CHENEY STROKES THE FAITHFUL
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Posted By: June Posted on: Mar. 17, 2009 at 9:42 AM |
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Mar. 17, 2009 at 12:10:27 PM
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| Yes, it is JUST LIKE, OBAMA and all the DEMOTARDIC WHORES, blindly support Summers, Gensler and Geithner who are all responsible for the Financial Crisis talking about how GOOD it is to give Summers, Gensler and Geithner MORE POWER and paying trillions to their BANKER BUDDIES. who already gamed the banking system created by Demotards. Yes, the Bu$h/Cheney nightmare is winding down, just as the Obama/Banker nightmare is running full steam towards the cliff....
JuneWHORES, Cowardly running, ducking and dodging and 5 year old juvenile ad hominems just keep piling up on the s***-eaters dinner plate... All the while, she can show no damage from the Evil Free Market Competition while blindly whoring for the SAME OLD s*** binary fundamentalists demotardic bumper sticker mentality...
So JuneWHORE, How do you JUSTIFY WHORING yourself to Obama who has HIRED SUMMERS, GENSLER and GAITHNER, AND GAVE THEM MORE POWER, you know the VERY PEOPLE responsible for the FINANCIAL MELTDOWN?/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span> /span> |
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Mar. 18, 2009 at 11:45:36 AM
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Erstwhile GOPher CHUCK HAGEL:That’s ridiculous! It has no merit on fact or by any measurement. I mean come on, this guy hasn’t even been in office two months. The mess that the Bush administration left the Obama administration. I’m a Republican…we got America into two wars, we’ve done great damage to our economy, to our force structure, to our standing in the world. For a Vice President who participated in that, who led in that, to come on and say that this new administration has really put America in danger is just folly. |
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Mar. 18, 2009 at 12:07:26 PM
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| Yeah, JuneWHORE, the REAL FOLLY of the Obama admin is HIRING Summers, Gensler, Geithner and BANKers all responsible for the current Financial Crisis and giving them MORE POWER and MORE MONEY to give to all their Banking Buddies.....
Before the Fall, AIG Payouts Went to Washington As long as everyone's talking today about AIG's payouts to its executives and foreign banks, let's remember the payouts AIG has made over the years to politicians. In the last 20 years American International Group (AIG) has contributed more than $9 million to federal candidates and parties through PAC and individual contributions. That's enough to rank AIG on OpenSecrets.org's Heavy Hitters list, which profiles the top 100 contributors of all time. Over time, AIG hasn't shown an especially partisan streak, splitting evenly the $9.3 million it has contributed since 1989. In the last election cycle, though, 68 percent of contributions associated with the company went to Democrats. Two senators who chair committees charged with overseeing AIG and the insurance industry, Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) and Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.), are among the top recipients of AIG contributions. Baucus chairs the Senate Finance Committee and has collected more money from AIG in his congressional career than from any other company--$91,000. And with more than $280,000, AIG has been the fourth largest contributor to Dodd, who chairs the Senate's banking committee. President Obama and his rival in last year's election, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), are also high on the list of top recipients. AIG has been a personal investment for lawmakers, too. Twenty-eight current members of Congress reported owning stock in AIG last year, worth between $2.5 million and $3.3 million. Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.), one of the richest members of Congress, was by far the biggest investor in AIG, with stock valued around $2 million. Last year AIG and its subsidiaries spent about $9.7 million on federal lobbying, or about $53,000 for every day Congress was in session in 2008. The company's spending on advocacy last year was down from an all-time high of $11.4 million spent on lobbying in 2007. |
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Mar. 18, 2009 at 10:40:05 PM
