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Impeach George Bush


Al Gore Remarks to MoveOn.org at New York University

Millions of Americans now share a feeling that something pretty basic has gone wrong in our country and that some important American values are being placed at risk. And they want to set it right.

Source: MoveOn.Org, 2003-08-07

Candidate: President George Bush

-AS PREPARED-
Ladies and Gentlemen:
Thank you for your investment of time and energy in gathering here today. I would especially like to thank Moveon.org for sponsoring this event, and the NYU College Democrats for co-sponsoring the speech and for hosting us.
Some of you may remember that my last formal public address on these topics was delivered in San Francisco, a little less than a year ago, when I argued that the President's case for urgent, unilateral, pre-emptive war in Iraq was less than convincing and needed to be challenged more effectively by the Congress.
In light of developments since then, you might assume that my purpose today is to revisit the manner in which we were led into war. To some extent, that will be the case - but only as part of a larger theme that I feel should now be explored on an urgent basis.
The direction in which our nation is being led is deeply troubling to me -- not only in Iraq but also here at home on economic policy, social policy and environmental policy.
Millions of Americans now share a feeling that something pretty basic has gone wrong in our country and that some important American values are being placed at risk. And they want to set it right.
The way we went to war in Iraq illustrates this larger problem. Normally, we Americans lay the facts on the table, talk through the choices before us and make a decision. But that didn't really happen with this war -- not the way it should have. And as a result, too many of our soldiers are paying the highest price, for the strategic miscalculations, serious misjudgments, and historic mistakes that have put them and our nation in harm's way.
I'm convinced that one of the reasons that we didn't have a better public debate before the Iraq War started is because so many of the impressions that the majority of the country had back then turn out to have been completely wrong. Leaving aside for the moment the question of how these false impressions got into the public's mind, it might be healthy to take a hard look at the ones we now know were wrong and clear the air so that we can better see exactly where we are now and what changes might need to be made.
In any case, what we now know to have been false impressions include the following:
(1) Saddam Hussein was partly responsible for the attack against us on September 11th, 2001, so a good way to respond to that attack would be to invade his country and forcibly remove him from power.
(2) Saddam was working closely with Osama Bin Laden and was actively supporting members of the Al Qaeda terrorist group, giving them weapons and money and bases and training, so launching a war against Iraq would be a good way to stop Al Qaeda from attacking us again.
(3) Saddam was about to give the terrorists poison gas and deadly germs that he had made into weapons which they could use to kill millions of Americans. Therefore common sense alone dictated that we should send our military into Iraq in order to protect our loved ones and ourselves against a grave threat.
(4) Saddam was on the verge of building nuclear bombs and giving them to the terrorists. And since the only thing preventing Saddam from acquiring a nuclear arsenal was access to enriched uranium, once our spies found out that he had bought the enrichment technology he needed and was actively trying to buy uranium from Africa, we had very little time left. Therefore it seemed imperative during last Fall's election campaign to set aside less urgent issues like the economy and instead focus on the congressional resolution approving war against Iraq.
(5) Our GI's would be welcomed with open arms by cheering Iraqis who would help them quickly establish public safety, free markets and Representative Democracy, so there wouldn't be that much risk that US soldiers would get bogged down in a guerrilla war.
(6) Even though the rest of the world was mostly opposed to the war, they would quickly fall in line after we won and then contribute lots of money and soldiers to help out, so there wouldn't be that much risk that US taxpayers would get stuck with a huge bill.
Now, of course, everybody knows that every single one of these impressions was just dead wrong.
For example, according to the just-released Congressional investigation, Saddam had nothing whatsoever to do with the attacks of Sept. 11. Therefore, whatever other goals it served -- and it did serve some other goals -- the decision to invade Iraq made no sense as a way of exacting revenge for 9/11. To the contrary, the US pulled significant intelligence resources out of Pakistan and Afghanistan in order to get ready for the rushed invasion of Iraq and that disrupted the search for Osama at a critical time. And the indifference we showed to the rest of the world's opinion in the process undermined the global cooperation we need to win the war against terrorism.
In the same way, the evidence now shows clearly that Saddam did not want to work with Osama Bin Laden at all, much less give him weapons of mass destruction. So our invasion of Iraq had no effect on Al Qaeda, other than to boost their recruiting efforts.
And on the nuclear issue of course, it turned out that those documents were actually forged by somebody -- though we don't know who.
As for the cheering Iraqi crowds we anticipated, unfortunately, that didn't pan out either, so now our troops are in an ugly and dangerous situation.
Moreover, the rest of the world certainly isn't jumping in to help out very much the way we expected, so US taxpayers are now having to spend a billion dollars a week.
In other words, when you put it all together, it was just one mistaken impression after another. Lots of them.
And it's not just in foreign policy. The same thing has been happening in economic policy, where we've also got another huge and threatening mess on our hands. I'm convinced that one reason we've had so many nasty surprises in our economy is that the country somehow got lots of false impressions about what we could expect from the big tax cuts that were enacted, including:
(1) The tax cuts would unleash a lot of new investment that would create lots of new jobs.
(2) We wouldn't have to worry about a return to big budget deficits -- because all the new growth in the economy caused by the tax cuts would lead to a lot of new revenue.
(3) Most of the benefits would go to average middle-income families, not to the wealthy, as some partisans claimed.
Unfortunately, here too, every single one of these impressions turned out to be wrong. Instead of creating jobs, for example, we are losing millions of jobs -- net losses for three years in a row. That hasn't happened since the Great Depression. As I've noted before, I was the first one laid off.
And it turns out that most of the benefits actually are going to the highest income Americans, who unfortunately are the least likely group to spend money in ways that create jobs during times when the economy is weak and unemployment is rising.
And of course the budget deficits are already the biggest ever - with the worst still due to hit us. As a percentage of our economy, we've had bigger ones -- but these are by far the most dangerous we've ever had for two reasons: first, they're not temporary; they're structural and long-term; second, they are going to get even bigger just at the time when the big baby-boomer retirement surge starts.
Moreover, the global capital markets have begun to recognize the unprecedented size of this emerging fiscal catastrophe. In truth, the current Executive Branch of the U.S. Government is radically different from any since the McKinley Administration 100 years ago.
The 2001 winner of the Nobel Prize for Economics, George Akerlof, went even further last week in Germany when he told Der Spiegel, "This is the worst government the US has ever had in its more than 200 years of history...This is not normal government policy." In describing the impact of the Bush policies on America's future, Akerloff added, "What we have here is a form of looting."
Ominously, the capital markets have just pushed U.S. long-term mortgage rates higher soon after the Federal Reserve Board once again reduced discount rates. Monetary policy loses some of its potency when fiscal policy comes unglued. And after three years of rate cuts in a row, Alan Greenspan and his colleagues simply don't have much room left for further reductions.
This situation is particularly dangerous right now for several reasons: first because home-buying fueled by low rates (along with car-buying, also a rate-sensitive industry) have been just about the only reliable engines pulling the economy forward; second, because so many Americans now have Variable Rate Mortgages; and third, because average personal debt is now at an all-time high -- a lot of Americans are living on the edge.
