaps they could learn that men aren't valued solely for the size of their dicks.

Or perhaps, at the very least, they could put their very own dicks on the line. Demonstrate their own prowess. Fight their own battles.

Can't you just see the grudge match: the Krauthammer vs al Sadr Graeco-Roman wrestling. Oil up, boys, and get grappling...

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» Let's look at the record, shall we? Posted by: thoughtcriminal
» Where the oil is: Posted by: rwa
» RE: Ooh, hello sailor Posted by: Edward George
» RE: Ooh, hello sailor Posted by: ISlamIslam
Bush the Gambler: "All In"
Posted by: Roy Eidelson on Jan 6, 2007 4:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Immediately after the 9/11 attacks, President Bush sat down to play poker with the biggest stack of chips at the table, the odds-on favorite to win one of the highest-stakes games ever played. This huge initial chip advantage was built from a unified and supportive citizenry at home, a mainstream media that rarely questioned his judgment or intentions, an international community prepared to give him the benefit of the doubt, and a military machine bigger than the next couple dozen countries combined. But since those early heady days, Bush and his close advisers and neocon allies have made one horrendous decision after another. The great tragedy, of course, is that the president has not only been playing with his own chips. Rather, in this game his poor play has cost the lives of our courageous soldiers and many Iraqi civilians, our country's stature in the world, and our national resources desperately needed for other purposes, domestic and international.

Others, realizing how poorly they've been playing, would recognize that they don't belong at the table—or at least conclude that they had entered the wrong game. Not so with the president. Rather, all signs suggest that this stubborn poker player is unlikely to learn any constructive lessons from his abysmal performance. There are at least five reasons why this is so. First, although a relative novice at the game, he has refused to prepare adequately, hasn't mastered the likelihood of various outcomes, and seemingly hasn't even tried to understand his opponents and their style of play. Second, he has cultivated and embraced an Old West saloon mentality where a loaded six-shooter and a quick draw can turn losing hands into winners. Third, he has a personal history of being bailed out whenever he has come up short in the past, whether through family connections or the highest reaches of our judicial system. Fourth, he has convinced himself that God is personally by his side, presumably with an unlimited supply of aces. And fifth, he is now concerned about his legacy, and likely suspects that only a miraculously successful reshaping of Iraq and the Middle East can save him from being a frequent answer in "worst president ever" debates in the decades ahead.

My list is undoubtedly incomplete, but it is daunting. It suggests that Bush will ultimately be driven to go "all in" regardless of any wiser counsel he might receive. And at the very least, "all in" means continuing to play the Iraq hands as he has done thus far--or perhaps with even greater recklessness and abandon. More frightening still, "all in" may mean saving his very last stack of chips for Iran. As a new year begins, we should all be asking whether anyone can pull him away from the table before it is (again) too late.

P.S. As an addendum, the appeals Bush and his supporters will use in defense of their actions are predictable. I describe some of them in detail in an online video entitled "Dangerous Ideas: How Conservatives Exploit Our Five Core Concerns" that can be viewed HERE

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» RE: Bush the Gambler: "All In" Posted by: Mamarianne
Somebody, somewhere...
Posted by: fsquared on Jan 6, 2007 5:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
stop this surge idea in its tracks. There is NO MILITARY solution to the Iraq mess...well...short of obliterating the whole country, anyway. Is our Iraq policy so "advanced" that it can't follow lesson 101 about repeating history?

Signed...
Frustrated from within the machine

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» Drang nach Osten - the Drive to the East Posted by: thoughtcriminal
» RE: A simpler vision. Posted by: Edward George
» RE: A simpler vision. Posted by: sheena2u
What is our final expectations in Iraq
Posted by: kencohen on Jan 6, 2007 5:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As I currently understand Bush's expections, he refuses to accept the fact that he made an horrific mistake in his impetuous, reckless, urgent, unilateral and pre-emptive invation of Iraq. Now that the Iraq war is the centerpiece of his legacy as president (he has done nothing else that would distinguish his accomplishments in office), he wishes to have history see that he made a brilliant decision despite all the naysayers and doubters. Bush envision a strong, centrally governed Iraq, friendly to the US and our interests (including permanent military bases) and western oriented in values and economic development (especially partnering with US oil producers). Iraq was to become the "western" wedge that rids the area of tribal and theocratic rule.
To date, Mr. Bush has steadfastly denied that just the opposite reality is emerging in Iraq. The local tribal sects are fighting (and winning) for their own power and autonomy, the Sunni/Shiia/ Kurd divisions are reshaping the politics and real estate in the region. al Sadr has emerged as a dominant political and military figure. He is allied with Iran and is clearly anti US. The Saddam execution gave us a clear view of the reality in Baghdad.
So, what are 20,000 more troops expected to accomplish in a city and country aleady fractured, divided and chaotic. How are we to train Iraqis whose loyalities do not envision a united, strong central government that blends all of the tribal and religious factions into one democratically ruling entity? Instead, their loyalties remain to their local religious and tribal leaders. Our training and equipping these Iraqis simply gives them greater weapons and fighting skills to perpetuate their civil war.
Remember the Tet offensive in Viet Nam? We were in the same boat. Our mission was lost, our army tired and demoralized and our expectations of what we wanted Viet Nam to look like was turning into the opposite reality. Yet we could not yet let go of the belief that military force will get us what we want. It didn't then and will not now!
Our strategy in Iraq needs to correct the series of blunders and mis steps taken at evey turning point, realize that we failed to appreciate the history of the area and the strength of local culture. We need to engage with Iraq's neighbors. give up our xenophobic reactions to Muslim cultures and respect that western democracy is seen as Christian occupation that offends the basic fabric of the middle eastern consciousness.
I see no awareness in the Bush administration that the American People do not buy his beliefs that what happens on the streets of Baghdad will determine the destiny of the war on terror or protect our national security. We do not see that our efforts and sacrifices have been welcomed or appreciated by the Iraqi people and we see no emerging new world order in the area to promises hope and stability.
In good conscience, we can no longer ask of our sons and daughers to risk their lives and limbs to engage in a misguided effort with no clear mission or meaningful outcome. The "surge" is simply another spin on "staying the course".
It is time our leadership took a cold sober view of the geopolitical reality in the middle east and at least stop the further hemorrhaging and erosion of our standing and influence in the region. The correction of the mess Bush has created will be daunting. We need a surge in diplomatic interventions. aliance builing and thoughtful strategic planning.

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Who benefits from a 'surge'? Part1
Posted by: lclark on Jan 6, 2007 5:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Iraq war has been an example of what our government has become from the onset. Liars and exploiters of both its citizens and other peoples...all in the governments service to multinational financial and corporate interests.

The weapons of mass destruction, the passion for 'democracy', the desire for stability are deceits.

