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This is an interesting read. If you have time check it out.
Written by GussJuly 30, 2007 issue - Dick Cheney may be a taciturn man, writes author Stephen F. Hayes, but the vice president can become animated discussing doomsday scenarios. In his new biography, “Cheney: The Untold Story of America’s Most Powerful and Controversial Vice President” (578 pages. HarperCollins. $27.95), Hayes tells the story of the Cheney family, sitting around their new big-screen TV in Jackson Hole, Wyo., on a recent Fourth of July, watching the 1997 movie “The Peacemaker.” Starring George Clooney and Nicole Kidman, the film is about a plot to blow up New York with a nuclear bomb. Partway through the movie, Cheney’s wife, Lynne, entered the room and asked what was happening. The question was directed at no one in particular, but the vice president launched into “a 10-minute, scene-by-scene synopsis of the action,” according to Lynne’s brother Mark Vincent. She interrupted to clarify her question: “What’s happening now?”
Cheney, writes Hayes, woke up on the morning of September 12, 2001, asking: when is the next attack? A lot of Americans woke up that day asking the same question, but while many have been lulled back into semicomplacency, Cheney has never stopped worrying and wondering and—it must be said—trying to do something about it. The vice president has become a kind of modern-day prophet of doom. He is seen by many Americans as slightly creepy, if not sinister. Of course, he could be right: Al Qaeda may well be, as recent intelligence reports suggest, gearing up for another and possibly more catastrophic attack. But what makes Cheney so dire, so animated by gloom?
University Update - Dick Cheney - A biographer gains rare access to Vice President Cheney—but little insight into his psyche. linked with University Update - Dick Cheney - A biographer gains rare access to Vice President Cheney—but little insight into his psyche.
University Update - George Clooney - A biographer gains rare access to Vice President Cheney—but little insight into his psyche. linked with University Update - George Clooney - A biographer gains rare access to Vice President Cheney—but little insight into his psyche.




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~J~ Says:
July 23rd, 2007 at 5:36 pmVisit ~J~
I would think in the position he holds he has more information on which to base his gloom. He’s worried about our country, even if others think another attack won’t come. I want my leaders to worry about our safety and to do something to see we are as safe as possible.
Sue Says:
July 23rd, 2007 at 5:45 pmVisit Sue
Amazing isn’t it that the author of the Newsweek piece can take a few actual sentences from this book being released tomorrow and fashion it around his own thinking.
Stephen Hayes (the actual author of the book)has responded to the fellows at Powerline and offers quite a different take on this book.
Just another one of those publications that will be left to the interpretation of the reader.