The Dude’s Blog

They figured he was a lazy time wasting slacker. They were right.

Murtha Refuses to Apologize to Exonerated Marines: Does Anyone Care?

Posted by The Dude on June 18, 2008

**Repost with Update**
Pennsylvania Congressman John Murtha has refused to apologize for calling U.S. Marines murderers. Since announcing to the world that the Marines killed innocent Iraqi’s ‘in cold blood’, Six Marines have been exonerated on all charges, and now the charges have been dropped against the highest ranking officer accused by Murtha, Lt. Col. Jeffrey Chessani. Murtha, though, doesn’t seem to care.

This is the way Murtha’s original comments were reported Internationally. Sad.

This is Murtha refusing to apologize to acquitted soldiers…

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What’s Wrong With This Detroit News Headline??? Take A Wild Guess

Posted by The Dude on June 6, 2008

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Ronald Reagan: A Time For Choosing

Posted by The Dude on June 6, 2008

As True Today As Ever:
Ronald Reagan - A Time for Choosing (October 27, 1964)

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Another Haditha Marine Acquitted: Murtha Standing By Statement That the marines killed innocent Iraqi’s ‘in Cold Blood’

Posted by The Dude on June 5, 2008

Pennsylvania Congressman Jack Murtha has refused to apologize for calling U.S. Marines murderers. Since announcing to the world that the Marines killed innocent Iraqi’s ‘in cold blood’, Six Marines have been exonerated on all charges. Murtha, though, doesn’t seem to care.

This is the way Murtha’s comments were reported Internationally. Sad.

This is Murtha refusing to apologize to acquitted soldiers…

  

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And Barack Said, Let There Be Light: And There Was Light…

Posted by The Dude on June 4, 2008

Quote Barack Obama in his quasi-acceptance speech on Tuesday:

“I am absolutely certain that generations from now, we will be able to look back and tell our children that this was the moment when we began to provide care for the sick and good jobs to the jobless; this was the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal.”

Dude: Sounds reasonable....
(H/T LittleGreenFootballs)

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To Barry from John: Let’s Chat…

Posted by The Dude on June 4, 2008

Full Letter Delivered Today To Senator Barack Obama:

June 4, 2008

The Honorable Barack Obama
Obama for America
P.O. Box 8102
Chicago, Illinois 60680

Dear Senator Obama:

In 1963, Senator Barry Goldwater and President John F. Kennedy agreed to make presidential campaign history by flying together from town to town and debating each other face-to-face on the same stage. In Goldwater’s words, those debates “would have done the country a lot of good.” Unfortunately, with President Kennedy’s untimely death, Americans lost the rare opportunity of witnessing candidates for the highest office in the land discuss civilly and extensively the great issues at stake in the election. What a welcome change it would be were presidential candidates in our time to treat each other and the people they seek to lead with respect and courtesy as they discussed the great issues of the day, without the empty sound bites and media-filtered exchanges that dominate our elections. It is in the spirit of President Kennedy’s and Senator Goldwater’s agreement, in the spirit of the politics of change, and to do our country good, that I invite you to join me in participating in town hall meetings across the country to discuss the most important issues facing Americans. I also suggest we fly together to the first town hall meeting as a symbolically important act embracing the politics of civility.

I propose these town hall meetings be as free from the regimented trappings, rules and spectacle of formal debates as possible, and that we pledge to the American people we will not allow the idea to die on the negotiation table as our campaigns work out the details. I suggest we agree to participate in at least ten town halls once a week with the first on June 11 or 12 in New York City at Federal Hall until the week before the Democratic Convention begins at locations to be determined by our campaigns. Federal Hall is particularly fitting as it was the place where George Washington took the oath of office as our first President and the birthplace of American government hosting the first Congress, Supreme Court and Executive Branch offices. These town halls should be attended by an audience of between two to four hundred selected by an independent polling agency, could be sixty to ninety minutes in length, have very limited moderation by an independ ent local moderator, take blind questions from the audience selected by the moderator and allow for equally proportional time for answers by each of us. All of these are suggestions that can be finalized by our campaigns. What is important is that we commit to participate in these history making meetings to join in the higher level of discourse that Americans clearly would prefer.

To show our good faith, we should both commit to the first town hall I have suggested. In the mean time, we can work out dates for future town hall meetings.

I look forward to your favorable reply and to the opportunity to work with you to give Americans a better opportunity to understand our differences, our agreements and the leadership we offer them.

