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Posts tagged with "politics"

Michael Moore's favorite Democrat

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"Some of the things that people have said I said about Senator Obama are simply not true, There are other statements that I made that I wish I had made more clearly. And there are some that I made that I wish I had not made at all. And, obviously, in the heat of campaigns, that happens to all of us, but I regret that. And now it's time to move on." Senator Joe Lieberman at November 18, 2008 news conference .

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LOYAL JOE LIEBERMAN

WELCOME BACK, JOE, ALL IS FORGIVEN! Senator Lieberman Making Mea Culpas Democrats Let Joe Keep His Chairmanship
"...NOW IT'S TIME TO MOVE ON!"

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John McCain, Joe Lieberman & Sarah Palin
"I sincerely believe that the real ticket for
change this year is the McCain-Palin ticket"


Sarah Palin & Joe Lieberman


John McCain & Joe Lieberman


Joe Lieberman addressing
The Republican National Convention
"MY FRIENDS... TRUST ME..."


Joe Lieberman & George W. Bush


Joe Lieberman & Dick Cheney


Al Gore & Joe Lieberman


Bill Clinton & Joe Lieberman

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Jesus & Judas

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. . . . LINKS:

. . . . . "Teflon Joe" Lieberman
. . . . . Joe Lieberman Apology-to-Obama-o-tron
. . . . . Video: Lieberman on 'Meet the Press' 11-23-08
. . . . . Video: Joe Lieberman Speech to RNC

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"Well, I do, I regret it. I mean, I don’t, I, I, you know, I’m going forward. You can take from the word regret what you, what you, will. I wish I had not said some of the things I’ve said. But, again, we all do it. There was a lot of stuff said in this campaign about both candidates that I think a lot of people regret. I’m happy to step forward and say that I regret some of the things I’ve said. But somebody once said to me, God put our eyes in front of our head so we would always be naturally looking forward. And that’s what, at this time of peril for our country, we’ve all got to be doing." - Tom Brokaw interviewing Sen. Joe Lieberman on 'Meet the Press' November 23, 2008

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In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, some material on this website is provided for comment, background information, research and/or educational purposes only, without permission from the copyright owner(s), under the "fair use" provisions of the federal copyright laws. These materials may not be distributed for other purposes without permission of the copyright owner(s).

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THE IMPROPER and IMPRUDENT VICE PRESIDENT

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Dick Cheney putting the Vice in US Presidency treason high crimes constitution wars iraq iran afghanistan 9/1 9-11 WTC hijack pentagon intel halliburton exxon texaco halliburton big oil Sticker"In an effort to avoid disclosing information about his actions, Dick Cheney claimed he's not part of the Executive branch. However, he's not in the Judicial or the Legislative branch and he tries to claim executive privilege when he wants it. In reality, Cheney is the Mob Boss behind the scenes at the White House... putting the Vice in US Presidency! Like most egomaniacal criminals, he thinks he's above the law." - bumper stickers

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cheney - go fuck yourself
THE "POTTY MOUTH" VEEP!

On Tuesday, June 22, 2004, "Cheney, serving in his role as president of the Senate, appeared in the chamber for a photo session. A chance meeting with Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (Vt.), the ranking Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, became an argument about Cheney's ties to Halliburton Co., an international energy services corporation, and President Bush's judicial nominees. The exchange ended when Cheney offered some crass advice.' 'Fuck yourself,' said the man who is a heartbeat from the presidency..." [The Washington Post] "And this is the administration that's trying to prevent you from saying 'fuck' on TV." Ironically, that same day the senate approved a ten-fold increase in fines for broadcasting "obscene, indecent, and profane language." [2] On Fox News Cheney explained his outburst as: "Well, I expressed myself rather forcefully, felt better after I had done it."

On June 4th, 2007 a federal appeals panel struck down the current government policy of fining stations that air shows that contain bad words: If President Bush and Vice President Cheney can blurt out vulgar language, then the government cannot punish broadcast television stations for broadcasting the same fleeting contexts. [3]

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LINKS:
• Fuck Yourself by Repulsa
• Go Fuck Yourself Mr Cheney (music video)
• Potty-Mouth Cheney
• Potty Mouth Cartoons...
• "I'm still your president..." Impeach Cheney now!
• American Citizens Together
• One Nation Under Siege banner
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In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, some material on this web page is provided for comment, background information, research and/or educational purposes only, without permission from the copyright owner(s), under the "fair use" provisions of the federal copyright laws. These materials may not be distributed for other purposes without permission of the copyright owner(s).