Iraq was an artificially created country that consists of three distinct enthic groups that simply do not like each other: Kurds, Shiite, Sunni. Allowing each to create their own nation with each having a portion of the oil fields would be a more viable solution. But as said, the goals of democracy and stability are working deceits.

So what's really going on?

War costs and national debt as a means of transfering wealth to the privilaged controlling class on the transnational level is no different than 'privitization' and 'public/private patnerships' and new bankruptcy laws and usury rates for credit card rates on the national front.

Since the late 60's the share of Federal taxes paid from the profits of corporations has dropped from 30 + % to single digits, with the taxes shifting to wage earners. Since G Bush 'tax cuts', wage earners are further burdened with taxes and people who generate wealth from investment have their income protected.

Do you pay less taxes now? No. It's a shell game. Rising housing prices found other levels of government hustling to reevaluate the value of housing and raise those taxes. Now that the housing bubble has burst and prices are dropping you will not see the same fervent interest to lower assessments. At the same time, business interests are given property tax breaks as incentives, as though retail stores and the like would actually avoid establishing themselves in a location if they did not receive these reductions. The fact is that at the onset of this country property ownership and income were coincident. These were the shop owners and famers and the tax was based on the fact these properties generated wealth for their owners, not simply shelter.

Want to solve social security shortfalls? Remove the cap so the superwealthy pay in proportionally. What is Bush proposing as an alternative? Adding in illegal workers from Mexico. He does not want to 'fix' social security, he wants to break it and the borders of America as well.

The Iraq war is about getting control of physical resources - oil - as the value of the dollar evaporates. The Bush administration has also been intent on getting Iraq's assests such as utilities turned over to multinational corporate control. They have even expended energy ensuring the farmers of Iraq are required to buy their seed from corporate entities.

In the U.S. we see the same sell off of what was once public infastructure to multinational corporations, everything from 'public' water supplies to toll roads...and more of this is coming to the U.S. at a rapid rate. And illegal immigration is simply a variation on this theme of providing cheap labor and wage suppresion in this country, as well as eroding the concept of national sovreignty as the multinational goals of creating a 'north american union' is persued.

Take a look around and you will notice how once regulated businesses such as utilities are now foreign owned, and the costs of basic services is rising rapidly while the service is degrading.

Our 'representatives' from both major parties use slogans as they persue the interests of multinational corporations.

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Who benefits from a 'surge'? Part2
Posted by: lclark on Jan 6, 2007 5:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Take issues like dependence on oil and pollution. Both could be addressed without exotic future technologies. Electric cars have been viable for 30 years, and most middle class American families use a 2nd car primarily for commuting. A combination of electric cars and the generation of electricity through the mass deployment of wind turbines would address a significant part of the dependence on imported oil directly.

Why do we not see these sorts of straightfoward solutions persued? Auto manufacturers would earn less money on engines that are simpler and generate less after purchase profits. Oil corporations would see profits reduced as well as their control over populations and governments. Instead we see bogus solutions such as hybrids that increase basic transporation and repair costs. A purchaser of a hybrid will pay more for the car than they will save in rising fuel costs, will have higher maintenance costs, and less trade in value as the batteries will have aged.

Insteads of solutions that benefit citizens or people of this planet in general, you see wars and loss of personal choice, erosion of the constitution, promotion of fear, governmental control of more areas of individuals.........we've lost the vision that created the constitution (both in rights and the persuit of the common good) and now have a burdensome government that insists it has the authority to compel people to do all sorts of intrusive acts from wearing seat belts when they drive to drugging their children with Ritalin if they are in public schools.

If you take a broad perspective who may begin to see how gross the methods and goals of people who craft our laws and create national policy have become.

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» RE: Who benefits from a 'surge'? Posted by: VannaLaRoche
The surge attempts to "secure" Iraq- FOR THE NUKING OF IRAN
Posted by: xbj on Jan 6, 2007 5:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I keep saying it, these suicidal moron Warpigs are hell bent on nuking Iran, and they ARE GOING TO DO IT.

The buildup of ships in the Gulf (as well as a ill-advised Canadian vessel that has a false-flag Israeli bulls-eye painted right on it [Israel masquerades as Iran and sinks the ship]), the mobilization of every possible troop to Iraq to hold down the inevitable Shia REVOLUTION once Iran is nuked... what more do you need to know what they're up to?

IT COULDN'T BE MORE OBVIOUS than if they announced it.

Problem is, EVEN IF THEY DID, people wouldn't believe it, because IT WOULD BE SO SUICIDAL.

Just to oil prices and the resulting economy ALONE, not to mention what China and Russia WILL ABSOLUTELY DO to retaliate, protect THEIR oil interests in Iran, and MAKE GOOD ON THEIR MUTUAL PROTECTION PACTS they have signed LONG AGO with Iran.

These desperate, UTTERLY INSANE, Hitler-in-his-bunker assholes think that the only way to "reunite" the country behind them and their Nazi agenda is to BRING THE ENTIRE REST OF THE WORLD DOWN UPON AMERICA.

Yep, that will unite us all right... in one huge slag heap of NUKED BLACK GLASS, AFTER killer Tsunami on both coasts have washed every major coastal city out to sea.

Could anyone possibly be any more asinine? There just isn't a word suitable to describe how unbelievably stupid these Nazi Warpigs are.

Just no word. In English anyway. I'm sure there's one in Farsi though. And probably in Mandarin as well.

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No Way Out Of The Quagmire
Posted by: Tom Degan on Jan 6, 2007 5:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Iraq has done to the United States what Afghansistan did to the Soviet Union. The damage that a murderous, half-witted little dirt bag named George W. Bush did to his once-great country will be deep and long lasting - we're talkin' gererations here, kiddies! The next twenty-five years will be remembered as the time where America re-defined itself. Part of that redefinition will be shutting down the military industrial complex that has decimated America's treasure and turned the world into a powderkeg. Another part will be returning to the vision of America as articulated by Abraham Lincoln on the fields of Gettysburg one somber afternoon one-hundred and forty-three years ago: "...government of the people, by the people, for the people..." We're doomed otherwise. Father Abraham's vision is, indeed, in serious danger of perishing from the earth.

The war is over. We lost it. Anyone not smart enought to figure this out (Bush and Cheney, for example) are not thinking rationally. For purely political reasons, Dubya is going to try like hell to keep this obscentiy going until January of 2008 when he'll be able to hand it over to the next (read: Democratic) administration to lose. The 110th Congress must take matters in their own hands and end it NOW. As the excellent piece above makes clear, Saddam was a hard act to follow and yet, somehow the First Fool has managed to do it! Poll after poll after embarrassing poll has shown that the majority of the Iraqi people are actually nostalgic for the regime of Saddam Hussein!

Remember his son, Uday? Sure the kid had a bit of a mean streak! Sure he was a homicidal little thug but -you know what they say, don'cha? "Boys will be boys"! Ha! Ha! Ha! The fact that Saddam and both of his sons are now viewed as martyrs is just too funny for words.

