CLUB INFORMATION -bushremoval2k8
Club Name : bushremoval2k8
Description : 2008 Democratic Presidential Candidates: Barack Obama www.myspace.com/barackobama Bill Richardson www.myspace.com/richardsonforpresident John Edwards www.myspace.com/johnedwards Mike Gravel www.myspace.com/mikegravelforpresident Hillary Clinton www.myspace.com/hillaryclinton Chris Dodd www.myspace.com/senatordodd Joe Biden www.myspace.com/bidenforpresident Dennis Kucinich www.myspace.com/denniskucinich Our troops are being killed off when there is no real threat other than the lies that George W. Bush has tried to brain wash in us through controling the media. He has started a war in Iraq, killing off several soldiers, just for oil. Several mishaps have occured while he has been in office and when the events are reviewed every piece of evidence points to the Bush administration to being the source of the problem. The question that we should ask ourselves is, should we be led by someone who led us into an unnecessary war and caused much turmoil among our country? The answer to this question is your opinion but I feel we shouldn't follow someone who is leading us down the wrong path. Everyone can contribute to spreading the truth. The media has corrupted many others, so I feel it is our right to try to convince them to believe in the truth and it is there choice whether to believe you or not. The voices of the American people need to speak the truth, the media will not. When the fight begins within himself, a man's worth something. -Robert Browning. One might have followed the wrong path, but everyone is granted a second chance to change. "Life is like a freeway one wrong exit and you will be lost for hours to find the right path."-Neelam Zafar George W. Bush is making the wrong decisions and has not just effected himself, but he has effected our whole country. "A real leader or supervisor's success is not solely measured on their personal ability, but is better measured by the success of the team they lead. This success is based both on the personal and professional growth of the team and the ability to provide the services for which both the team and its clients prosper." R. Scott Smith Take the quiz: "How much do you hate Bush?" AMAZING You rule, I despise Bush as much as you do. You understand how dimwitted he is and much of an opinionated jerk he is. It's not that I hate George W. Bush, it's just I hate the incompetence that he shows and the fact that he has done several terrible things in his life and is never penalized for any of them. The house should pass a resolution of inquiry or impeachment calling on the Judiciary Committee to launch an investigation into whether grounds exist for the house to excercise its constitutional power to impeach George W. Bush.-Elizabeth De LA Vega Do you believe there is a U.S. government cover-up surrounding 9/11? Yes 89% 9447 votes No 11% 1201 votes Not only is George W. Bush a terrible person, his grandfather Prescott Bush caused War II. Prescott Bush provided Adolf Hitler with money allowing him to create the sevral thousand weapons in order to enslave the Jews, thus beginning the holocaust. As most people know, the holocaust was an event where the Nazi's captured several Jews and enslaved them among consentration camps. Then the Jews were slautered. This event led to the death of 6 million Jews, which started War II. Website for information above^: http://www.nhgazette.com/cgi-bin/NHGstore.cgi?user_action=detail&catalogno=NN_Bush_Nazi_2 Bush's approval ratings have decreased greatly during his term in his office: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/graphic/2005/10/29/GR2005102901606.html George Bush senior and the bin Laden's are family friends who together started an oil company in Texas. The bin Laden's had been meeting with George Bush secretly. On the day of 9/11 Shafig Bin Ladin had met with George Bush in the ritz hotel. They were on Carlyle Group business just a few miles from where hijackers supposedly acting on behalf of Osama bin Laden would fly a plane into the Pentagon. http://www.propagandamatrix.com/041203metwithbinladen.html Heres a question nobody seems to be able to answer....what the hell happened to our focus on Afganistan? Is it really we over took there government in order to establish a democracy? I DONT THINK SO...we used them in order to export oil out of the country of Turkmenistan because they have one of the largest sources of oil in the world. We bombed our way through Afganistan in order to create a path for the shipment of oil from Afganistan to the U.S. Then once we had finished that we decided to focus on Iraq leaving tens of thousands of soldiers stranded there being killed daily. And you must be wondering how is that possible? The answer is, a majority of the world is quaking in fear of the war because the media is being payed off to advertise lies established by the Bush administration. This is an outrage, when one man is able to control a whole entire country after everything he has done, most of which has devastated the county. I SAY, IMPEACH BUSH!!! IMPEACH BUSH PETITION: http://www.petitiontoimpeach.com/ Those who say that we should stay the course in Iraq overlook the fact that there was never any course to begin with. From the shifting justifications for the war, to the lack of any plan to win the peace, to the misguided attempts at nation-building (something the President once said we should never try to do), the administrations incompetence has brought us to the brink of 2,000 American lives lost and the creation of exactly what we were supposed to be trying to prevent: chaos, terrorism, and Islamic theocracy. I have objected to this war since it was in its planning stages while I was working for the House Armed Services Committee. Now I believe that new thinking is needed if we are to have any chance of success in Iraq. The withdrawal of most American troops should be a matter of months, not years. However, any timetable must be based on the reality on the ground in Iraq, not the electoral needs of politicians. The administration has too often imposed timetables based on its sinking poll numbers, ignoring the pleas of Iraqi leaders. This high-handedness has only made it more difficult to achieve stability. The only way to bring our troops home quickly and responsibly is to adopt a genuine strategy for success in Iraq. We have a