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Cheney's belligerence is an echo of the NeoCon fear-babble we heard in early February when a former Bush speechwriter published a WaPo Op-Ed stating:The CIA program he is effectively shutting down is the reason why America has not been attacked again after 9/11. He has removed the tool that is singularly responsible for stopping al-Qaeda from flying planes into the Library Tower in Los Angeles, Heathrow Airport, and London’s Canary Warf, and blowing up apartment buildings in Chicago, among other plots. It’s not even the end of inauguration week, and Obama is already proving to be the most dangerous man ever to occupy the Oval Office.At that time - 2 weeks into the Obama administration - the RNC declined to comment on whether Cheney, et al, represented the official Party position. That, of course, led to widespread speculation that the GOPhers were setting the stage to gain political advantage in the event of another terrorist attack.And, given the tone of the VoA low-info types, that's true for sure around here!Now, Larry Wilkerson, Colin Powell's former Chief of Staff, has written about Cheny's fearmongering - in the February interview with Politico and, more recently, on CNN:As to twisted logic: "Cheney said at least 61 of the inmates who were released from Guantanamo (sic) during the Bush administration...have gone back into the business of being terrorists." So, the fact that the Bush administration was so incompetent that it released 61 terrorists, is a valid criticism of the Obama administration? Or was this supposed to be an indication of what percentage of the still-detained men would likely turn to terrorism if released in future? Or was this a revelation that men kept in detention such as those at GITMO--even innocent men--would become terrorists if released because of the harsh treatment meted out to them at GITMO? Seven years in jail as an innocent man might do that for me. Hard to tell.As for the fear-mongering: "When we get people who are more interested in reading the rights to an Al Qaeda (sic) terrorist than they are with protecting the United States against people who are absolutely committed to do anything they can to kill Americans, then I worry," Cheney said. Who in the Obama administration has insisted on reading any al-Qa'ida terrorist his rights? More to the point, who in that administration is not interested in protecting the United States--a clear implication of Cheney's remarks.But far worse is the unmistakable stoking of the 20 million listeners of Rush Limbaugh, half of whom we could label, judiciously, as half-baked nuts. Such remarks as those of the former vice president's are like waving a red flag in front of an incensed bull. And Cheney of course knows that.Cheney went on to say in his McLean interview that "Protecting the country's security is a tough, mean, dirty, nasty business. These are evil people and we are not going to win this fight by turning the other cheek." I have to agree but the other way around. Cheney and his like are the evil people and we certainly are not going to prevail in the struggle with radical religion if we listen to people such as he.link:[www.thewashingtonnote.com]
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Mar. 19, 2009 at 06:44:57 AM
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[This is a reply to comment by June on Mar. 18, 2009 at 10:40:05 PM]
June
Mar. 18, 2009 at 10:40:05 PM Cheney's belligerence is an echo of the NeoCon fear-babble we heard in early February when a former Bush speechwriter published a WaPo Op-Ed stating: The CIA program he is effectively shutting down is the reason why America has not been... View this Comment So JuneWHORE, Why doesn't Obama, just release all the documentation on Cheney and let the world bring him up on WAR CRIMES? Demotards HAVE THE POWER, THE ELECTION IS OVER... WHEN ARE THE DEMOTARDS GOING TO HOLD CHENEY RESONSIBLE AND ACCOUTABLE?
the short answer is: THEY ARE NOT GOING TO....
Demotards, LIKE YOU, DONT BELIEVE IN HOLDING PEOPLE ACCOUNTABLE.... YOU DONT even take RESPONSIBILITY for YOUR OWN VIEWS and ACTIONS.... JuneWHORE:
How do you JUSTIFY WHORING yourself to Obama who has HIRED SUMMERS, GENSLER and GAITHNER, AND GAVE THEM MORE POWER, you know the VERY PEOPLE responsible for the FINANCIAL MELTDOWN?/span>/span>/span> /span> |
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Mar. 19, 2009 at 09:29:46 AM
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On March 16, Jack Cafferty's question was -Is former Vice President Dick Cheney right that Pres. Obama’s policies “raise the risk” of a terror attack in the U.S.?All 299 responses may be viewed at the link below but here's one of the few that supports Cheney's fearmongering - from Rod M:We better be careful we’re not playing politics here. Sure Cheney is unpopular or worse, but his track record, 0 terrorist attacks on US soil, is all that matters. I hope the current administration is considering Cheney’s input, and double checking their assumptions. I’d hate for our safety to become a political issue, which is what Obama made it.Hunh?link:[caffertyfile.blogs.cnn.com]
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Mar. 19, 2009 at 06:16:09 PM
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[This is a reply to comment by June on Mar. 19, 2009 at 09:29:46 AM]
June
Mar. 19, 2009 at 09:29:46 AM On March 16, Jack Cafferty's question was - Is former Vice President Dick Cheney right that Pres. Obama’s policies “raise the risk” of a terror attack in the U.S.? All 299 responses may be viewed at the link below but... View this Comment So WHY isn't OBAMA holding Cheney responsible and accountable? Why are DEMOTARDS holding Cheney responsible and accountable? |
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Mar. 19, 2009 at 09:51:28 PM
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[This is a reply to comment by adam on Mar. 19, 2009 at 06:16:09 PM]
adam