It seems obvious that big and important issues like the Bush economic policy and the first Pre-emptive War in U.S. history should have been debated more thoroughly in the Congress, covered more extensively in the news media, and better presented to the American people before our nation made such fateful choices. But that didn't happen, and in both cases, reality is turning out to be very different from the impression that was given when the votes -- and the die -- were cast.
Since this curious mismatch between myth and reality has suddenly become commonplace and is causing such extreme difficulty for the nation's ability to make good choices about our future, maybe it is time to focus on how in the world we could have gotten so many false impressions in such a short period of time.
At first, I thought maybe the President's advisers were a big part of the problem. Last fall, in a speech on economic policy at the Brookings Institution, I called on the President to get rid of his whole economic team and pick a new group. And a few weeks later, damned if he didn't do just that - and at least one of the new advisers had written eloquently about the very problems in the Bush economic policy that I was calling upon the President to fix.
But now, a year later, we still have the same bad economic policies and the problems have, if anything, gotten worse. So obviously I was wrong: changing all the president's advisers didn't work as a way of changing the policy.
I remembered all that last month when everybody was looking for who ought to be held responsible for the false statements in the President's State of the Union Address. And I've just about concluded that the real problem may be the President himself and that next year we ought to fire him and get a new one.
But whether you agree with that conclusion or not, whether you're a Democrat or a Republican -- or an Independent, a Libertarian, a Green or a Mugwump -- you've got a big stake in making sure that Representative Democracy works the way it is supposed to. And today, it just isn't working very well. We all need to figure out how to fix it because we simply cannot keep on making such bad decisions on the basis of false impressions and mistaken assumptions.
Earlier, I mentioned the feeling many have that something basic has gone wrong. Whatever it is, I think it has a lot to do with the way we seek the truth and try in good faith to use facts as the basis for debates about our future -- allowing for the unavoidable tendency we all have to get swept up in our enthusiasms.
That last point is worth highlighting. Robust debate in a democracy will almost always involve occasional rhetorical excesses and leaps of faith, and we're all used to that. I've even been guilty of it myself on occasion. But there is a big difference between that and a systematic effort to manipulate facts in service to a totalistic ideology that is felt to be more important than the mandates of basic honesty.
Unfortunately, I think it is no longer possible to avoid the conclusion that what the country is dealing with in the Bush Presidency is the latter. That is really the nub of the problem -- the common source for most of the false impressions that have been frustrating the normal and healthy workings of our democracy.
Americans have always believed that we the people have a right to know the truth and that the truth will set us free. The very idea of self-government depends upon honest and open debate as the preferred method for pursuing the truth -- and a shared respect for the Rule of Reason as the best way to establish the truth.
The Bush Administration routinely shows disrespect for that whole basic process, and I think it's partly because they feel as if they already know the truth and aren't very curious to learn about any facts that might contradict it. They and the members of groups that belong to their ideological coalition are true believers in each other's agendas.
There are at least a couple of problems with this approach:
First, powerful and wealthy groups and individuals who work their way into the inner circle -- with political support or large campaign contributions -- are able to add their own narrow special interests to the list of favored goals without having them weighed against the public interest or subjected to the rule of reason. And the greater the conflict between what they want and what's good for the rest of us, the greater incentive they have to bypass the normal procedures and keep it secret.
That's what happened, for example, when Vice President Cheney invited all of those oil and gas industry executives to meet in secret sessions with him and his staff to put their wish lists into the administration's legislative package in early 2001.
That group wanted to get rid of the Kyoto Treaty on Global Warming, of course, and the Administration pulled out of it first thing. The list of people who helped write our nation's new environmental and energy policies is still secret, and the Vice President won't say whether or not his former company, Halliburton, was included. But of course, as practically everybody in the world knows, Halliburton was given a huge open-ended contract to take over and run the Iraqi oil fields-- without having to bid against any other companies.
Secondly, when leaders make up their minds on a policy without ever having to answer hard questions about whether or not it's good or bad for the American people as a whole, they can pretty quickly get into situations where it's really uncomfortable for them to defend what they've done with simple and truthful explanations. That's when they're tempted to fuzz up the facts and create false impressions. And when other facts start to come out that undermine the impression they're trying to maintain, they have a big incentive to try to keep the truth bottled up if -- they can -- or distort it.
For example, a couple of weeks ago, the White House ordered its own EPA to strip important scientific information about the dangers of global warming out of a public report. Instead, the White House substituted information that was partly paid for by the American Petroleum Institute. This week, analysts at the Treasury Department told a reporter that they're now being routinely ordered to change their best analysis of what the consequences of the Bush tax laws are likely to be for the average person.
Here is the pattern that I see: the President's mishandling of and selective use of the best evidence available on the threat posed by Iraq is pretty much the same as the way he intentionally distorted the best available evidence on climate change, and rejected the best available evidence on the threat posed to America's economy by his tax and budget proposals.
In each case, the President seems to have been pursuing policies chosen in advance of the facts -- policies designed to benefit friends and supporters -- and has used tactics that deprived the American people of any opportunity to effectively subject his arguments to the kind of informed scrutiny that is essential in our system of checks and balances.
The administration has developed a highly effective propaganda machine to imbed in the public mind mythologies that grow out of the one central doctrine that all of the special interests agree on, which -- in its purest form -- is that government is very bad and should be done away with as much as possible -- except the parts of it that redirect money through big contracts to industries that have won their way into the inner circle.
For the same reasons they push the impression that government is bad, they also promote the myth that there really is no such thing as the public interest. What's important to them is private interests. And what they really mean is that those who have a lot of wealth should be left alone, rather than be called upon to reinvest in society through taxes.
Perhaps the biggest false impression of all lies in the hidden social objectives of this Administration that are advertised with the phrase "compassionate conservatism" -- which they claim is a new departure with substantive meaning. But in reality, to be compassionate is meaningless, if compassion is limited to the mere awareness of the suffering of others. The test of compassion is action. What the administration offers with one hand is the rhetoric of compassion; what it takes away with the other hand are the financial resources necessary to make compassion something more than an empty and fading impression.
Maybe one reason that false impressions have a played a bigger role than they should is that both Congress and the news media have been less vigilant and exacting than they should have been in the way they have tried to hold the Administration accountable.