As has been said before by people a hell of alot smarter than I, this war is lost. Truth be told, "winning" it, was never even a vague possibility.

Don't pray for American victory in Iraq. Pray for God's will. Pray for peace.

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
"The Rant by Tom Degan

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» RE: No Way Out Of The Quagmire Posted by: monkeywrench
» RE: No we won Posted by: Edward George
» RE: No Way Out Of The Quagmire Posted by: Conservasaurus
» RE: No Way Out Of The Quagmire Posted by: Tom Degan
» RE: No Way Out Of The Quagmire Posted by: sheena2u
Let's give the terrorists what they want...
Posted by: Carl Street on Jan 6, 2007 5:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Only idiots think terrorists are a threat to them. The truth is they are ONLY a threat to our so-called leaders. And, then only because these jerks have profited by raping other countires to make a buck.

Only a fool would put his A$$ on the line to save George Bush and his corporate friends from what they deserve. The easy way out of this is just round up all those jerks and send them to the "terrorists" to do with them whatever they want.

The minute we did that gas would drop down to 30 cents a gallon and the world would look upon us as heroes!

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Insurgent Crackdown Pipedream
Posted by: cynyk on Jan 6, 2007 5:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This morning the wire services report that al-Maliki plans to launch a crackdown on Bagdad insurgents, particularly the forces of Moqtada al-Sadr. But the fact is that al-Sadr's forces have so infiltrated the Iraqi army and police forces, they are a virtual extension of the Mehdi Army. That leaves the Americans to enforce the crackdown. How would you like to be the American soldiers entering Sadr City knowing that you're likely to get shot from both sides - the insurgents and your supposed Iraqi soldier allies?

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Where's the Dough?
Posted by: edith on Jan 6, 2007 5:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The surge of course will result in more destruction and more pollution in Iraq. And Bush is expected to ask for BILLIONS more in "reconstruction" aid for Iraq as part of the surge plan to "stabilize" Iraq. This includes billions for public works prorgrams to hire unemployed Iraqis(unemployed because of the US-unleashed war!).

Not one penny for the surge. As for the billions, we've spent hundreds of billions on "reconstruction" already, and the electric power in Iraq still is spotty. No more money for "reconstruction" until all US troops and facilities are out and dismantled.

No more money for reconstruction until a neutral third party auditor decides where the already spent money went and what needs to be done to bring all of Iraq back into the modern age, not just the Oz-like Green Zone where the US regents reign.

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» RE: Where's the Dough? Posted by: sheena2u
Why?
Posted by: paschn on Jan 6, 2007 6:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why do the US sheeple continue to write about that murdering bastard as though some great mistake was made?
Like it's really not his fault, or character flaw,... or he's just too stupid for the job?
Dammit,.... can you not see evil when it murders your sons and daughters??
When it gathers like maggots on dying flesh to devour what death hasn't taken??
Republicans/neocons have sold your lives out to big business. And it wasn't an "accident",...bad luck or a mistake. Fools,.. it's done intentionally to make money on the backs and blood of YOU AND YOURS!!

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Cut of the funds
Posted by: Democritus on Jan 6, 2007 6:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The funds appropriated last October for Iraq are sufficient to get our troops out swiftly and safely. It's time for Congress to get some guts and cut off more funding for the war. That's the way the Vietnam war ended. Kagan's "surge strategy" is an attempt to use funds already appropriated to send more troops to die. The Kagan claque in Iraq (there are two others) needs to be confronted with reality and then confined to the dustbin of history.

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Some surging thoughts. . .
Posted by: monkeywrench on Jan 6, 2007 6:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Surge"; what a descriptive word. That's what you get when you flush a toilet – which is pretty much where the Bush administraton finds itself in Iraq. Also keep in mind that for every surge, there is a backflow; and for us, that backflow will be flag-draped coffins.

On one side, there are the Sunnis, supported by Saudi Arabia. If the slaughter of their brothers in Iraq escalates, how long will our sweetheart deal for Saudi oil hold out? On the other side, there are the Shiites. They are already being supported by Iraq. If we decide to bomb their nuclear facilities (assuming we can even find them), there is a probability that a good portion of their enormous ground forces will invade Iraq in support of their brothers and to drive us out. We could very quickly find our already overtaxed 140,000 soldiers overwhelmed, or even held hostage. Then what? Nuclear war? This thing could escalate out of control so easily it is positively frightening.

Having Bush as Commander-In-Chief is like giving a hand grenade to a three-year-old. How long will it be until his stupid, reckless adventures really "pull the pin" over there?

The only surge I want to see now is a surge of good sense and courage from Congress to pay attention to the surge of public opposition to the Iraq occupation and impeach the First Idiot and his puppeteer Cheney. Before that pin drops to the floor.

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» RE: Some surging thoughts. . . Posted by: sheena2u
Can't we all just SING ALONG...
Posted by: cheneybush2008 on Jan 6, 2007 6:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
(as sung to
You IS A Human Animal)...

You IS A Huffie Liberal,
You IS A Very Special Breed,
Botch elections, you blame Bush,
Not your flaming leftist push,
For jobs without some work
Which you can't heed.

You IS A Huffie Liberal,
You IS A Very Special Breed,
Whether Fonda or George Lucas,
You'd prefer Saddam had nuked us,
Instead of ending any threat you
couldn't see.

You IS A Huffie Liberal,
You IS A Very Special Breed,
Burn the flag, steal a pill,
You'll abort more children still
than the UN or EU will ever need.

You IS A Huffie Liberal,
You IS A Very Special Breed,
Whether gay or TV hack,
or just a hoe on mostly crack,
There's nothing you won't do to
not succeed.

You IS A Huffie Liberal,
You IS A Very Special Breed,
Shrill and strident, you'll be true,
To all the things with which you've screwed,
FICA, unions, schools, and Medicrap indeed.

You IS A Huffie Liberal,
You IS A Very Special Breed,
Young or old, smart or tanned,
Oh Canada thinks you're still grand,
Though Vermont is where you'll make your
final stand.

You IS A Huffie Liberal,
You IS A Very Special Breed,
Uncle Teddy, Cousin Lerch,
Any pardon selling perch,
Be better than the nation you
besmirch.

You IS A Huffie Liberal,
You IS A Very Special Breed,
When you speak, forests cry,
Booboo Boxer lets them fry,
Never mind the fuzzy critters that
all die.

You IS A Huffie Liberal,
You IS A Very Special Breed,
To the center Hillary runs,
Never mind you don't like guns,
That never stopped you once from
Shrieking MORE SEX WITH NUNS.

You IS A Huffie Liberal,
You IS A Very Special Breed,
Diss the troops, hit a cop,
As long as cable you don't drop,
To watch the latest MeetUp numbers
bleed.

