Food Blogger Camp 2011
1 day ago
"Aides said no immediately upcoming presidential event is focused on the economy..." - Wash Post, 9/13/04Read More......
The biggest blot on Bush's record may be his failure to take his required annual physical in 1972. As a result, he was suspended from flying — an embarrassment for serious pilots. In years past, the Bush campaign claimed he missed the physical because his personal physician was in Houston. Now the White House says Bush did not need to take the physical, since he did not intend to fly during his stint in Alabama.Another interesting point made in this article from Time:
Only one member of Bush's unit has come forward to say he saw Bush reporting for duty in Alabama, but his recollection places Bush in the state before Bush was officially assigned there....Read More......
"Cheney also talked up the economy. He said national employment statistics miss many people who are making money, such as those selling items on eBay. 'That's a source that didn't even exist 10 years ago,' he said. 'Four hundred thousand people make some money trading on eBay.' " - APSOME ADS I'D LIKE TO SEE IN RESPONSE
AD 1I'm thinking something with Harry & Louise in it. You remember them. Harry comes home, tells Louise his job was outsourced and he got fired. Louise, tears streaming down her face, asks, "How oh how will we provide for our two kids in college, let alone put food on our own table?" Harry turns to the camera and says with confidence, "eBay!"Read More......
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AD 2
Harry and Louise are sitting down having their morning coffee. Louise opens up the mail and cries, "Oh my, our Medicare rates just went up 17%! How are we and millions of seniors going to afford this?" Harry puts his paper down and smiles to the camera, "eBay!"
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AD 3
Mrs. Gonzalez, the wife of a servicemember fighting in Iraq, answers the door. A man in a military uniform hands her a telegram and says he's very sorry. Stunned, tears streaming down her face, she looks at the man and begs, 'how will I provide for my newborn child?' The soldier turns to the camera and shouts, "eBay!"
If he is a flip-flopper, Kerry has company.Read More......
_In 2000, Bush argued against new military entanglements and nation building. He's done both in Iraq.
_He opposed a Homeland Security Department, then embraced it.
_He opposed creation of an independent Sept. 11 commission, then supported it. He first refused to speak to its members, then agreed only if Vice President Dick Cheney came with him.
_Bush argued for free trade, then imposed three-year tariffs on steel imports in 2002, only to withdraw them after 21 months.
_Last month, he said he doubted the war on terror could be won, then reversed himself to say it could and would.
_A week after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Bush said he wanted Osama bin Laden "dead or alive." But he told reporters six months later, "I truly am not that concerned about him." He did not mention bin Laden in his hour-long convention acceptance speech.
"I'm a war president," Bush told NBC's "Meet the Press" on Feb. 8. But in a July 20 speech in Iowa, he said: "Nobody wants to be the war president. I want to be the peace president."
Bush keeps revising his Iraq war rationale: The need to seize Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction until none were found; liberating the Iraqi people from a brutal dictator; fighting terrorists in Iraq not at home; spreading democracy throughout the Middle East. Now it's a safer America and a safer world.
"No matter how many times Senator Kerry flip-flops, we were right to make America safer by removing Saddam Hussein from power," he said last week in Missouri.
Bush has changed his positions on new Clean Air Act restrictions, protecting the Social Security surplus, tobacco subsidies, the level of assistance to help combat AIDs in Africa, campaign finance overhaul and whether to negotiate with North Korean officials....
Zogby - 9/9It's a VERY close race, and you can pretty easily ignore the outlier polls. In two of these polls, including the FOX poll, Bush is under 50% - all very strong signs that whatever "bounce" Bush got is pretty much evaporated. KEEP WORKING. Read More......
Bush - 47%
Kerry - 45%
Time- 9/9
Bush - 54%
Kerry - 42%
Democracy Corps (Democratic org.) - 9/9
Bush - 50%
Kerry - 47%
FOX Opinion Dynamics - 9/8
Bush - 47%
Kerry - 45%
"News Item (1988): Presidential campaign of George H.W. Bush charges that Democratic vice presidential candidate Lloyd Bentsen used his influence to get his son into the Texas Air National Guard during the Vietnam war" - Chicago Sun-TimesRead More......
The trouble restoring Iraq's electrical system exemplifies the failures of a larger reconstruction process still marked by tainted water supplies, limited sewage treatment and curtailed construction of public buildings. An effort that was supposed to provide jobs, stability and democracy has instead produced a deep reservoir of confusion and anger that feeds the country's deadly insurgency.On private contractors:
Although electricity was the foundation of the rebuilding campaign, State and Defense department planners vastly underestimated the time, money and effort needed to restore the country's power grid, which had deteriorated far beyond their expectations under 12 years of U.N. sanctions.
A review of the restoration effort shows that it was beset by poor planning, inconsistent leadership, sabotage and deteriorating security.