Whenever both houses of Congress are controlled by the President's party, there is a danger of passivity and a temptation for the legislative branch to abdicate its constitutional role. If the party in question is unusually fierce in demanding ideological uniformity and obedience, then this problem can become even worse and prevent the Congress from properly exercising oversight. Under these circumstances, the majority party in the Congress has a special obligation to the people to permit full Congressional inquiry and oversight rather than to constantly frustrate and prevent it.
Whatever the reasons for the recent failures to hold the President properly accountable, America has a compelling need to quickly breathe new life into our founders' system of checks and balances -- because some extremely important choices about our future are going to be made shortly, and it is imperative that we avoid basing them on more false impressions.
One thing the President could do to facilitate the restoration of checks and balances is to stop blocking reasonable efforts from the Congress to play its rightful role. For example, he could order his appointees to cooperate fully with the bipartisan National Commission on Terrorist Attacks, headed by former Republican Governor Tom Kean. And he should let them examine how the White House handled the warnings that are said to have been given to the President by the intelligence community.
Two years ago yesterday, for example, according to the Wall Street Journal, the President was apparently advised in specific language that Al Qaeda was going to hijack some airplanes to conduct a terrorist strike inside the U.S.
I understand his concern about people knowing exactly what he read in the privacy of the Oval Office, and there is a legitimate reason for treating such memos to the President with care. But that concern has to be balanced against the national interest in improving the way America deals with such information. And the apparently chaotic procedures that were used to handle the forged nuclear documents from Niger certainly show evidence that there is room for improvement in the way the White House is dealing with intelligence memos. Along with other members of the previous administration, I certainly want the commission to have access to any and all documents sent to the White House while we were there that have any bearing on this issue. And President Bush should let the commission see the ones that he read too.
After all, this President has claimed the right for his executive branch to send his assistants into every public library in America and secretly monitor what the rest of us are reading. That's been the law ever since the Patriot Act was enacted. If we have to put up with such a broad and extreme invasion of our privacy rights in the name of terrorism prevention, surely he can find a way to let this National Commission know how he and his staff handled a highly specific warning of terrorism just 36 days before 9/11.
And speaking of the Patriot Act, the president ought to reign in John Ashcroft and stop the gross abuses of civil rights that twice have been documented by his own Inspector General. And while he's at it, he needs to reign in Donald Rumsfeld and get rid of that DoD "Total Information Awareness" program that's right out of George Orwell's 1984.
The administration hastened from the beginning to persuade us that defending America against terror cannot be done without seriously abridging the protections of the Constitution for American citizens, up to and including an asserted right to place them in a form of limbo totally beyond the authority of our courts. And that view is both wrong and fundamentally un-American.
But the most urgent need for new oversight of the Executive Branch and the restoration of checks and balances is in the realm of our security, where the Administration is asking that we accept a whole cluster of new myths:
For example, the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty was an effort to strike a bargain between states possessing nuclear weapons and all others who had pledged to refrain from developing them. This administration has rejected it and now, incredibly, wants to embark on a new program to build a brand new generation of smaller (and it hopes, more usable) nuclear bombs. In my opinion, this would be true madness -- and the point of no return to the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty -- even as we and our allies are trying to prevent a nuclear testing breakout by North Korea and Iran.
Similarly, the Kyoto treaty is an historic effort to strike a grand bargain between free-market capitalism and the protection of the global environment, now gravely threatened by rapidly accelerating warming of the Earth's atmosphere and the consequent disruption of climate patterns that have persisted throughout the entire history of civilization as we know it. This administration has tried to protect the oil and coal industries from any restrictions at all -- though Kyoto may become legally effective for global relations even without U.S. participation.
Ironically, the principal cause of global warming is our civilization's addiction to burning massive quantities carbon-based fuels, including principally oil -- the most important source of which is the Persian Gulf, where our soldiers have been sent for the second war in a dozen years -- at least partly to ensure our continued access to oil.
We need to face the fact that our dangerous and unsustainable consumption of oil from a highly unstable part of the world is similar in its consequences to all other addictions. As it becomes worse, the consequences get more severe and you have to pay the dealer more.
And by now, it is obvious to most Americans that we have had one too many wars in the Persian Gulf and that we need an urgent effort to develop environmentally sustainable substitutes for fossil fuels and a truly international effort to stabilize the Persian Gulf and rebuild Iraq.
The removal of Saddam from power is a positive accomplishment in its own right for which the President deserves credit, just as he deserves credit for removing the Taliban from power in Afghanistan. But in the case of Iraq, we have suffered enormous collateral damage because of the manner in which the Administration went about the invasion. And in both cases, the aftermath has been badly mishandled.
The administration is now trying to give the impression that it is in favor of NATO and UN participation in such an effort. But it is not willing to pay the necessary price, which is support of a new UN Resolution and genuine sharing of control inside Iraq.
If the 21st century is to be well started, we need a national agenda that is worked out in concert with the people, a healing agenda that is built on a true national consensus. Millions of Americans got the impression that George W. Bush wanted to be a "healer, not a divider", a president devoted first and foremost to "honor and integrity." Yet far from uniting the people, the president's ideologically narrow agenda has seriously divided America. His most partisan supporters have launched a kind of 'civil cold war' against those with whom they disagree.
And as for honor and integrity, let me say this: we know what that was all about, but hear me well, not as a candidate for any office, but as an American citizen who loves my country:
For eight years, the Clinton-Gore Administration gave this nation honest budget numbers; an economic plan with integrity that rescued the nation from debt and stagnation; honest advocacy for the environment; real compassion for the poor; a strengthening of our military -- as recently proven -- and a foreign policy whose purposes were elevated, candidly presented and courageously pursued, in the face of scorched-earth tactics by the opposition. That is also a form of honor and integrity, and not every administration in recent memory has displayed it.
So I would say to those who have found the issue of honor and integrity so useful as a political tool, that the people are also looking for these virtues in the execution of public policy on their behalf, and will judge whether they are present or absent.
I am proud that my party has candidates for president committed to those values. I admire the effort and skill they are putting into their campaigns. I am not going to join them, but later in the political cycle I will endorse one of them, because I believe that we must stand for a future in which the United States will again be feared only by its enemies; in which our country will again lead the effort to create an international order based on the rule of law; a nation which upholds fundamental rights even for those it believes to be its captured enemies; a nation whose financial house is in order; a nation where the market place is kept healthy by effective government scrutiny; a country which does what is necessary to provide for the health, education, and welfare of our people; a society in which citizens of all faiths enjoy equal standing; a republic once again comfortable that its chief executive knows the limits as well as the powers of the presidency; a nation that places the highest value on facts, not ideology, as the basis for all its great debates and decisions.