You IS A Huffie Liberal,
You IS A Very Special Breed,
Jezze Jaxson, Martin Sheen,
There's no time for Listerine,
But boiling smelly Birkenstocks is
keen.

You IS A Huffie Liberal,
You IS A Very Special Breed,
Suckled on the teet of state,
Your mantra daily MASTERBATE,
As cure for all ills foreign and
obscene...

OK, your turn, go...

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» Bush castrated you, cb Posted by: Beck
» Sing this song instead Posted by: 1984NOW!!!
» RE: Sing this song instead Posted by: fixitt
THIS URGE TO SURGE
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Jan 6, 2007 7:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a great article. Bush shopped around until he found new people to put in charge who think(?) the way he does. A little like shopping around for a cheap hooker. He hasn't had a good idea in six years I don't have much faith. But the newly elected Dems are doing what they got elected to do. Biden & Murtha won't give up. They now have the backing they need and for the first time Bush stands alone. I think McCain is history. Here's hoping. Thanks, ANNA

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Bush is too burned out to function
Posted by: robchapman on Jan 6, 2007 7:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I watched Bush and Rice at the White House presentation of of PonteNegro as Deputy Secretary of State and was surprised at how stressed and burned out they looked.

If I had one my direct reports show up to work in the condition that Bush was in when he presented NegroPonte, I would suggest a vacation and send him home.

I think it is time to examine whether the stress and rejection of the campaign, the world tour and the ISC controversy have left Bush too depleted to make decisions.

It is also worth questioning whether Bush has the national interest in mind at all in trying to personally define a new national policy after he has been through such an emotionally trying period.

It is unfair to ask the troops, their families and the public to suffer more without first assuring that Bush is mentally and psychologically fit enough to make the decisions needed to implement a major new and untested policy.

Robert Chapman
Lansing, NY

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Stupid Dems and Bush's initiative
Posted by: citizenjoe on Jan 6, 2007 7:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Do we expect anything better from the crusader-racist Bush? All he knows is how to kill more inferior races to try to make them do as he demands. In doing so, he keeps the initiative from the ridiculous Democrats. He takes more money away from their pitiful efforts to give a little charity to the American public which Bush and his corporate cronies are robbing blind. Their stupidity is overwhelming. Bush is their enemy, nevertheless, they pretend he is merely a misguided well-intentioned President. Bush knows better.

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Tickertape ticks for Bush
Posted by: earthmother on Jan 6, 2007 7:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If it weren't for the utter frustration and mayhem of it all, the comedy of the whole damn mess would be hilarious. It is so easy to see and yet- the media is sooooo good at misdirection. It's like a mondo medicine show. But forget the smoke and mirrors... bring on the ROCKET'S RED GLARE! BOMBS BURSTING IN AIR! BUSH'S PROFITS ARE THERE! These "WARS" are doing EXACTLY what Bush & Co. planned them to do and the changing of his players is merely a tag team maneuver. As he said, loudly and proudly during a debate with Al Core, "By the time it is all said and done I will have made more money than I could ever dream." And he meant it.

And so, here we are. And here we will be until he has squeezed every drop of life's blood from this government- HIS government. Or have the public already forgotten? "IT WAS OUR GOVERNMENT. THEY STOLE IT. WE WANT IT BACK." Isn't that what the Blond Boy Bimbo of the far right said?

Or, as Grover Norquist said... "We will shrink the U.S. government until we can drown it in the bathtub!"

Glub glub, our nation's in the tub.

It is easy to understand, really. Bush Co. will continue to give the U.S. the Arbusto treatment and nothing but NOTHING spends money like WAR! WAR-huh! What is it good for? BREAKING THE BANK! I tell ya... Carl Icon could take lessons on corporate raiding from this group!

But think on it... Is there a bigger corporation to raid? Anywhere? Go ahead. Think he is STUPID. That works for him. Argue over what is the best straTEEgery. Bicker, ponder, articulate all you want. Profess and progress, argue and contemplate. Shake shout and throw yourself about. It doesn't matter at all because every second of every hour that Bush continues to RULE the meters are ticking. The bill is flying, soaring, reaching new heights never before achieved. Nixon must be stymied as he watches from beyond at the amount of money Bush is spending. NO war ever profitted a president and compadres more than this one vis a vis The Carlyle Group, and others like Halliburton.

As Bush so peavishly asserts... he is RICH. Filthy rich. Top of the heap. What is more, he is a WAR PRESIDENT. Winning has no meaning in these wars other than the money of it all. And he just might be the one to break the bank.

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Clash of the Elites By JOHN WALSH
Posted by: rwa on Jan 6, 2007 7:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A titanic power struggle is being waged within the policy elite, or more simply the U.S. ruling class. The clash is taking place over the war on Iraq, U.S. policy toward Israel--and ultimately over the best way to run the U.S. empire. The war on Iraq is shaping up as such a disaster for the empire that it can no longer be tolerated by our rulers in its present form. The struggle is as plain as the nose on your face; nevertheless it draws little comment. One reason is that we are taught to view matters political through the prism of Democrat versus Republican, whereas this struggle among our rulers cuts across party lines. On the "Left," few so much as allude to this internecine war, much less use it to good effect. This is apparently due to a very rigid, very dogmatic view of how empires function, indeed how they "must" function, and due to a fear of being labeled anti-semitic and thus running afoul of the Israeli Lobby. In many cases this silence reflects an actual sympathy among "liberals" for neocon foreign policy, either out of a latter day do-gooder version of the White Man's Burden, or an attachment to Israel.

This struggle is in no way hidden and definitely not a secret conspiracy. It is out in the open, as it must be, since it is in great part a battle for the hearts and minds of the American public. This fact makes the absence of commentary about it all the more chilling. The fight among our rulers sets the neocons against other very important elements in the establishment: the senior officer corps, represented by Jack Murtha and Colin Powell; the old money like Ned Lamont; the oil men, like James Baker; those who want to see the American imperium run effectively, like Lee Hamilton and Robert Gates of the Iraq Study Group; many in the CIA, both active duty and retired; policy makers like Zbigniew Brzezinski who has long opposed the war which he has ascribed to the influence of certain "ethnic" groups; and even former presidents Gerald Ford who kept his mouth shut and Jimmy Carter who has not and whose frustration with Israel and the neocons is all too clear in his book "Palestine, Peace Not Apartheid."

On the other side are the neocons, based in the Washington "Think" Tanks, in the civilian leadership of the pre-Gates Pentagon, in Dick Cheney's office, in large parts of both parties in Congress, and in the editorial pages of the print media. Most of the House and much of the Senate is still under the control of the neocons thanks to the fund-raising exertions and threats from AIPAC and its minions. Hence, the most powerful political allies of the neocons are the leading Democrats, who indulge in the most intense and shallow anti-Bush rhetoric but are reliable allies in the neocon crusades in the Middle East. The neocon side has relied heavily on the power of ideas. This in turn hinges on the second rate level of those writing for the mass media who go along with whatever framework for policy discussion is put forward by the neocons. Good examples of this are most op-ed pages, the Sunday morning talk shows, Weekend Edition on NPR and Washington Week in Review on PBS...

