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lol, when i read to understand it makes no sense whatsoever![]()
So the Dems control the Senate and the House - hip hip hooray. Or is it?
Instead of complaining, they will now have to contribute.
Instead of scapegoating, they will have to be part of the solution.
Iraq is no longer Bush's problem exclusively, it is a Dem problem too.
Rumsfeld is gone - no more soundbites about how incompetent he is
I guess admitting the economy is good will be ok?
Time for action - real decision making. Not just second guessing and Monday morning quarterbacking
Are they up to it?
Will Nancy Pelosi use her power to waste valuable time investigating the Bush Admin or instead put forth an agenda that she/her party believe will benefit the country.
Will Charlie Rangel spend more time decorating Cheney's old office than figuring out how to finance the govt?
Will they push for a deadline to pull out of Iraq? or reduce funding?
Tough tough decisions to make - and the Dems will have to make them - or appear just as ineffective as the Republicans
This is what they wanted - or is it?
Put up or shut up time
Many of our JUB homocons need their closets for other things... but you didn't hear that from me!
i think this is where the twilight zone music cues in
thanks for sharing your opinions kulindahr
they are kooky as all hell but you have a right to them
Oh, she's inconsolable, the poor thing! Perhaps it's best to leave her alone.
Want some cheese with that whine?
and if you read subsequent posts, you will see that a majority of the JUBBERs support payback not improving the country
But, of course, there is no reason for us not to do both.
But, of course, there is no reason for us not to do both.
Iraq is a big, deadly, expensive mess and Americans want it fixed.Even though the voters put the Democrats in charge of Congress; 78 % of the voters who were polled were concerned that the Democrats might pull out of Iraq too quickly. ...
Iraq is a big, deadly, expensive mess and Americans want it fixed.
Problem is, nobody knows how to fix it, and in fact it might not be fixable for a very long time.
While there were plenty of other problems to deal with, Bush & Co created one that didn't exist before them. I think Americans still have not realized what a disgustingly corrupt, dishonest, incompetent, destructive administration Bush & Co is. And BushRepublicans are responsible as well, riding on their coat tails and marching in lockstep to Karl Rove's orders.
What I suspect will end up happening is we redeploy our troops and then maintain some kind of monitoring in the area, and return militarily if our own interests are threatened.
The bottom line is Bush & Co started this with a bunch of lies so they could have a war with Saddam Hussein and then they mismanaged it spectacularly. BushRepublicans in Congress helped the incompetent Bush & Co by repeating their lying propaganda about how great it was going in Iraq and how Democratic opposition was anti-American and pro-terrorist. Also BushRepublicans are to blame because they neglected to hold Bush & Co accountable, neglected to perform essential oversight.
So Americans voted in Democrats. What Democrats have taken on is a situation in crisis, and that means crisis management. The worst part is they're not even in a position to take action with Iraq, only to formulate a plan and suggest it to Bush & Co.
It's a terrible situation for Democrats but it's also an opportunity. We'll see how well they finesse being entrusted with dealing with a huge mess that they don't have the power to clean up.
Good one Mattie - another recycled pic from James with a baby crying - really original. About as original as the current Dem position on what to do in Iraq - oh that's right they have none.
You are proving the point of my post
You have no idea what the Dems will do - because they haven't outlined anything
Be careful what u wish for cause the hangover is gonna be killer
Well, your just cynical as hell, aren't you! LoL...I don't think it is really as simple or self-serving as you put it. Most of "big industry" in America have been very suspicious of free-trade. For every Bill Gates and Microsoft who supports it, there is a US Steel who doesn't. I think your revealing your own ideological prejudices. If you instinctively feel that "big business" is inherently evil...your prolly on the Left. I think business is inherently good.
seapuppy said:We COMPLETELY dissagree here. The West is half asleep, demoralized, and uncertain how to deal with, what I believe, to be the single most important international issue regarding world peace that we will face in this century. I always find it funny when people only quote that one line from Ike. Even Ike thought it was used out of context in his time. He presided over one of the greatest expansions of the military industrial complex in history. Ike's warning was to be careful in your oversight...not "it's time to break out the sandles and love-beads." Give the General a little more credit than that.
seapuppy said:Where are you getting that ideologies not linked to "land aquisition" fail? 1. Who says Islamic extremism isn't interested in controlling territory? 2. Movements DEVOID of fervrent ideology usually fail, not the other way around. "A few loopy muslims?" We need to chip in and get you cable news or sumthin. Islamic extremism is adhered to by TENS of MILLIONS upon TENS of MILLIONS at the most conservative estimate. It is THE dominate opposition politically in EVERY SINGLE MUSLIM COUNTRY ON THE PLANET in those countries not ALREADY under their control. Were you just unaware of this? Can you name a SINGLE muslim country where that is NOT the case? I can't think of one.