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From: AND
2004-01-09 00:00:00
now we hear that none other than halliburton has
the government contract to drill for water on
mars.

apparently the plan is to make
this planet unlivable, then those that can afford
it can leave and go to mars until earth heals
herself.

great, just great!



From: Linda
2004-01-09 00:00:00
wouldn't you just know that someone is going to
believe the rush limbaugh-esque cr-p that on a
wintry day in new york, the world coudn't possibly
be getting warmer...

well, fella, the
desert, known for its heat, also gets cold in
winter - in fact, colder than the plains.


the point of global warming is the
deserts on our planet are growing. get it. the
oceans are shrinking. fresh water is disappearing.


our bodies are 98% water. if we can't
replenish the water we use, we
die.

now, if you don't get it, don't
blame al gore because he does. just because you
don't understand the theory of relativity, doesn't
make einstein a looser.



From: EL LATINO
2004-01-09 00:00:00
the internet inventor is again making a fool of
himself. talking about global warming while he is
freezing his -ss. thanks for loosing the
elections. looser!!



From: albert g.
1999-11-30 00:00:00
the time has come to plan and organize the end of
this administration.
enough of the lies and
excuses have been told.
the time of reckoning
has arrived.
join us in defeating bush and
company.
unite for the sake of america.



From: Margery Fletcher
1999-11-30 00:00:00
this article points out the excellent reasons for
citizens to demand better and more honest
leadership than those who are in power now. i am a
political activist, and abhor many of the things
that have taken place through the current
administrations decisions, the worst of which is
the ongoing war in iraq. i am of grandmotherly
age. though i saw my contemporaries killed and
wounded in a war that did nothing but kill and
destroy, i have felt that a person who had had to
fight in such a war, deserved at least to fight
under such an administration that had knowledge of
the horrors of war, and that considered war as the
last resort for straightening out problems.

i feel the present war was begun, partly to
show the president was tough. it's too bad so many
soldiers had to help him out incurring their own
injuries and death.

as far as the
environment and the deadly effect of polluted air
on children, partricularly poor children, i
haven't seen the president change rules on power
plant emissions yet.

if gw were my son
he'd catch hell from me for what he was doing. i
would be ashamed to admit i had raised
him.

these are hard times,here, yet the
people whose country we are wrecking have had it
very much harder. our deployment of troops to iraq
should have been a peace event, and should have
engaged both sides in dialogue of how to make
lives better. it is like we are drooling over the
oil. i think it's time for us to walk, ride bikes
or buses, choose vehicles that use far less gas,
or that have new environmentally sound
technologies. do we have to pay for getting rich
with our children going to war?