Mar. 19, 2009 at 06:16:09 PM So WHY isn't OBAMA holding Cheney responsible and accountable? Why are DEMOTARDS holding Cheney responsible and... View this Comment Since you and Cheney have the same style of communication, lemme ask you, Trenchmouth - whaddaya think Cheney hoped to achieve with his unvarnished attack on the Obama administration’s anti-terrorism policies?Was he just being the same cranky, self-serving, ol’ partisan NeoCon? Was he being defensive because Leahy and Feinstein are pressing for an investigation of his anti-terrorism policies? Was he feeeling the heat of the ABA's threat to investigate his protege, Yoo, and the Dem's interest in the legal advice dispensed by Yoo and Addington, Cheney's lawyer c** chief of staff? Was he seriously advocating that we continue to ignore habeas corpus, maintain gulags, torture, starve and chain the inmates to their beds? Was he simultaneously right and wrong as the WSJ argues - right about a potential threat; wrong to present it in a thoughtless, partisan attack?Whaddaya think? |
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Mar. 19, 2009 at 10:09:19 PM
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[This is a reply to comment by June on Mar. 19, 2009 at 09:51:28 PM]
June
Mar. 19, 2009 at 09:51:28 PM Since you and Cheney have the same style of ask you, Trenchmouth - whaddaya think Cheney hoped to achieve with his unvarnished attack on the Obama administration’s anti-terrorism policies? Was he just being the same cranky, self-serving,... View this Comment I will be HAPPY to answer YOUR questions JuneWHORE, AS SOON AS YOU ANSWER MINE: How do YOU JUSTIFY WHORING yourself out to Obama who has HIRED SUMMERS, GENSLER and GEITHNER, the VERY PEOPLE responsible for the FINANCIAL MELTDOWN?/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span> /span> /span> /span> /span> BTW:/span> Consider three key episodes from the last week just standing alone. On Friday, the Obama administration announced that it would no longer use the Bush-identified label "enemy combatants" as a ground for detaining Terrorist suspects, an announcement that generated headlines suggesting a significant change from the prior administration. But the following day, after reviewing the legal brief the administration filed (.pdf) setting forth its actual position regarding presidential powers of detention, here is how The New York Times's William Glaberson accurately described what was really done:
Bush's asserted power to detain as "enemy combatants" even those people who were detained outside of a traditional "battlefield" -- rather than charge them with crimes -- was one of the most controversial of the last eight years. Yet the Obama administration, when called upon to state their position, makes only the most cosmetic and inconsequential changes -- designed to generate headlines misleadingly depicting a significant reversal ("Obama drops 'enemy combatant' label") -- while, in fact, retaining the crux of Bush's extremist detention theory. Or consider the new policies of transparency that Obama announced during his first week in office, ones that prompted lavish praise from most civil libertarians (including me). When it comes to a civil liberties restoration, few things are more important than drastically scaling back the Bush adminstration's endless reliance on frivolous national-security-based "secrecy" claims as a weapon for hiding virtually everything the Government does. Excessive secrecy was the linchpin of most of the Bush abuses. Last year, several privacy groups, including the Electronic Frontier Foundation, became alarmed at what appeared to be an emerging, new Draconian international treaty governing intellectual property, the so-called Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement. As Wired's Dave Kravets reported, the treaty as negotiated by the Bush administration -- government summaries of which were leaked to and posted on Wikileaks -- "would criminalize peer-to-peer file sharing, subject iPods to border searches and allow internet service providers to monitor their customers' communications." Despite the fact that drafts of the treaty have been leaked; that the terms have nothing to do with national security; and that the agreement was being circulated among 27 different nations, the Bush administration -- typically enough -- rejected FOIA requests for documents pertaining to the treaty (.pdf) last January on multiple grounds, including "national security." Based on Obama's new pledges of transparency and new FOIA policies, EFF and others re-submitted the FOIA request last month. But in a March 10 letter (.pdf), they received a virtually identical response, this time from Obama's Chief FOIA Officer in the Office of the Trade Representative (click on image to enlarge): There may or may not be legitimate reasons under the law to withhold drafts of this IP treaty, but the Bush-mimicking claim that doing so is justified "in the interest of national security" is, as Kravets wrote, "stunning." And it's hard to imagine many things more patently inconsistent with the fanfare over expanded "transparency" during Obama's first week. Finally, consider Obama's headline-generating announcement earlier this week that he would "limit" the use of presidential signing statements, one of Bush's principal instruments for literally ignoring the law. That announcement generated much celebration among Obama supporters, such as this poetic pronouncement by a front-page writer at Daily Kos:
Yet two days later -- literally -- Obama signed a $410 billion spending bill and appended to it a signing statement claiming that he had the Constitutional authority to ignore several of its oversight provisions. There is a very strong argument to make, grounded in clear Supreme Court precedent, that some of those provisions are actually unconstitutional, which would make the use of signing statements for those provisions probably proper. But at least some of those provisions which Obama declared invalid are, at worst, of arguable validity and, more accurately, grounded in strong judicial precedent regarding Congressional power. The broad powers Obama asserted for himself in that signing statement are clearly at odds with the pretty-worded policy he issued days earlier whereby he "promised to take a modest approach when using the statements"; to use them only to challenge provisions he notified Congress in advance he believes are unconstitutional; and to issue them "based only on interpretations of the Constitution that are well-founded." Those are episodes just from the last week. It's to say nothing of the series of events that preceded last week that shocked many Bush critics and outraged virtually all civil libertarians, including the Obama administration's embrace of the most radical version of the "state secrets" privilege; the claim that detainees in Bagram and other dark American prisons around the world have no rights of any kind to challenge their detention; the pressure exerted on Britain to keep evidence of torture concealed; and the extraordinary efforts undertaken to block judicial rulings on whether the Bush administration broke the law in how it spied on Americans. It's true that there have been some bright spots -- the release of some of the long-concealed OLC memos; the order that the CIA no longer interrogate detainees outside of the scope of the Army Field Manual; the indictment of the last "enemy combatant" on American soil; the directive that Guantanamo be closed and that the International Red Cross be given access to all detainees -- but many of those steps are preliminary and symbolic and have become quickly overshadowed by the far more substantial embraces of Bush's executive power theories. * * * * * After many years of anger and complaint and outrage directed at the Bush administration for its civil liberties assaults and executive power abuses, the last thing most people want to do is conclude that the Obama administration is continuing the core of that extremism. That was why the flurry of executive orders in the first week produced such praise: those who are devoted to civil liberties were, from the start, eager to believe that things would be different, and most want to do everything but conclude that the only improvements that will be made by Obama will be cosmetic ones. But it's becoming increasingly difficult for honest commentators to do anything else but conclude that. After all, these are the exact policies which, when embraced by Bush, produced such intense protest over the last eight years. Nobody is complaining because the Obama administration is acting too slowly in renouncing these policies. The opposite is true: they are rushing to actively embrace them. And while there are still opportunities to meaningfully depart from the extremism of the last eight years, the evidence appears more and more compelling that, at least in these areas, there is little or no intent on the part of the Obama administration to do so.
UPDATE: The following two sentences bear repeating, apparently:
If there's a way that this point can be made more clearly -- that this has nothing to do with complaints that Obama is acting "too slowly" to uproot Bush's civil liberties assaults, thus rendering a total strawman the excuse that "he's only been in office for 50 days and people can't be impatient" -- please let me know how that might be done. Additionally, there is a large universe between (a) declaring -- as this person did yesterday -- that Obama "is likely to prove to be the greatest leader in the history of this country" and (b) equating Bush and Obama. To criticize Obama is not to argue that he is the equivalent of Bush. To point out the undeniable facts that Obama has actively embraced many of the most controversial Bush civil liberties and executive power abuses is not to posit an equivalence between the two administrations. Rational people are capable of seeing more than these two options: Obama should not yet be criticized and Obama is the equivalent of Bush. These are just basic logical principles that shouldn't need to be stated. -- Glenn Greenwald /span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span>/span> |
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And, oh yes, don't cha know - mavericky ol' Gramps McCain has added his fissure, contending that it's too soon to tell if the Obama administration has made us unsafer or not!
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