Given this balance of forces, it would seem that the neocons must lose ­ but the outcome remains open. The neocons cannot be counted out, even though their base is narrow, for they can draw on all the resources of a nation state, Israel, with its vaunted intelligence services and special forces which span the world and operate in the U.S., as well as its ability, if it desires, to launder cash and deliver it to U.S. operatives. And of course the war profiteers like Halliburton and others love the Iraq adventure. The arms manufacturers may be less happy with it, since money is not being spent on profitable high-tech weapons which do not have to function but rather on highly unprofitable "boots on the ground."

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Clash of the Elites By JOHN WALSH #2
Posted by: rwa on Jan 6, 2007 7:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The public forays of the anti-neocons in this struggle are well-known. James Wilson in the New York Times, accusing Bush of lying about uranium from Niger; Richard Clarke's expose on the incompetence behind 9/11; the exposure of Judith Miller as lying about WMD, thus corrupting the NYT reportage (even the Washington Post, dominated as its opinion pages are by the neocons did not allow its reporting to be undermined by the likes of Judith Miller); the antiwar stance of John Murtha indicating the unhappiness of the senior officer corps with the dominance of US Middle East policy by the Israel-first neocons; Mearsheimer and Walt's paper, as important for who wrote it as for its content, which finally took on the Israeli Lobby, the core adversary of the anti-neocons; and most recently Jimmy Carter's book which inevitably raises the question of the shedding of American blood to preserve Israeli apartheid and to lay waste every and any nation perceive by Israel to be a threat. Add to this the report of the Baker Commission and the near-simultaneous removal of Rumsfeld and his replacement with a member of the Baker Commission.

The biggest blow to the neocon agenda came from the people themselves, in the form of the 2004 election defeat of the Republicans. Unfortunately, this defeat amounted only to a registration of national disgust over the war in Iraq but not one which would result in policy changes since the establishment Dems are solidly neocon in their foreign policy ­ especially when it comes to the Middle East and Israel. The same is true of many progressives. One looks in vain for a reference to the Lobby on the Michael Moore web site for example or in the missives from UFPJ or from "P"DA.

Two questions emerge. Are there advantages to be gained from this struggle for the peace movement? Most definitely. We are being provided with powerful testimony from the most unassailable sources ­ Jimmy Carter, Richard Clarke and Mearsheimer and Walt to name a few. And we should not allow this important information to be discredited by the neocons. The leading anti-neocons are not anti-empire, but at least they want to end the bloody war on Iraq and the dominance of Israel over key segments of U.S. foreign policy. That is a step forward. And second, given the key power of the Israel Lobby, can the peace movement fail any longer to ignore it as though it were irrelevant? Absolutely not. We ignore it at our peril. And we must get rid of all fears of being labeled as anti-semites. Most Jewish Americans, much to their credit, oppose the policies of the Lobby, which in the long run may be responsible for stirring up considerable anti-semitism in the U.S. and around the world. Would it not be wonderful if an anti-Lobby organization of Jewish Americans emerged with a title like "Not in Our Name"?

Finally, given the balance of forces at play, it is difficult to discern what Bush is likely to do in the coming days and months. The punditry is now predicting an escalation of the war in Iraq (aka a "surge"), but Bush surprised once with the firing of Rumsfeld of which there was no advance hint ­ quite the contrary. He is certainly under enormous pressure to alter course, and he may have to do so no matter how much he recoils from it. He may even do so after a "surge" which could be used as a smoke screen for a policy shift. But escalating the conflict even temporarily will sink his ratings below 30% and make him the most unpopular president in history. We shall see.

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Bush = destruction
Posted by: mountainmama on Jan 6, 2007 8:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
EVERYTHING Bush touches he either ruins or destroys outright! Look at his past history at jobs for a perfect example. He's a looser!

It is my prediction that this "new way forward" plan is going to backfire big time!

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BUSHH AND CHENEY ARE DUMB ASSES
Posted by: philobat on Jan 6, 2007 8:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Neither of these drunken boobs seem to get the message the American people are delivering to them. The sad fact is they do not care one ioda. They will continue to destroy lives as well as our reputation around the world (for a fee) until they are forced out of office.

They do not care what anyone has to say. They made up their own rules and laws to carry out what they want to do with no regard to anything but their own agendas.

The fact they remain in power just goes to show that Americans have lost our voices- for now.

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Remember the Alamo
Posted by: Carl Street on Jan 6, 2007 8:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have come to believe that the reason all the idiot presidents come from Texas is they have Alamo Syndrome -- they think dying in battle is a good thing and want everyone to do it.

I have seen this act before with Lyndon Baines Johnson

Now we have Lyndon Baines Bush....

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Is there a doctor in the house?
Posted by: Ellen Remore on Jan 6, 2007 9:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What I find truly astonishing is that no one, NO ONE, has yet made the observation that Bush is not just "living in a bubble," but is, in fact, as crazy as a shithouse rat. I do not intend that as sarcasm or hyperbole; he is beginning to make Hitler in the Bunker look like a man grounded in reality. Mr. Biden probably has a point inasmuch as Cheney is concerned, but I'm convinced that George is just waiting to hear from Jesus. Consider the perilous nature of this situation. This is the most powerful man on the planet; the individual whose hand is poised over "the button." Leaving him in the Oval Office is somewhat like leaving an Olympic torchbearer in a nitroglycerine factory!

I am dead serious about this. We need to start writing and calling our Congresspersons, telling them to get up off their dead asses and look at the 800-lb. gorilla at the dinner table. God knows, I hate Cheney; he's nothing but walking malevolence--but he's less dangerous only because he's manifestly less insane. Jesus, people, I'm usually not a Cassandra, but we could be frigging doomed!!

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» RE: Is there a doctor in the house? Posted by: VannaLaRoche
» RE: Is there a doctor in the house? Posted by: Ellen Remore
It's time to both push on and support the Democrats
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Jan 6, 2007 9:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Keep in mind that all the Democrats are being heavily lobbied by the same corporate powers that were so eager for the invasion of Iraq in the first place.

At least Pelosi and Reid have tried to gain the initiative by publically calling for troop withdrawals over the next four months. Murtha has indicated that if an escalation is declared by Bush he'll introduce legislation to cut off the funding for that step.