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Let Them Eat Cake
2-10-2005
Rice is Wrong
2-2-2005
Hear Ye, Hear Ye
1-30-2005
The Soft Bigotry of Low Expectations
1-7-2005
Iraq's Founding Father
12-7-2004
Generalissimo Bush
10-29-2004
Maimed in Iraq, then Mistreated, Neglected, and Hidden in America.
10-27-2004
Vote Early, Vote Often
10-26-2004
Oops, He DID IT Again!
10-26-2004
ADMINISTRATION MISLEADS ON MISSING EXPLOSIVES
10-22-2004
A Creep in Wolves Clothing
10-20-2004
Does That Mean God Was Wrong: Reprise
10-18-2004
Where's Wolf, Tim, Chris?
10-17-2004
With Trembling Fingers
10-17-2004
Bush May Be the End to the Republican Party
10-16-2004
Bush's Mismanagement Deadly
10-14-2004
The Debates
10-11-2004
The Emperor Has No Clothes
10-8-2004
Jonathan Chait He's So Bad, He Might Be Perfect
10-8-2004
Bush V Kerry II
10-7-2004
A Chilling Message from Dick Cheney
10-7-2004
Bush Aides Admit Bush Stoking Fears of Terrorism for Political Gain
10-5-2004
Bremer Joins the Throng of Rats Deserting Ship
10-5-2004
Iraq spells Quagmire
10-5-2004
Iraq Spells Quagmire
10-5-2004
Iraq Spells Quagmire
10-5-2004
Iraq Spells Quagmire
10-5-2004
Iraq Spells Quagmire
10-4-2004
Treat Terrorists As The Criminals They Are
10-3-2004
FREE SPEECH = BAD CITIZEN?
9-18-2004
Bush Threatens World Peace and Prosperity
9-18-2004
Priceless
9-15-2004
THIS IS THE BIGGEST POLITICAL AND MILITARY BLUNDER THIS COUNTRY HAS FACED SINCE…
9-15-2004
The problem is that he still refuses to come clean about it.
9-15-2004
A Couple Salon Teasers
9-15-2004
Osama Who? Anothe Bush Flip-Flop
9-15-2004
Kerry Challenges Bush Record on Issues
9-7-2004
Gramm Delivers the Goods
9-7-2004
Sharon Bush Speaks
9-3-2004
Joe Roche - Army Specialist Writes Home
8-30-2004
Open Mouth - Insert Foot
8-29-2004
Catastrophic Success
8-27-2004
Connecting the Dots
8-27-2004
Prosecutor Who Attacked Kerry Admits Lying
8-26-2004
Bush's Swifties
8-24-2004
What Did You Do During the War, Mr. Preznit?
8-24-2004
This is rich
8-23-2004
The Fear Factor
8-22-2004
Rood, too
8-21-2004
Swift Boats Shame
8-21-2004
Bush in Viet Nam Fraikus
8-20-2004
WOLF!! III
8-20-2004
Pre-emption Doesn't End at Our Borders
8-20-2004
Bush's Failures Spread to Another Continent
8-20-2004
Abu Ghraib Probe Points to Top Brass
8-19-2004
What Happened on the Bridge
8-18-2004
He Hit Me First!
8-16-2004
The Daily Mislead
8-16-2004
Troops Coming Home
8-15-2004
A Sample of What a Democratic Ad could Look Like
8-3-2004
The Trend is Our Friend
8-2-2004
Here's a Must Read
8-1-2004
Orange
7-30-2004
And They're Off! Bush Criticizes Kerry's Record in Senate
7-19-2004
Bush Got It ALL WRONG!!
7-19-2004
Bush Approves of this Political Ad
7-18-2004
The CIA's acting director, John E. McLaughlin, told
7-14-2004
Say What?
7-14-2004
TONY BLAIR TAKES PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY!!
7-14-2004
Donald Trump Would 'Fire' Bush Over Iraq Invasion
7-13-2004
So, Does That Mean God Was Wrong?
7-10-2004
Bush Says We Need More Intelligence
7-10-2004
CO-INKY-DINKY
7-9-2004
BUSH ADMIN TAKING AIM AT ELECTION
7-8-2004
Going After Osama
7-6-2004
Don't Let's Lose Our Sense of Humor
7-5-2004
Iraq sovereignty: New Puppets on Old Strings
6-29-2004
The Polls are in - Bush is Down
6-27-2004
Bowling for Terrorism
6-27-2004
Bush: "Do As I Say, Not As I Do"
6-27-2004
Have You Been "Bushhitted?"
6-25-2004
Bush's Security Keeps Him Safer
6-24-2004
Duped or Dope
6-24-2004
Reality is unravelling for Bush
6-24-2004
Bush v Moon
6-24-2004
Four More Years
6-21-2004
A Father's Day Weekend
6-19-2004
9/11 Comission Credibility Issue for Bush
6-18-2004
Cheney DELUSIONAL
6-16-2004
Ex-U.S. Diplomats, Military Officers Urge Bush's Ouster
6-15-2004
Still Torture
6-15-2004
Bush Looks To Vatican For Support
6-13-2004
Powell Admits Big Mistake, Again
6-12-2004
A Rationalization of Torture
6-12-2004
More on Abu Ghraib
6-10-2004
Torture
6-9-2004
Stranger Than Fiction