Sincerely,

John McCain
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The Dude’s Top Ten Talkers…

Posted by The Dude on June 3, 2008

Inspired by the Talker’s Magazine “Heavy Hundred” , this is the Dude’s list of top ten radio hosts in America today.
Leave a comment and tell me what you think (or just how much I suck…)

1. Rush: The Man. The Legend.
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2. John Gibson: Probing and thought-provoking, the John Gibson Show is a lot of fun.

3. Dennis Prager: The top conservative philosopher on the radio today.

4. Hugh Hewitt: The best interviewer in the business.

5. Michael Medved: The man has an encyclopedic memory.

6. Bill O’Reilly: The television show is greatness and the radio show ain’t too bad, either.

7. Mark Levin: Get off the phone you big dummy!!

8. Sean Hannity: Not my favorite, but definitely a voice that deserves to be heard.

9. The Dunham and Miller Show: (The Dallas/Ft. Worth morning show on 1310 the Ticket is genius)

10. Glenn Beck: Crazy? Maybe. But definitely entertaining.

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YES WE CAN!!!

Posted by The Dude on May 9, 2008

What would you like to ask Barack Obama?

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Obama’s Foreign Policy Approach: Ignore History, Hope It Doesn’t Repeat Itself

Posted by The Dude on May 9, 2008

After the win in North Carolina, Barack Obama fulminated about what the victory meant for America. On foreign policy, Obama said, it was a recognition that the US should talk to its enemies, in the same manner as FDR, Truman, and Kennedy did. At the time, I noted the strange claim and its complete ignorance of history, and today, Jack Kelly continues the history lesson for a constitutional scholar who clearly skipped 20th-century history:

I assume the Roosevelt to whom Sen. Obama referred is Franklin D. Roosevelt. Our enemies in World War II were Nazi Germany, headed by Adolf Hitler; fascist Italy, headed by Benito Mussolini, and militarist Japan, headed by Hideki Tojo. FDR talked directly with none of them before the outbreak of hostilities, and his policy once war began was unconditional surrender.

FDR died before victory was achieved, and was succeeded by Harry Truman. Truman did not modify the policy of unconditional surrender. He ended that war not with negotiation, but with the atomic bomb.

- Ed Morrissey

Harry Truman also was president when North Korea invaded South Korea in June, 1950. President Truman’s response was not to call up North Korean dictator Kim Il Sung for a chat. It was to send troops.

Perhaps Sen. Obama is thinking of the meeting FDR and Churchill had with Soviet dictator Josef Stalin in Tehran in December, 1943, and the meetings Truman and Roosevelt had with Stalin at Yalta and Potsdam in February and July, 1945. But Stalin was then a U.S. ally, though one of whom we should have been more wary than FDR and Truman were. Few historians think the agreements reached at Yalta and Potsdam, which in effect consigned Eastern Europe to slavery, are diplomatic models we ought to follow. Even fewer Eastern Europeans think so.

When Stalin’s designs became unmistakably clear, President Truman’s response wasn’t to seek a summit meeting. He sent military aid to Greece, ordered the Berlin airlift and the Marshall Plan, and sent troops to South Korea.

Given the importance that Obama places on this approach to foreign policy — he seldom fails to mention it as an example of the “change” he’ll bring to Washington — one wonders why the media hasn’t pressed him on this rationalization. Obama isn’t merely saying that he’ll reinstitute diplomatic relations with Iran, which would emulate our relations with the Nazis and the Japanese prior to Pearl Harbor. Obama wants to have meetings without preconditions with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who has publicly spoken of his desire to annihilate a key ally of the US, as well as Hugo Chavez, Raul Castro, and any number of thugs and tyrants. When did FDR, Truman, and Kennedy do that? Answer: never.

As I pointed out on Wednesday, even diplomatic contact didn’t help FDR with Japan and Germany. The Japanese used diplomatic negotiations as a stalling maneuver to get its Imperial Navy in place to destroy our Pacific Fleet in 1941. Our diplomatic relations with the Nazis only encouraged America Firsters and Nazi sympathizers like Charles Lindbergh to claim that Hitler had no animus towards the West and that he could be a bulwark against Bolshevism.

