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Want a good laugh? Read this from Classical Values.
With a sentence structure such as this:
I call it righteous indignation because if he is elected president, he will probably did something wrong and he will need to be impeach.
you have to only imagine what you will find at the link.
I don’t know. Do they?
Michael Barone takes us back to the Truman days and shows a parallel with President Bush:
Another is that presidential determination to avoid defeat and retreat can prevail against the advice of experts. Just as Truman’s Pentagon opposed the airlift, so George W. Bush’s Pentagon mostly opposed the surge strategy in Iraq. In late 2006 and early 2007, the advice from experts, notably the Baker-Hamilton Commission, was the same as that Marshall and Bradley gave Truman: get out with whatever fig leaf you can. The surge, like the airlift, was said to put undue strain on the military, to degrade the readiness of men and materiel for other missions. All these claims were plausible and, in the case of the surge, dominated press coverage and were supported by the incoming leaders in Congress.
Well worth the read.
This Irishman is not shy about his thoughts on our Presidential election.
Written by Sue