6-8-2004
Bush Lawyers Decide Torture Okay
6-8-2004
Is Torture Legal?
6-8-2004
Ron Reagan Jr Blasts George Bush Jr
6-7-2004
Blood In The Water, and Everyone Can Smell It
6-2-2004
INCOMPETENT NINCOMPOOPS!!
6-2-2004
MEA CULPA, INDEED
6-2-2004
Bush Denies Knowing Chalabi-Boy
6-1-2004
Nothing To Fear
5-27-2004
Gore's Theme for Bush Administration: Incompetent
5-25-2004
Bush Avoids Voices of Protests at Yale
5-25-2004
Bush Takes On Iraq
5-25-2004
Feeling Safer?
5-20-2004
5/20/04
5-17-2004
The Newsweek Article
5-16-2004
Gee, I sure hope Iraq turns out okay...
5-13-2004
Truth In Court
5-13-2004
Bush Contradicts Self At His Own Press Conference
5-13-2004
Bush's Lies
5-12-2004
Bush, Rumsfeld, Cambone, Boykin, Miller
5-12-2004
This Is A Hold-Up
5-10-2004
Just How Bad Does It Have To Get?
5-5-2004
Bush Doesn't Apologize
4-28-2004
As Suspected, Bush Went to Iraq for the OIL
4-28-2004
Kerry Strikes Back
4-27-2004
Ambassador Joe Wilson's Book
4-26-2004
I Admit It, I'm At A Loss
4-24-2004
Bush's Bankruptcies
4-24-2004
Sovereignty
4-22-2004
Bush's Goal - Rule the World
4-22-2004
Wave Bye-Bye to the Free Press
4-22-2004
Peggy Noonan’s Pearl Harbor
4-20-2004
BUSH-CHENEY 2000 TO PAY $90,000 CIVIL PENALTY
4-20-2004
Spin
4-19-2004
Will Bush Be Responsible?
4-18-2004
Midas Touch
4-17-2004
Why the Press Conference, Why Now?
4-16-2004
Imagine
4-16-2004
Molly Ivins
4-14-2004
Iraq
4-13-2004
Bush's News Conference
4-13-2004
Massachusettes National Guard Told They Aren't Going Home
4-13-2004
In His Own Words
4-11-2004
White House Warned of Al Quaeda Hijackings Months before 9/11
4-11-2004
FBI Very Active in Al Quaeda Investigation Months Before 9/11
4-7-2004
The Shit's Hit the Fan
4-6-2004
Incompetent or Malevolent
4-5-2004
America Won't Turn and Run
4-4-2004
Deanna Laney and George W Bush
4-3-2004
Powell, "Failed Intelligence", Gee, Ya Think So?
3-30-2004
Rice to Speak
3-29-2004
Is Bush Unhinged
3-20-2004
Bush Campaign - Made Overseas
3-18-2004
Censure Bush over Killing Americans and Iraqis for no Reason
3-11-2004
Bush Sees the Light - Legalism
3-10-2004
Salon.com - the New Pentagon Papers
3-8-2004
Blix: Bush, Blair Knew They Were Hyping Case for War
3-6-2004
Houston, We have a Problem
3-6-2004
Bush Capitalizes on 9/11 Sympathy and Makes Excuses
3-5-2004
Did I Say There Were More Jobs?
3-1-2004
190 Lies of Bush
2-28-2004
Four More Lies from the Lying Son of a Bush
2-27-2004
Bush's Biggest Bungle
2-20-2004
Bush's 200 Million Surrogates
2-20-2004
Bush "Jumping In"
2-19-2004
Chalabi Scandal (Yes, Another One
2-18-2004
Jobs, Jobs, Jobs
2-17-2004
Bush, Bremer, Iraq Founding Fathers
2-15-2004
The Boy Who Cried Weapons of Mass Destruction
2-15-2004
Molly Ivins Wants Us to Remember
2-13-2004
She's Baaaack
2-12-2004
Still AWOL
2-11-2004
AWOL II - Silver Spoon Service
2-11-2004
George Bush - The Lost Year
2-10-2004
AWOL? !
2-9-2004
Kean will Subpoena Bush
2-8-2004
President Sets Out Commission Task
2-7-2004
BOOBS
2-7-2004
Bush the Bull
2-6-2004
Tom Daschle Answers Bush Budget
2-6-2004
Bush's Record
2-6-2004
Moving Right Along
2-5-2004
There was No Failure of Intelligence
2-4-2004
Liar, Incompetent or Space Cadet?
2-2-2004
Excuses, Excuses
2-2-2004
Join with Move On to ask Congress to Censure the President
2-1-2004
Irony Polarizes Planet
2-1-2004
Another Opening, Another Show
1-31-2004
Oh Ari, Ari
1-30-2004
The Dog ate my Weapons of Mass Destructions
1-30-2004
Leader or Mis-Leader
1-30-2004
Where's the Apology?
1-29-2004
Bush and Hussein
1-29-2004
U.S. off to Afghanistan, again.
1-29-2004
Bush, Alone, is Accountable
1-28-2004
The Kelly-Kay Nexus
1-27-2004
Bush Backs Away from WMD Claims
1-27-2004
Bush Wants the Facts, Belatedly
1-26-2004
Who Owes Who an Explanation?
1-25-2004
Bush knows something we don't know
1-24-2004
Cheney vs Kay
1-22-2004
Bush is Out in the Cold
1-20-2004
If You're So Smart...
1-20-2004
The New Poll
1-19-2004
State of the Union - 2004