seapuppy said:You have me utterly confused here???? Your saying Al Qeada has NO interest in Iraq BECAUSE it is so rich in oil? WTF??? Are you kidding? I could argue the abserdity of that, but why take my word for it? Accoriding to Al Qeada's official sources, Iraq is THE CENTRAL FRONT in thier efforts. They will be delighted to take over or at least control significant aspects of that countries national life.
seapuppy said:It is just not true, and in direct contrast to basic military history, to think that the South Vietnamese were not severely handicapped by the total cut-off in aid. They DID run out of the most basic supplies.
seapuppy said:The peace accords did allow everyone's troops, except ours, to remain on the chessboard where they were but it was a treaty based on the eventual political settlement of the conflict.
seapuppy said:You are totally glossing over the Democratic Parties betrayal of the people of South-East Asia and trying to make it seem as if the Republicans were just as guilty.
Good. I hate to repeat what someone else has already said.Your version wasn't quite like CNN was discussing yesterday.
I remember.Remember what the orignal vote was in Congress.
It would be foolhardy to forget the destructive and divisive words and actions of BushRepublicans over the past several years.The blame game needs to be behind us
1. Can you please advise the forum who "most of the Democrats" are who posit that firearms shouldn't exist in America? As in a list of names? Otherwise, it would seem you've gone off the rails again.
2. Can you please advise how you came to the conclusion that these unnamed people and anyone who agrees somehow becomes "pro-rape, pro-murder, pro-crime?"
Can you please substantiate your statement that somehow "taking away firearms" would mean "at least 2.5 million more crimes in the U.S. every year?"
Not that I don't necessarily trust you, but a history of playing fast and loose with the facts has dimmed your reputation.
It's a pity you haven't provided a link or the transcript, especially as you're only providing one side of that poll's findings. The flip side of that poll was an equal number fearing the Republicans would drag their feet and take too long to exit Iraq. As such, I really don't know what value this poll holds as a metric for what the public's expectations of BOTH parties really are.
One thing of which I'm certain is this war is viewed as a Republican war, it's seen as Bush's war, which is quite accurate. After all, it was evidence culled, chosen, and provided by the Executive branch that comprised the case for war, and it was GW Bush and the GOP Senate leaders who made certain the vote to use force was held just before the 2002 elections, and it was Bush and his party that made up shit to sell this war, shit like the president repeatedly claiming that he feared "mushroom clouds" over American cities as America's fate, if the Congress didn't see things his way. Given all of the lies in the selling of the war and all of the cheap, partisan (as in GOP) politics surrounding the timing of the Iraq authorization, it is indeed a good and accurate thing that the American people recognize exactly who it was that led us into this disaster, and I suspect America will recall that the Democrats neither started the war nor are they responsible to end it. After all, the conducting of war is largely an Executive matter, not legislative.
I agree with NickCole -- there probably aren't any magic plans or solutions to exit Iraq and the determination to withdraw will be a complicated matrix of pros and cons. Indeed, as with all fraudulent and botched beginnings of enterprises such as war, it is the getting out that requires so much deliberation and planning, especially in this circumstance where it seems there was no planning beyond the invasion, no "next steps" were carefully charted for post-invasion occupation of Iraq in 2003.
Yes, well, the media always likes to fret and wring its hands when it comes to the Democrats, just as the media loves to salute the "steeled determination" and "sense of focus" of the Republicans even as they made a total mash of the war. Dems are simply going to have to do the best they can with a bad situation, and let the chips fall where they may.
Yes, what of it? The vote was as follows: The Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution of 2002 was passed by the United States Congress authorizing force by a largely party line vote of 296-133, and by the Senate on October 11 by a vote of 77-23.[/B] But again, I don't know what you're trying to nail up against the vote as it was gained under false pretenses.
I've always found that people who refuse help and seek instead to "brand" their efforts as their own at the start of certain endevors are usually the very same idiots who, after their great ideas prove to be terrible realities and after everything their opponents said would come to pass comes to pass, say, "Well this is a fine fix you got us in." Sorry, doesn't work that way, and in no way am I being sarcastic or dismissive of the critical importance of Iraq when I say that it's a little late to look at people who opposed the invasion and to try and blame them for one's own lies and incompetence.
The facts -- so clear to almost everyone but apparently not to you -- are that had the truth been told about Iraq and its WMD, Bush's request to use force in Iraq likely would have failed -- there was no case to support the serious business of going to war. Democrats cannot and should not forget that going to war wasn't their idea, it was Bush's idea, and it is him that the American people must, and will, ultimately hold accountable. Put another way, this mess need not and should not have ever occurred, and while the Dems will do what they can to remediate the situation, it wasn't their planning, it wasn't their lies, and it wasn't their war.