A Pentagon decision to rely on private contractors to do much of the rebuilding also slowed work. Rather than depend on Iraqis to make quick fixes, the Pentagon decided to spend money on complex, big-ticket infrastructure ? a strategy that would meet long-term goals rather than the nation's immediate needs, critics said.On poor management:
At the same time, work in Iraq was roiled by constantly changing leadership, vision and emphasis. Since rebuilding began in April 2003, seven people have overseen the electricity project - the equivalent of a new CEO every 2 1/2 months for one of the most complicated and expensive tasks in Iraq.On unrealistic assumptions - "you break it you own it":
Many State Department and Pentagon officials involved in the initial planning for war assumed that the electricity sector would generally need only repairs and rehabilitation because the military had avoided infrastructure targets.On how poor security and insurgency caused more failures (this is why Generals told Bush it would take 200,000-300,000 troops to secure the country - TO DO IT RIGHT):
But as government officials and contractors slowly fanned out after major combat ended, they found that 12 years of sanctions had created a far worse situation than they had realized.
While assessing the damage, the electrical team, headed by the U.S. Agency for International Development, was blindsided by a far more serious challenge: looting, sabotage and violence.This administration is running on Iraq as a symbol of its policies. Tell people the truth, show them the truth, and this administration won't be up 2-4%, they'll be down 7-10%. Now be good little activists and get out there and KEEP WORKING. Read More......
Insurgents tumbled transmission towers like dominos. When U.S. assessment teams arrived in Iraq shortly after the invasion, about 30 towers had been knocked down. By September, that had grown to 600 towers, substantially cutting into Iraq's ability to send power across its grid.
Theft was rampant, and Baiji was hit hard. Bandits in search of copper stole more than 50 miles of high-tension wire between the plant and Baghdad, cutting off the complex from the country's largest population center.
"We buy [electrical parts], the next day they're gone," Jim Guy, a USAID engineering specialist, said during a conference in Washington. "We have to guard everything that's loose, or else it will be gone in the morning."
President Bush' former Harvard Business School prof says his ex-student supported the Vietnam War but wanted somebody else to fight it.Read More......
Yoshi Tsurumi said yesterday that Bush told him his father's connections got him into the Texas Air National Guard. "But what really disturbed me is that he said he was for the Vietnam War," said Tsurumi, who has also taught at Baruch College and the City University of New York. "I said, 'George, that's hypocrisy. You won't fight a war that you support but you expect other people to fight it for you.' He just smirked."
Tsurumi, who crossed paths with Bush in the early 1970s when the future President was studying for his MBA, previously has criticized Bush's economic policies and described him as a mediocre student who "believed people were poor because they were lazy."
But Tsurumi's new volley comes as Bush has been battling allegations he got preferential treatment at the height of the divisive Vietnam War. Bush, according to Tsurumi, "had no sense of guilt" about getting into the Guard while others wound up fighting in Vietnam.
"He was very casual about it," the professor said. "I said, 'Lucky you, how did you manage it?' He said, 'My dad had a good friend who put me at the head of the waiting list.'"
GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: "...Secretary Powell comes on the program and says 'no, this violence was anticipated, George Will, and we have to tough it out.' "Read More......
GEORGE WILL: "Well, it clearly wasn't anticipated. We didn't prepare the country, our country, for this kind of fighting, and we didn't prepare our deployment over there for this kind of fighting."
"The United States and other nations are prepared to help move an expanded African peacekeeping force into position in Sudan's Darfur region to halt the bloodshed, national security adviser Condoleezza Rice said on Sunday." - ReutersIs there anywhere in the world the Bush administration WON'T send in American troops and spend billions of American dollars? Jesus, they talk about tax-and-spend Democrats, how about kill-and-spend Republicans. Yes, I feel the Sudan's pain. But we simply cannot go and intervene into every part of the world and not think that at some point we've overextended ourselves. This is why we DON'T go and invade places like Iraq based on a lie, simply because it's "nice" to have Saddam gone (I'm still not sure how "nice" it is for the families of the 1,000 war dead.) The idea is to have troops and money available when REAL emergencies like the Sudan arrive.
"Televangelist Paul Crouch, founder of the world's largest Christian broadcasting network, has waged a fierce legal battle to prevent a former employee from publicizing allegations that he and Crouch had a sexual encounter eight years ago." - LA TimesRead More......
Wash Post editorial: "PRESIDENT BUSH doesn't care, and neither do the Republican House and Senate leaders. They're content to open up the streets to the pointless and exceptionally deadly gunfire of assault-style weapons. Their cold political calculation: Let the assault weapons ban expire Monday night, and let the police in particular and everybody in general fend for their lives. After all, that's the way people like it -- or so claims Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) who, unlike other doctors who have treated shooting victims, thinks this is what the people want. 'I think the will of the American people is consistent with letting it expire, so it will expire,' Mr. Frist told reporters last week... "Read More......
Senior military and national security officials in the Bush administration were repeatedly warned by subordinates in 2002 and 2003 that prisoners in military custody were being abused, according to a new book by a prominent journalist.
In a statement posted on its Web site, the Pentagon said: "Based on media inquiries, it appears that Mr. Seymour Hersh's upcoming book apparently contains many of the numerous unsubstantiated allegations and inaccuracies which he has made in the past based upon unnamed sources."
The statement added that several investigations so far "have determined that no responsible official of the Department of Defense approved any program that could conceivably have authorized or condoned the abuses seen at Abu Ghraib."
That is essentially the same reaction issued by the Pentagon when Mr. Hersh first reported, in May, that Mr. Rumsfeld, with White House approval, established a secret program under which commandos would capture and interrogate suspected terrorists with few if any constraints, and that eventually that program's reach extended into the Abu Ghraib prison.
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