1-17-2004
Bush and Scott
1-14-2004
The Outrage Gap
1-10-2004
Bush Planned Iraq Invasion Before 9/11
1-8-2004
So Bush Had To Reform Medicare, Huh?
1-7-2004
FOUND! WMDs!
1-7-2004
The Old Bait and Switch, Again
1-4-2004
That was Then, This is Now?
1-3-2004
God's Blessing Him
1-1-2004
Bush Lies About Sex
12-30-2003
Lest We Forget
12-29-2003
And the Administration Goes on Lying
12-19-2003
9/11 Kean Preliminaries - Administration Delay Hinders Progress
12-18-2003
Jose Padilla Held Hostage - Officially
12-16-2003
Thanksgiving Leaves a Bad Taste in the Mouths of the Troops
12-16-2003
The Bush Administration Repudiates International Law
12-13-2003
I'll Take Carni Games for $200, Alex
12-13-2003
We've Got 'im
12-11-2003
Stop The Count
12-11-2003
Rumsfeld using Israeli Advisors in New Offensive
12-9-2003
Brainiac Strikes Again
12-7-2003
White House Wants Kerry to Apologize for Profanity
12-7-2003
Bush Sells Iraq
12-4-2003
9/11 In Neverland
12-4-2003
Excuses, Excuses, Excuses
12-3-2003
Good-bye, Mr. President: The Secret Resignation Letters
11-27-2003
Better Watch Out
11-26-2003
Bush Family Business II
11-24-2003
Bush Brings Midland to Buckingham
11-20-2003
Is Bush Beyond the Law?
11-20-2003
Mr Blair: "We stay until the job gets done."
11-17-2003
A Safer and More Peaceful World
11-16-2003
CIA Finds No Evidence Hussein Sought to Arm Terrorists
11-16-2003
The President In His Own Words
11-16-2003
The President In His Own Words Part II
11-16-2003
The President In His Own Words Part III
11-16-2003
Unable to Establish an Iraq/Al Qaeda Connection, Bush Builds One
11-15-2003
A Parable
11-14-2003
Oh, What a Tangled Web We Weave...
11-8-2003
Bombs Over Baghdad - Again
11-8-2003
U.S. Closes Diplomatic Missions in Saudi Arabia
11-6-2003
Americans RIPPED OFF Again
11-5-2003
One in Seven - Flailing Support
11-1-2003
Bush's Other Wars
11-1-2003
There's Only One Issue in this next election - Abortion
11-1-2003
Piling On
10-30-2003
The Lying Spreads to Condoleezza Rice
10-28-2003
Two Words: Emperor's Clothes
10-27-2003
The 9/11 StoneWall
10-27-2003
140,000 Voters in Iraq Will Vote to Rid Us Of Our Madman
10-20-2003
Charity Begins at Home
10-17-2003
Bush Looting Our Future
10-16-2003
Did Someone Say "Crusade"
10-16-2003
White House Officials Leak Bush's Order to Stop Leaks
10-11-2003
KISS
10-11-2003
Bush Administration Set to Gut Endangered Species Act!
10-5-2003
BUSH LEAVE HIS FOOTSTEPS IN THE SAND
10-3-2003
Bush - I lied - Again - So What?
10-2-2003
David Kay - Sorry about the Progress Leaks, I was Wrong
10-1-2003
Different Lies - Same Story
9-29-2003
Why All The Fuss
9-27-2003
What If?
9-26-2003
The Marshall Plan?
9-24-2003
Wouldn't Recognize the Truth if it Bit Him On His Ass
9-22-2003
Bush Takes His Case to FOX
9-21-2003
Ivins Hits Another Homer
9-20-2003
CNN Poll
9-17-2003
This Is Not A War, We Were Never Here
9-14-2003
Roadmap Dead - Isreal Puts out the Hit Palestinian Leadership
9-12-2003
The Lie was a Lie
9-4-2003
White House Admits Letting Bin Laden's out of the Country on 9/12
9-4-2003
The Bush Defense
9-4-2003
Blair Lied, so Bush Lied
9-3-2003
Pointing Fingers at Bush
9-3-2003
Duped? Doped? Bush as the Victim
9-3-2003
Right and Left Meet in Opposition to Bush Imperialism
9-3-2003
The Worm Turns
9-1-2003
Can This Fight Be Won?
8-26-2003
More Lies from the White House
8-25-2003
US/Pakistan Agree NOT to Capture Bin Laden
8-24-2003
Losing the Peace - As in Afganistan, Iraq is Proving an Intractable Problem for the Bush Administration
8-24-2003
Bush's Other Unemployment Problem
8-21-2003
Shame on Bush - No Welcome mat In Oregon
8-5-2003
More UnDiplomatic Diplomacy Towards North Korea
8-5-2003
Building a House of Cards
8-1-2003
Often-Wrong Cheney
8-1-2003
David Kay Leaks Progress
7-31-2003
Poindexter Goes Down Again
7-30-2003
I lied, too Bad
7-29-2003
As Ridiculous as it is Grotesque
7-28-2003
The Rumor Mill
7-26-2003