Pelosi, Reid Call for Withdrawal of Troops, Washington Post

Also keep in mind that politicians can only do so much. Ask yourself who is really benefitting from this war - Halliburton, ExxonMobil, ChevronTexaco, BP, Shell, ConocoPhillips, etc - and their financiers: international investment banks and hedge funds who also control most of the other large corporations (pharma, telecom, weapons, agribusiness, etc.). If you bother to write to Democrats to encourage them to cut off funding (which we should all do), also include this line:

"The wealthiest sectors in the US are benefitting immensely from government services, but they are refusing to pay their fair share - please repeal all of the tax cuts that Bush implemented, especially the cuts in the capital gains tax. Get rid of the government subsidies for oil exploration and industrial agriculture, and start subsidizing renewable energy!"

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The Republican War in Iraq
Posted by: Jersey Devil on Jan 6, 2007 10:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now is the time for the Republican Party to fish or cut bait on Iraq. Those Republicans that support Bush's increased troop levels and his war in Iraq, will accept responsibility in 2008 for THEIR war. Republican's that DO NOT support Bush's War and his sending more troops into the Iraqi meat grinder should stand up and say so now or also accept responsibility in 2008. There is no longer anywhere for members of Congress to run and hide from responsibility. We as voters should keep score of who is for and who is against the Bush War in Iraq and vote accordingly in 2008. We have the votes, we have the power, we must choose wisely in 2008 or our nation will continue to suffer self-serving fools.

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A little question to Americans
Posted by: Temporary on Jan 6, 2007 10:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was wondering, why do you people always bitch about both israel AND Iran! Do you honestly want to have both powers as enemies, with nearly half a million American forces between them? Perhaps it's time to make some tough choices and cut the macho shit?

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» RE: A little question to Americans Posted by: Ellen Remore
» RE: A little question to Americans Posted by: Carl Street
A question about the war...
Posted by: Carl Street on Jan 6, 2007 10:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If we send a "SURGE" of troops to Iraq will that make our own troops inSURGEnts?

Sounds like it will to me....

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normpink
Posted by: normpink on Jan 6, 2007 10:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"ESCALATION" not "surge". Let's be precise and not use neocon langauge double talk so that they can escape analogies with Vietnam.

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» RE: normpink Posted by: Suzannah
» RE: normpink Posted by: Dboy
Emerald City and Surgitis
Posted by: cognitorex on Jan 6, 2007 10:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
About two weeks ago a prominent mid east expert said that his sources felt the Sunni insurgents were close to actually mounting an attack on "Emerald" City.
This causes the presumption that if we leave, Emerald City will be overrun. This is anathema, personally and politically, to the hubristic incompetents running this fiasco.
It also broaches the "1% Doctrine" that America's embassy, our palatial downtown Baghdad digs, are in some violative jeopardy as we speak.
Lo and alas that we should be in this situation, but both scenarios cry out their seductive song.

"Surge, surge, surge"
"Surge you fools."

cognitorex blogspot

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The Surge: Political Cover or Escalation? By Paul Craig Roberts
Posted by: rwa on Jan 6, 2007 10:51 AM   
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The New Year began on the hopeful note that Bush’s illegal war in Iraq would soon be ended. The repudiation of Bush and the Republicans in the November congressional election, the Iraq Study Group’s unanimous conclusion that the US needs to remove its troops from the sectarian strife Bush set in motion by invading Iraq, Donald Rumsfeld’s removal as defense secretary and his replacement by Iraqi Study Group member Robert Gates, the thumbs down given by America’s top military commanders to the neoconservatives’ plan to send more US troops to Iraq, and new polls of the US military that reveal that only a minority supports Bush’s Iraq policy, thus giving new meaning to "support the troops," are all indications that Americans have shed the stupor that has given carte blanche to George W. Bush...

The American Establishment, concerned by Bush’s mismanagement, moved to take control of Iraq policy away from him. However, recent news reports suggest that Bush has turned his back to the American establishment and his military advisers and is throwing in his lot with the neoconservatives and the Israeli lobby. This will further isolate Bush and make him more vulnerable to impeachment...

Raed Jarrar (CounterPunch, January 4) suggests that the Shi’ite militias, such as the one led by Al-Sadr, are the intended targets of the "surge option." There seems no surer way to escalate the conflict in Iraq than to attack the Shi’ite militias...The reason the US has not been driven out of Iraq is that the majority Shi’ites have not been part of the insurgency. The US owes its presence in Iraq, just as the colonial powers always owed their presence in the Middle East, to the disunity of Arabs.

Attacking the Shi’ite militias while fighting a Sunni insurgency would violate this rule. If Bush ignores US military commanders and expert opinion and accepts the surge option advanced by the delusional neocon allies of Israel’s Likud Party, US troops will be engulfed in general insurgency. This is why General John Abizaid resigned on January 5.

In recent Senate Armed Services Committee hearings, Senator John McCain, who believes in the efficacy of violence and not in diplomacy, pressed Abizaid to request more US troops to be sent to Iraq. General Abizaid replied as follows:

"Senator McCain, I met with every divisional commander, General Casey, the core commander, General Dempsey, we all talked together. And I said, in your professional opinion, if we were to bring in more American troops now, does it add considerably to our ability to achieve success in Iraq? And they all said no."

By manipulating Bush and provoking a military crisis in which the US stands to lose its army in Iraq, the neoconservatives hope to revive the implementation of their plan for US conquest of the Middle East. They believe they can use fear, "honor," and the aversion to ignoble defeat to expand the conflict in response to military disaster.

The neocons believe that the loss of an American army would be met with the electorate’s demand for revenge. The barriers to the draft would fall, as would the barriers to the use of nuclear weapons.

Neocon godfather Norman Podhoretz set out the plan for Middle East conquest several years ago in Commentary Magazine. It is a plan for Muslim genocide. In place of physical extermination of Muslims, Podhoretz advocates their cultural destruction by deracination. Islam is to be torn out by the roots and reduced to a purely formal shell devoid of any real beliefs.

Podhoretz disguises the neoconservative attack against diversity with contrived arguments, but its real purpose is to use the US military to subdue Arabs and to create space for Israel to expand.
Not enough Americans are aware that this is what the "war on terror" is all about.

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Baker Act their Butts
Posted by: ccluelessfl60 on Jan 6, 2007 11:18 AM   
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The only Surge that makes sense to me is a Surge of white coats with strait jackets into the Oval Office. Our fearful leader is just plain nuts and so is his buddy Dick. A shared psychosis maybe due to too many hormones in their prime steaks.Out side the protection of the office both of them would have to present themselves to a Judge and prove they were not a danger to themselves or others. A combination of megalomania, illusions of grandeur and narcissism has rendered them both psychotic. Lack of insight prevents them both from dealing with reality and they see no harm in sacrificing a few more men and women for their failed policies of world domination. They are both quite nuts and the Constitution made no provision for lunacy. Lets' see if we can't Baker Act their butts. Bet we could get a few psycharitrists to examine them.

