S-Des
Comfortably Numb
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2005
- Posts
- 6,944
And McCain kinda likes wars.
This is dishonest and very below the belt. I think it's beneath you.
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And McCain kinda likes wars.
I don't think he's got a handle on that problem either, but that's very far from the most pressing problems I have with the economy--in that respect, and certainly regarding the Congressional discretionary spending, I don't think he's lying at all.The dying middle class...
Versus
the rising one percent
I don't think McCain has a handle on this problem, Joe. I think, actually, he's lying to you.
It may be about that for you... not so much for me.It's not about cutting back the military, by the way. It's about halting this criminal war. And McCain kinda likes wars. It doesn't seem to matter much if you were lied to in order to get you to support it.
DAMN! You fucking blind idiots.
That "surplus" line does get thrown around a lot, but I assume we do know that the math worked out into a surplus--while still going into debt? Like, the checking account balance looked good, but it was based on borrowing a whole lot of money from the bank in order to do it? That's still better than Bush, but its not like America had stopped spending more than it made or anything. Just giving us some context here...DAMN! You fucking blind idiots.
What part of TWO TRILLION DOLLARS spent on the war do you not understand?
This administration squandered a surplus and plunged us into to debt to fight a war that has ZERO real purpose.
To be fair to McCain (whom I don't actually care for), he's talking about a presence there a lot like our presence everywhere else. He's not talking about a 100 year war--he's long since clarified what he meant by that remark. We're still in Germany. We're not at war with them. Relatively speaking, its not terribly expensive being in Germany and Korea. This was the idea with the "100 years" comment. Now, personally, I think we should get out of everywhere... but lets not misrepresent what the man's saying.And McCain says we will stay for a hundred years if we have to.
Bin Laden ain't in Iraq, folks. Not now, not five years ago.
Obama may not be perfect but he is our best chance...
Fin.
Actually, I think it's McCaine who's dishonest, below the belt, and beneath me.This is dishonest and very below the belt. I think it's beneath you.
Actually, I think it's McCaine who's dishonest, below the belt, and beneath me.
(Incomes have risen) so very much faster at the high end, that it's obscene-- even if it isn't illegal. So very much slower in the middle, that the middle class is shrinking and turning into the lower class while we watch. So non-existent on the lower levels that the poverty level is rising faster than the high-wage-earner's incomes. Puhleeze.
Sorry, kid. That line stinks no matter how often you parrot it.
Slyc, they did break the law by invading Iraq.I find the whole thing curious, and more than a little sensational. First is the assumption that war crimes were committed.
Second is whether or not waterboarding was used, or even if it classified as torture. Yes, I read the accompanying articles. Nowhere is it explicitly stated that anyone views waterboarding as torture, but there is the usual tip-toeing around the daisies on the issue. But if it is torture, Obama would have his attorney general investigate it. If it isn't . . . expect a quite fade-away and a jump to the next scandal du jour.
Would it lead to any indictments? Highly unlikely. Would such an investigation amount to anything? Beyond giving the media something else to salivate over, again, highly unlikely.
I don't care for Bush, never have. I've agreed with some of his administration's policies, and disagreed with others. Having a military background, I can understand and even support a lot of what goes on behind the scenes when it comes to gathering intelligence. Some of it just ain't pretty, and it makes people cringe. That's why it's behind the scenes. You don't ask a butcher how the cow was killed when you're eating a hamburger, do you? You probably wouldn't have much of an appetite if you did.
That's a simple analogy, and I'm sure someone will take issue with it. But the bottom line, I feel, is that there things done by the military and government that the public shouldn't really want to know, unless you just want to satisfy your own sense of morbid curiosity. Morality and ethics are always pushed to the wayside when it comes to defending your way of life. The majority of people will do what they need to -- not what they're comfortable contemplaying doing when calm and rational -- in order to safeguard themselves and their loved ones. The savage animal has never left humanity. It's just a little more complex.
As far as Obama being worthy of a vote . . . I'm still thinking about that one.
I know from experience that even mentioning income distribution leads to angry accusations of ''class warfare,'' but anyway here's what the (truly) nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office recently found: Adjusting for inflation, the income of families in the middle of the U.S. income distribution rose from $41,400 in 1979 to $45,100 in 1997, a 9 percent increase. Meanwhile the income of families in the top 1 percent rose from $420,200 to $1.016 million, a 140 percent increase. Or to put it another way, the income of families in the top 1 percent was 10 times that of typical families in 1979, and 23 times and rising in 1997.
How about Sudan? How about Rwanda during the Hutu-Tutsi genocide there?Under international law the sovereignty of a country is inviolate. A country can only fight a war if it is attacked or if it receives a mandate from the U.N. Security Council.
Um, that would be Richard Armitage (telling Bob Novak). The prosecutor knew about it at the very beginning of the investigation. I never fail to be amused at the conspiracy theories that flow around this case. Fitzgerald knew the entire time who outed her, and never prosecuted him. Yet it still remains a rallying cry for those that believe everything is Bush's fault.
I love you too, Bel.
Who says Liberals aren't more compassionate?![]()
That would be interesting. I'd be surprised, and pleased, to hear any actual concrete, specific, or constructive thoughts coming out of your mouth.At some point it would be interesting to set aside the dueling snarks (I'm as guilty as anyone) and have a real conversation about the real challenges of a new economy in which a not-bright person with just a high school income or less finds it very difficult to create a stable middle-class life and standard of living.
Slyc, they did break the law by invading Iraq.
Under international law the sovereignty of a country is inviolate. A country can only fight a war if it is attacked or if it receives a mandate from the U.N. Security Council.
Like all laws, it's broken all the time. And like all laws, countries that break it are protected from prosecution by their power.
But Iraq was still illegal.
How about Sudan? How about Rwanda during the Hutu-Tutsi genocide there?
. but, the budget can't pay for that. It just can't.
That "surplus" line does get thrown around a lot, but I assume we do know that the math worked out into a surplus--while still going into debt? Like, the checking account balance looked good, but it was based on borrowing a whole lot of money from the bank in order to do it? That's still better than Bush, but its not like America had stopped spending more than it made or anything. Just giving us some context here...