Bush's Consistent Failing - No Concern for the American Economy
7-24-2003
Tough-Guy Stance Not Working In Korea
7-22-2003
Hadley Did It
7-21-2003
No CIA Consultation on Bush WMD State of the Union Speech
7-18-2003
Cliff-Notes Style Reading Gets Bush D- on State of the Union Address
7-17-2003
Why won't this go away? Durbin Charges that WhiteHouse Pushed for Niger Uranium Claims
7-17-2003
CIA Officials Didn't get Copy of State of the Union Address
7-17-2003
Who is Robert Joseph
7-15-2003
Taliban is the Key to Iran
7-15-2003
16 Words Just the TIP of the Iceberg
7-14-2003
Bush Told Tenet to Keep the Niger Claims In
7-14-2003
Veteran Intelligence Community Calls for Cheney''s Head
7-13-2003
Bush Credibility Crisis - Al Quaeda to the Rescue
7-11-2003
How the Land of the Free Became the Dinosaur in the Tar Pit
7-11-2003
The Hard Questions If Tenet Told Blair Why didn't he tell Bush
7-10-2003
150,000 Soldier Security Force
7-10-2003
More DoubleSpeak
7-3-2003
BRING 'EM ON!
7-2-2003
The Anonymous Reuters Lie
7-1-2003
Iraq War is Over, but the Fighting Goes On
7-1-2003
What Joseph Wilson Didn't Find in Africa
6-27-2003
Waxman - Why did Bush Lie?
6-27-2003
Ten Appalling Lies We Were Told About Iraq
6-25-2003
AP - US Didn't kill Bin Laden when they had the Chance
6-19-2003
Cynthia McKinney - Bush didn't know about 9/11
6-16-2003
Write Your Congressman, and while you're at it, Sign the Impeachment Petition
6-13-2003
Gosh, D'ya Think They Might Have Lied
6-13-2003
Call for Impeachment Widens
6-13-2003
Bush Lied
6-13-2003
Here's The Point
6-12-2003
UN - No War Crimes Trials for US Soldiers
6-11-2003
Bush Administration Says No Probe into Faked Intelligence on Iraqi WMD
6-11-2003
It depends on what you mean by -HAS- George has some splainin to do.
6-11-2003
David Kay - it's not about the smoking gun
6-10-2003
Dumbing Down the War
6-9-2003
Damage Control and Spin
6-2-2003
Powell - I'm not Reading this Bullshit
5-30-2003
"Inalienable Rights" at the Pleasure of the Bush Administration?
5-29-2003
Lynch Rescue Ruse
5-27-2003
Read it Here First
5-25-2003
Israeli Intelligence Leaks Knowledge of Iraqi Weapons Moved to Lebanon before US Invasion
5-22-2003
Whitman Resigns Citing Bush Administration's Environmental Failures
5-19-2003
Excuse - who can count them? Stopping Terrorism
5-16-2003
International Criminal Court Preferred Venue for Tommy Franks War Crimes
5-13-2003
We Give Up - There're No Weapons of Mass Destruction in Iraq
5-12-2003
Will the real Paul Bremmer please stand up?
5-9-2003
9/11 Inquiry Access Stalled by White House - Victims Reach out to Community for Help
5-7-2003
Tommy Franks and Others to be Tried for War Crimes in Belgium
5-6-2003
The Blade Cut Loose - Mitch Daniels Resigns
4-26-2003
John Bolton Warns Syria, Libya, Cuba on Weapons of Mass Destruction
4-24-2003
Trickle Down Tax Cut
4-24-2003
Oil For Food - US to Manage Iraqi Food Supply
4-22-2003
No International Oversight for Weapons Inspectors
4-18-2003
Rumsfeld - I don't think we'll find any.
4-17-2003
Bechtel Rumsfeld Bush
4-16-2003
Excuses Are like Abu Abbas
4-14-2003
Three Excuses - Oops, did I say Iraq, I meant Syria
4-11-2003
Liberation Anarchy Iraq
4-11-2003
so that's it, no weapons, no saddam, no liberation
4-10-2003
Three Diplomatic Mistakes
4-9-2003
Syria - the new Iraq
4-9-2003
Wow, that was easy - Iraq War Over
4-6-2003
Turn Left at Bagdad - There's Syria
4-6-2003
Ooops - forgot to look at the Airport
4-5-2003
Victory with Victory - How to Win a War without objectives.
4-5-2003
Excuse IV - Saddam Might Be The Next Hitler
4-4-2003
Bush to Rule Iraq
4-3-2003
Mourning the Dead
4-3-2003
April Glaspie - US Ambassador to Iraq, 1990
3-27-2003
Mandela on Bush
3-26-2003
Excuse Number II - Liberating the Iraqi People
3-25-2003
Haliburton Awarded Massive Iraqi Oil Reconstruction Deal
3-25-2003
War Crimes
3-22-2003
Will they plant evidence?
3-21-2003
Why Do They Hate US?
3-21-2003