model for this but it will require a change in our approach. Many in this administration as well as my opponent believe that we can somehow create a Jeffersonian democracy in Baghdad, which will then spread throughout the Middle East. This is fundamentally flawed strategy (more of a fantasy than a strategy), and it cannot succeed. It ignores centuries of Middle Eastern political reality, and it would mean keeping our military bogged down in Iraq for years even decades to come. Our military strategy for the invasion of Iraq valued speed over securing territory; we executed a computer driven, electronically inter-connected "lightning strike" at the expense of boots on the ground, and we never secured the borders of Iraq. This quickly made Iraq a magnet for outside Islamic extremists to infiltrate, and, in brutal fashion, wage an urban terrorist war against the Iraqi people and our occupying American forces. We are spending much more defending the borders of Iraq than we are our own wide open borders. This expenditure, when coupled with the Bush tax cuts, cripples our ability to invest in homeland security, education, health care, space and science research and other key areas. Our national priorities have been turned upside down. The Iraqi people, who have never before had the opportunity to have a voice in the future of their country, have just voted to approve a new constitution. Whether this constitution can work as a solid basis for peace in Iraq remains to be seen. There are reasons to be concerned: it offers little guarantee of rights for women, and, because it was mostly negotiated between Kurds and Shiites, and would severely limit Sunni access to petroleum revenues, it has in large part been rejected by the Sunni population. So far there has been no indication that the new document will mean any letup in the insurgency. Whether or not the new constitution endures, we urgently need to adopt a new strategic approach. We do have a model that offers hope for at least some success. When the Balkans erupted into a three-way, multi-ethnic religious war in the 1990s, it was NATO, brought to the table by American leadership, that brought a cessation of fighting in a hostile region and laid the groundwork for peace. Bosnia is now on the cusp of joining the European Union. This is a true success story, one which offers important lessons for our involvement in Iraq. Those of us who were on the ground in Bosnia learned first hand how to apply this model and must now work to correct the mistakes of this administration. We were successful because we recognized a fundamental reality: unless you could separate the warring parties, no peace treaty was worth the paper it was printed on. Instead of a strong multi-ethnic, multi-religious federal government, the decision was made to create three semi-autonomous states, whose borders were both economically viable and based largely on historic, traditional lines. This reality is reflected, to a degree, in the new Iraqi constitution. However, if a peaceful Iraq based on loose confederation is to succeed, certain key issues need to be addressed. First among these is the distribution of oil wealth. Much of the Sunni rejectionism is based in a fear that, without a strong federal state, the Sunni regions will be at a severe financial disadvantage, since the vast majority of current Iraqi oil production is based in Kurdish and Shiite areas. A fair, population-based formula for distribution of petroleum revenues, along with a commitment to developing as-yet untapped oil reserves in the Sunni regions, could go a long way toward calming Sunni anxieties about the future. As it stands, with only 20% of the population and very little current oil production, many Sunnis feel that the insurgency is the only bargaining chip they have. The prospect of peace, and the assurance that there would be no return to a Sunni-dominated federal state, would offer powerful incentives to the Kurds and Shiites to agree to such a formula. We also need a better strategy for Iraqi security. The attempt to create a national Iraqi army has been a failure. Of the 115 battalions in the Iraqi army, only one is mixed Sunni, Shiite, and Kurd. Half of the soldiers listed on paper do not exist. Soldiers and police officers sell their weapons to the insurgents. Sunni units are often completely infiltrated by insurgent fighters. As Ambassador Peter W. Galbraith has said, the United States cannot build an Iraqi army when there is no Iraqi nation. Instead, we should be focusing on creating regional security forces, like those which have kept Kurdish and Shiite areas reasonably peaceful. We can create a successful exit strategy for Iraq. Weve done it before I was there. By restructuring security arrangements and helping to guarantee fair distribution of oil revenues, we can help separate and stabilize the warring parties. The quickest way to get American forces out of Iraq is to apply the lessons of our success in the Balkans. But we need leaders in Washington who understand that, unless we recognize how we got Iraq wrong from the beginning, well never get it right. -Copyright Eric Massa-Candidate for congress in New York Iraq controls the purest water supply in the whole world and if we are able to take control of Iraq we will be controling oil and water so there will be a war for oil and a war for water. Websites: http://www.truthout.org/ http://www.optruth.org/ http://www.thenation.com/ http://www.nytimes.com/top/news/washington/campaign2004/candidates/georgewbush/ http://www.whitehouse.org/ (Life as expressed by George W. Bush) Bushisms: I don't know whether I'm going to win or not. I think I am. I do know I'm ready for the job. And if not, that's just the way it goes. This is Preservation Month. I appreciate preservation. It's what you do when you run for president. You gotta preserve. I have a different vision of leadership. A leadership is someone who brings people together. I know the human being and fish can coexist peacefully. They misunderestimated me. It's clearly a budget. It's got lots of numbers in it. I think we agree the past is over. Families is where our nation finds hope, where wings take dream. Rarely is the question asked: Is our children learning. .. width="425" height="350"> ..> CHECK OUT THIS SITE........ www.voicesforpeaceandnonviolence.5u.com
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