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THE IMPERIAL PRESIDENT

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The Imperial Reign of The Bush and Cheney Administration

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GEORGE W. BUSH
based on painting by Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres (1780–1867)
Napoleon on His Imperial Throne, 1806

image created by Scattergood-Moore for PantherProUSA, © 2008

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"Stop throwing the Constitution in my face."
"IT'S JUST A GODDAMNED PIECE OF PAPER!"

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King George W.: James Madison's Nightmare
by Robert Scheer[posted online on July 18, 2007]

George W. Bush is the imperial president that James Madison and other founders of this great republic warned us about. He lied the nation into precisely the "foreign entanglements" that George Washington feared would destroy the experiment in representative government, and he has championed a spurious notion of security over individual liberty, thus eschewing the alarms of Thomas Jefferson as to the deprivation of the inalienable rights of free citizens. But most important, he has used the sledgehammer of war to obliterate the separation of powers that James Madison enshrined in the US Constitution.

With the "war on terror," Bush has asserted the right of the president to wage war anywhere and for any length of time, at his whim, because the "terrorists" will always provide a convenient shadowy target. Just the "continual warfare" that Madison warned of in justifying the primary role of Congress in initiating and continuing to finance a war–the very issue now at stake in Bush’s battle with Congress.

In his Political Observations, written years before he served as fourth president of the United States, Madison went on to underscore the dangers of an imperial presidency bloated by war fever. "In war," Madison wrote in 1795, at a time when the young republic still faced its share of dangerous enemies, "the discretionary power of the Executive is extended … and all the means of seducing the minds are added to those of subduing the force, of the people."

How remarkably prescient of Madison to anticipate the specter of our current King George imperiously undermining Congress' attempts to end the Iraq war. When the prime author of the US Constitution explained why that document grants Congress–not the president–the exclusive power to declare and fund wars, Madison wrote, "A delegation of such powers [to the president] would have struck, not only at the fabric of our Constitution, but at the foundation of all well organized and well checked governments."

Because "[n]o nation could preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare," Madison urged that the constitutional separation of powers he had codified be respected. "The Constitution expressly and exclusively vests in the Legislature the power of declaring a state of war…the power of raising armies," he wrote. "The separation of the power of raising armies from the power of commanding them is intended to prevent the raising of armies for the sake of commanding them."

That last sentence perfectly describes the threat of what President Dwight Eisenhower, 165 years later, would describe as the "military-industrial complex," a permanent war economy feeding off a permanent state of insecurity. The collapse of the Soviet Union deprived the military profiteers and their handsomely rewarded cheerleaders in the government of a raison d'etre for the massive war economy supposedly created in response to it. Fortunately for them, Bush found in the 9/11 attack an excuse to make war even more profitable and longer lasting. The Iraq war, which the president's 9/11 Commission concluded never had anything to do with the terrorist assault, nonetheless has transferred many hundreds of billions in taxpayer dollars into the military economy. And when Congress seeks to exercise its power to control the budget, this president asserts that this will not govern his conduct of the war.

There never was a congressional declaration of war to cover the invasion of Iraq. Instead, President Bush acted under his claimed power as commander in chief, which the Supreme Court has held does allow him to respond to a "state of war" against the United States. That proviso was clearly a reference to surprise attacks or sudden emergencies.

The problem is that the "state of war" in question here was an Al-Qaida attack on the US that had nothing whatsoever to do with Saddam Hussein's Iraq. Perhaps to spare Congress the embarrassment of formally declaring war against a nation that had not attacked America, Bush settled for a loosely worded resolution supporting his use of military power if Iraq failed to comply with UN mandates. This was justified by the White House as a means of strengthening the United Nations in holding Iraq accountable for its WMD arsenal, but as most of the world looked on in dismay, Bush invaded Iraq after U.N. inspectors on the ground discovered that Iraq had no WMD.

Bush betrayed Congress, which in turn betrayed the American people–just as Madison feared when he wrote: "Of all the enemies to public liberty war is, perhaps, the most to be dreaded, because it compromises and develops the germ of every other."

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The Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism. By Andrew Bacevich. Published by Metropolitan Books. "...identifies a profound triple crisis facing America: the economy, in remarkable disarray, can no longer be fixed by relying on expansion abroad; the government, transformed by an imperial presidency, is a democracy in form only; U.S. involvement in endless wars, driven by a deep infatuation with military power, has been a catastrophe for the body politic. These pressing problems threaten all of us, Republicans and Democrats. If the nation is to solve its predicament, it will need the revival of a distinctly American approach: the neglected tradition of realism..." - The American Empire Project

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The American National Anthem
Star-Spangled Banner | MP4 File

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In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, some material on this web page is provided for comment, background information, research and/or educational purposes only, without permission from the copyright owner(s), under the "fair use" provisions of the federal copyright laws. These materials may not be distributed for other purposes without permission of the copyright owner(s).

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this was my first entry...

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