10-07-2004, 01:47 AM | #121 (permalink) | |||
Banned
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in statements he made during the debate is accurate, is there any line that the sitting VP would cross before you-(Bush/Cheney supporters) would decide that he lacks credibility regarding the reasons why the U.S. attacked and occupies Iraq ? Quote:
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Cheney is vice president of a U.S. regime that is responsible for 1066 deaths of American troops in Iraq, serious combat injury to 7000 or more of our troops, the deaths of more than 10000 Iraqis, continued suffering and casualties, instability, and an indefinite commitment of 145000 U.S. troops in Iraq. President Bush himself stated in a nationally televised debate last week that Iraq is stabalizing and that a security force of 100000 Iraqis has been trained, when the Pentagon's own current report stated that only 8169 Iraqis had completed an 8 week training course intended to train Iraqi security recruits, and that<a href="http://www.reuters.co.uk/newsPackageArticle.jhtml?type=worldNews&storyID=590914§ion=news"> 22700 Iraqis</a>, in total, were considered to be adequately trained and equipped. <p> It is one thing for challengers in debates with the President and the VP to make statements in those venues that are somewhat misleading and contain some inaccuracies, but it is a much more disturbing trend for the top elected officials to be so blatantly misleading and inaccurate concerning execution of their sworn duties that concern matters of life and death. <p> Bush and Cheney seem to me to provide false and misleading information to the American people and to the world to such an extent that I can't believe any pronouncement that they make about the war in Iraq, or about threats to national security and actions that they say are needed to improve that security. What will it take before you can agree that they have broken the public trust? Will you trust them no matter what proof surfaces to undermine their claims related to justification of sending our troops to make war on Iraq ? Last edited by host; 10-07-2004 at 02:12 AM.. |
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10-07-2004, 07:30 AM | #122 (permalink) |
Tilted
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I thought Cheney wiped the floor with him, honestly, and apparently I'm the only one who liked his demeanor better than Edwards'. He came across like an experienced professional delivering a beatdown to an underconfident upstart. I guess that's not what most people find charismatic, but apparently a lot of people think that watching Bush trip over his lines and struggle for words makes him cute and cuddly and "just a regular Joe like one of us", so I guess my finger's just not on the pulse of America.
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10-08-2004, 06:28 AM | #125 (permalink) |
Tilted
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I just couldn't believe anything he said, not just on Iraq but also;
health care, a disaster with an expensive medicare drug benefit (60 Billion$$$) when you could save more buying drugs from Canada. the economy,massive tax cuts for the wealthy and the shill of saying small business will be paying taxes if Kerry's plan is instituted, (utter nonsense, if you earn over 200 thousand profit in a small business it should not be magically exempt from taxation) If Bush says one more time "you can't tax the rich" i'll start ranting ( of course you can't if you make it policy.) education, their never ending love of school vouchers; read this article about falling property value and tax income in Texas to understand how disconnnection of property taxes from local school districts will result in the collapse of tax income and property values http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/07/business/07scene.html and the link of Cheney via Scooter Libby to the outing of the C.I.A. operative, Valerie Plame Check out this link from the Washington Post for more: http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/07/business/07scene.html This does not even begin to discuss the gutting of the clean air act, energy policy and many other things I disagree with this administration on, including an increased connection of church and state, perhaps one of the worst effects of this administration, can you say "jihad" If you want more real information, not rhetoric I suggest a subscription to Atlantic Monthly, it's cheap, about ten dollars a year and it connects you to some of the best minds in the press and government. Television news has decayed to such a point that it is scarcely news. (saw old Reagan press conference in a documntary and it was like hounds on a fox, that's press)You could have known about the tribal factions and Iraq's natural tendencies towards civil war years before we invaded. |
10-08-2004, 07:23 AM | #126 (permalink) |
spudly
Location: Ellay
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There was a wonderful characterization in the NY Times (buried in an article on about the 13th page). The author said something to the effect that this VP debate was between two candidates - one, Cheney, for whom substance is a form of style, and another, Edwards, for whom style is a form of substance. I think this really captures the strengths of the way these two men portray themselves. I'll say again that I was impressed by both sides.
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Cogito ergo spud -- I think, therefore I yam |
10-08-2004, 11:10 AM | #127 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: South Carolina
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at first, i was impressed by both men..then the whole factcheck.org thing and I gotta say, I'd be more impressed with cheney if all his "facts" and dodges and little digs weren't lies..well, not all of them, but a good number. It's one thing to back up your answer, defend your position, etc, which i thought cheney did rather well...it's another thing to totally distort the truth when you're doing it...
so at first, i was calling it a draw, but now i'll go back to my original want of Edwards winning..
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Live. Chris |
10-08-2004, 06:47 PM | #128 (permalink) | |
Tilted
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Thanks for the information. |
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debate, thread, veep |
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