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b*tch kitty
Posted by: hangman on Jan 6, 2007 12:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
as a neighbor, to the north . it is strange that they continue to ignore the lessons from history. but its not a real big surprise. for with the radical extreme right wing neocons and christian groups that are and have benn financing this idiotic war and invasion from the begining. (sound familiar?)
if they stay ignorant of reality and think that their extreme religious beleifs are the end all be all.
Its that thing of , if we stay in a holding pattern of repeating history of violence and war based on extreme right wing beleifs . they can pretend to invade others and control the world. stupid crusade crap.
If only their God would slap them silly to snap out of it already .
As long as they keep using age old practices of religion and war with violence , nothing is going to change other than the end of their own bubble world and that around them. thus the empire falls.
throwing more souls into a war is not the answer to their prayers.
its almost as if they don't want to break the cycle of history, cause it might mean they have to accept reality and evolve with the rest of the world.

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Link to a Brilliant Piece by "The Man for All Seasons"
Posted by: fearlessmanateehunter on Jan 6, 2007 12:49 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Completely OFF TOPIC... Highly recomended reading......

http://www.thenation.com/doc/200...20070122/ moyers

Best regards,

Fearless Manatee Hunter,
Killer of the gentle Sea Cow

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Grand Strategy at Its Worst
Posted by: rwa on Jan 6, 2007 1:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Stalingrad on the Tigris
By FRANKLIN C. SPINNEY

Sun Tzu said avoid protracted war and attack cities as a last resort.

President Bush has managed to do the opposite in Iraq. Now he is about to escalate his long-war strategy with a door to door assault on Baghdad. The aim will be to cleanse Baghdad's neighborhoods of insurgents and local militias. But as Patrick Cockburn has shown, most of these militias are allied to the different factions of the Iraqi government we put into place.

Once the Battle of Baghdad starts, and casualties and frustrations mount, the US military will do what it always does: it will fall back on a technology-intensive firepower strategy.

But militias and insurgents will not cooperate by standing and fighting. Our adversaries will not provide the kind of targets so conveniently assumed by the Pentagon in the computer models it uses to sell its high-cost hi-tech weapons to Congress and the American people. The local fighters will counter with hit and run raids on US forces.

The increasing rubblization of Baghdad will create more opportunities for dispersing, for ambushing, and for mining. As the German's learned in Stalingrad, and we should have learned at Monte Cassino, the irregularity of rubble makes it easier for defenders to hide in or disappear into the environmental background, or what the Pentagon antiseptically calls the "urban battle space."

Couple this battlespace with the rising sea of intelligence support provided by increasingly hostile local residents, and it is likely that the US forces will be bogged down in a highly destructive unending battle.

Given the dubious nature of Mr. Bush's real motives for invading Iraq and our military's predilection for substituting firepower for ideas, the strategy of providing greater security to Baghdad's local population by destroying their city is an oxymoronic fantasy that will increase division at home, embolden adversaries, alienate allies and uncommitted nations, and make it impossible to end this conflict on favorable terms that do not sow the seeds for future conflict.

This is grand strategy at its worst.

But then, we have seen how fantasies come easily to the armchair strategists careening around the hall of mirrors that is Versailles on the Potomac.

Franklin C. Spinney is a former Pentagon analyst and whistleblower. His writing on defense issues can be found on the invaluable Defense in the National Interest website.

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» The Charge of The Light Brigade Posted by: Carl Street
Re-Name this war
Posted by: Jeanne on Jan 6, 2007 2:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To keep things perfectly clear, so that if Congress is somehow duped into either accepting or funding this latest error, let this War now and forever be called "Bush's War". It is the war he started with "facts" he concocted, funded with money that isn't part of the budget, and without support of most of the public. I think that makes it his. He made it up, he owns it. It is BUSH'S WAR.

The corollary is the McCain Doctrine -- surge and sustain.

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walt1944
Posted by: wrogal on Jan 6, 2007 8:10 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All this sounds so much like the Vietnam War that its unbelievable that politicians came be so stupid. When another Republican, Nixon, decided to show North Vietnam who was the "BOSS", he decided to act like Lydon Johnson by bombing North Vietnam into rubble and expanding the war into Cambodia. Neither "military surge" worked and South Vietnam still fell to the North. "Tricky Dicky" nearly tore the country apart with that and Watergate put the final nail in his coffin.
Now we have another Republican who thinks he is "King George" by continuing on another war with no end in sight, putting in more troops to lose more lives, wreck the personal lives of people at home (as if he cares!), and all for the financial gain of war profiteers like Dick Cheney and Halliburton. Add to all this the really frightening facts that this "neocon/neonazis" is spying on everyone's phone and now mail, and all I can ask is "WHERE ARE YOU WHEN WE NEED YOU, BILL CLINTON?"!!!

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COOKED @ AMERIKA CORP
Posted by: Hal on Jan 7, 2007 2:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The train wreck of lies behind a completely phony war spree by those that pretend to be at the helm of a Washington-MSM cesspit was well known to any blogger that cared to know.

The MSM had virtually one voice solidly behind this bogus episode as web sites aplenty (without real budgets or resources) continually published documented evidence to contradict the official Big Lie before the first bomb drop. Ditto for 911 cover-up.

Anyone that holds true power over this crypto-fascist nightmare of a former democracy does not live in the public eye. That does not excuse the self-serve criminals who performed their stage act at this latest obscenity for their masters.

But of course, it gets worse.

Iraq War Inc. was on the official front burner at bad theatre DC from well before a “neocon” unanimously passed “Iraq Liberation Act” of 1998.

Most worst-case scenarios had been war-gamed and plotted out decades before the cooked trigger at 911. The idea was to get into Iraq for a “we break it, we own it” debacle (Colin Powel).

Of course, it’s only a disaster for most Americans who pick up the tab in blood and treasure.

For Big Oil, cartel bankers and military contractors it’s a blood money banquet at the carcass of Iraq where corporate parasites feed like there’s no tomorrow.

Thus global village idiot GW Bush continues to “break” Iraq as we build military compounds there larger than the Vatican. And still other permanent bases from Kuwait to a half dozen countries in Eurasia.

Whatever the “left” or “right” says out of DC this was never about pulling out or going home.

Ever.

It’s about Bad Cop and Good Cop at a dirty station where the mob owns both and the fix is in.

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I don't 'denigrate solar power' - and Iraq is all about Big Oil - happening right now
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Jan 7, 2007 9:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Weird - are you even reading what I write? Solar is obviously the way to go, but it needs far more support - I'd argue for a capital gains tax cut for any investments in solar, for one thing, along with a removal of tax subsidies for oil exploration and cancelling the 'oil depletion allowance', as well as small loan programs that would aid individual homeowners in purchasing solar systems, as well as tax breaks and subsidies for electrical utilities that build solar plants. Quit lying about what I say, would you?

The British press seems to have less difficultly telling the truth, for some reason - here is more:

http://news.independent.co.uk/ world/middle_east/article2132574.ece

"Blood and oil: How the West will profit from Iraq's most precious commodity
The 'IoS' today reveals a draft for a new law that would give Western oil companies a massive share in the third largest reserves in the world. To the victors, the oil? That is how some experts view this unprecedented arrangement with a major Middle East oil producer that guarantees investors huge profits for the next 30 years

Published: 07 January 2007
So was this what the Iraq war was fought for, after all? As the number of US soldiers killed since the invasion rises past the 3,000 mark, and President George Bush gambles on sending in up to 30,000 more troops, The Independent on Sunday has learnt that the Iraqi government is about to push through a law giving Western oil companies the right to exploit the country's massive oil reserves.

And Iraq's oil reserves, the third largest in the world, with an estimated 115 billion barrels waiting to be extracted, are a prize worth having. As Vice-President Dick Cheney noted in 1999, when he was still running Halliburton, an oil services company, the Middle East is the key to preventing the world running out of oil."

Alternet should post that article!

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CAN CONGRESS RESCIND THE AUTHORIZATION FOR THE USE OF FORCE?
Posted by: xbj on Jan 7, 2007 10:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Any constitutional law experts out there? Can't Congress rescind the authorization to use force? Get a team of lawyers to determine that CONGRESS WAS LIED TO in the first place and that THE ORIGINAL AUTHORIZATION WAS OBTAINED UNDER FALSE PRETENSES.

Therby making it NULL AND VOID. LEGALLY.

This would effectively KILL not only THE SURGE, but ALSO KILL ANY NUKING OF IRAN WITHOUT CONGRESS GIVING FUTURE APPROVAL.

IF THIS CAN BE DONE, IT MUST BE DONE A.S.A.P.

Bush could NO LONGER sneak attack Iran (in a phony retaliation against a flase flag attack against American or Canadian interests carried out by Israel) IF THIS IS CARRIED OUT.

Not only that, it would stop the surge DEAD IN ITS TRACKS WITHOUT withdrawing funding or support for current troops.

It could also be seen as a first step toward impeachment and forcing the White House War Pigs to BRING HOME THE TROOPS.

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New way forward, said the lemming
Posted by: Dboy on Jan 7, 2007 11:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's not a "surge", its a military escalation. You fake left people seriously need to start learning about the importance of language. NEVER EVER ANYWHERE refer to this as a "surge"! When you do, you are buying into the neocon language. Don't get them have your words. It's a military escalation. Call it what is it or keep losing elections. The reason you don't see the word "escalation" in print is because fake left people are not using the WORD. I'm an atheist, but I've been trying to learn how to communicate to theists lately, so let me try this out. In the beginning was the WORD, and WORD with with God, AND THE WORD WAS GOD. Any questions? Damn, I have a public school education and managed to figure it out, why can't you people?

Dboy

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confused canadian
Posted by: memojames on Jan 7, 2007 1:06 PM   
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The discussion about how Congress might stop Bush from sending more soldiers to Iran seems to be limited to refusing more funds. I understand Congress has control of the purse strings but I also understand that Congress authorized the military action in Iraq. Can't Congress withdraw that authorization?

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» RE: confused canadian Posted by: Ian MacLeod
This is the start of the Middle East Wars
Posted by: Reader11722 on Jan 7, 2007 1:42 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First, they'll be a 'surge', then a 'push', next an 'escalation', then another 'surge'. As we all know, Iraq is a diversion. As the army attacks Iraq, the US gov't erodes rights at home by suspending habeas corpus, stealing private lands, banning books like "America Deceived" from Amazon, rigging elections, conducting warrantless wiretaps and starting 2 illegal wars based on lies. Soon, another US false-flag operation will occur (sinking of an Aircraft Carrier by Mossad) and the US will invade Iran, (on behalf of Israel).
Final link (before Google Books bends to gov't demands and censors the title):
America Deceived (book)

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Discriminators
Posted by: think on Jan 7, 2007 4:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Think!

Beneath the skin, regardless of color, we all look the same--a bloody mess!

Think!

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America & Israel Lost: Welcome to Greater Iran
Posted by: sofla100 on Jan 7, 2007 6:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Time to face up to GW Bushes karma, America and Israel lost, and there is nothing they can do about it. Iraq is history as the country collapses, and with Iraq disappearing will be an enlarged Iran, to somewhere West of Baghdad, a Kurdistan in the North and perhaps an expanded Saudi Arabia with the rest of Iraq. No amount of troops, casualties, kids killed will stop it now. The best thing America can do, is obviously to make peace with Iran and stand up to Israel to settle the boundaries of the new Palestinian State. This is actually a good thing because America really should have no cause to fight with Iran and the Arab states. Osama and 911 were caused by radicals, similiar to the David Koreshes of Christianity. With the new Iran will come America reconciling to the new reality and ultimately a stronger and more stable Middle East. Can Israel survive? I think so, but you know, it is really up to them. Instead of manipulating and buying off American politicians, it is time for them to get real, cut the apartheid stuff as South Africa did, and settle permanent boundaries to the satisfaction of all the impacted parties.

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» Excellent comment Posted by: citizenjoe
» RE: xcellent comment Posted by: mwildfire
THE 'SURGE' IS ANOTHER BLIND FOOTSTEP ON THE ROAD TO HELL
Posted by: TheStranger on Jan 8, 2007 11:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
See Digging Deeper blog, http://ivangoldman.blogspot.com/

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ITS TOTALLY THE DEMOCRATS FAULT!!!!!!
Posted by: poppop_schell on Jan 8, 2007 12:43 PM   
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If the Democrats had the political guts and moral fortitiude, they could stop this talk of surge immediately and also bring our troops home by June 30, 2007. Bush is NOT to blame as he is so obesseed with how history will see him that he can't think straight. Pride proceedeth the fall.

Simple solution to the surge. Stop the funding and do as Kucinich is advocating. Again, America's IMAGE is the main issue whcih again is simply FALSE PRIDE. We made a huge mistake and stop escalating it.

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Listens to his Commanders on the ground Until
Posted by: JSquercia on Jan 8, 2007 1:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The President is always talking about he LISTENS to his commanders on the ground and the Senator Kyle talk about
Surge being the the best idea of the Generals . WELL it should be abduntly clear by now that this is just pure BUSHSHIT . The emperor listens to no one unles you count his puppetmaster Cheney .Anyone who disgarees with Bush is sacked .
I don't know what is going to save this country from these
Arrogant , Ignorant , Corrupt and Greedy bastards but I can only pray that something or someONE will

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Bush Is Not A Christian
Posted by: FileandClaw on Jan 11, 2007 6:35 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bush is just a parallel counterpart of tyranny and murder. He is not a Christian by any sense of the word. He is a Mason of the highest degree. He follows Crowleyian doctrine and philosophy along with the Masonic Dogmatic philosophies of Albert Pike.

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