Maybe Obama could ask the Czechs how well unconditional talks worked for them during Munich. Neville Chamberlain insisted on holding peace talks to avoid war in Czechoslovakia, which could have defended itself as long as it held the fortifications in the Sudetenland long enough for Britain and France to beat Germany from the rear. Instead, Chamberlain carved up Czechoslovakia without its permission, and six months afterward, Hitler swallowed the rest of it whole. FDR, meanwhile, remained steadfastly neutral diplomatically until 1939, when he began clandestine support for the UK.

Negotiations with tyrants almost always leads to appeasement, which only postpones war until the tyrant is strong enough to wage it most effectively. It results in many more deaths and far more destruction because it gives the initiative and the timing to the tyrants, while building their credibility at home. William Shirer noted that the Germans were astounded when Hitler repeatedly bluffed the West during the years from 1935 to 1939, figuring each bluff would be called and Hitler destroyed as a political force. By the time he rolled into Poland unopposed except by the outmatched Poles, who expected actual military assistance from Britain and France, Germans would follow Hitler anywhere, convinced of his invincibility.

That’s what Obama’s “new approach” to foreign policy promises. It’s Neville Chamberlain without the umbrella. It certainly isn’t FDR or Truman.

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Israel Helps Environmental Struggle By Destroying Syrian Bomb

Posted by The Dude on April 29, 2008

This page has always defended the use of force to stop evil in this world. That’s why it was great to see the Israeli’s take the initiative and destroy a Syrian bomb factory that was (reportedly) less than two years away from producing a nuclear bomb. Even more interesting, is the North Korean involvement in the Syrian bomb.

“WASHINGTON - CIA Director Michael Hayden said Monday that the alleged Syrian nuclear reactor destroyed by an Israeli airstrike in September would have produced enough plutonium for one or two bombs within a year of becoming operational.

U.S. intelligence and administration officials publicly disclosed last week their assessment that Syria was building a covert nuclear reactor with North Korean assistance. They said it was modeled on the shuttered North Korean reactor at Yongbyon, which produced a small amount of plutonium. The Syrian site, they said, was within weeks or months of being operational.

“In the course of a year after they got full up they would have produced enough plutonium for one or two weapons,” Hayden told reporters after a speech at Georgetown University.”

One of the scary aspects of this story (there are many, by the way) is the fact that it has now been proven that North Korea is actively trying to export its nuclear technology to anyone willing to buy. I’m sure terrorists (who seem to have a lot of money all the time, somehow) have noticed as well.

Who do you want dealing with the likes of Kim Jong Il, Syrian dictator Bashar Assad, and the rest of the Bad News Bombers? Mad Dog McCain, Hardcore Hillary or Barack “The Glock” Obama….  

Why is this story good for environmentalists, you ask? Take a look at what could have happened:
Photobucket(Caption: [Artist rendering] Kim Jong Il, singlehandedly blowing up everything in the world except for Pyongyang…Just one ‘Judgment Day’ scenario)

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More Fair and More Balanced

Posted by The Dude on April 28, 2008

Despite being castigated as a pro-Bush and pro-Republican network, on Sunday, Fox proved once again why it is the most balanced news network on television. It isn’t regarded that way, though, because to most people in this country, a balanced panel = right wing bias.

Exhibit A (h/t Newsbusters.org):

MEET THE PRESS Panel:                        Fox News Sunday Panel:

  • Host–Tim Russert                                 Host-Chris Wallace
  • David Broder–Wash. Post                      Brit Hume–FNC
  • John Dickerson–Slate                            Bill Kristol– Weekly Standard; NY Times
  • Gwen Ifill–PBS                                      Mara Liasson–NPR
  • Andrea Mitchell–NBC                            Juan Williams–NPR
  • Richard Wolffe–Newsweek                  

Hmmm… 6 liberals on Meet the Press and two liberals, one Republican, one right-leaning anchor and a centrist on Fox News Sunday.

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Editor’s note: It’s true that Fox has a right wing editorial point of view, but how is that any different from the editorial board at a newspaper. All major newspapers in the country have editorial points of view, and the other television networks all have liberal leaning points of view. The difference, I think, is that Fox News labels opinion as opinion and doesn’t pepper its news coverage with editorial opinions, as NBC News certainly does, and to a lesser extent, the rest of television news does. 

What do you think? 

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Dear Dan, From Karl

Posted by The Dude on April 19, 2008

Friday, April 18, 2008

Karl Rove vs. Dan Abrams 

Karl Rove

April 13, 2008

 Mr. Dan Abrams

MSNBC

30 Rockefeller Plaza

New York, N.Y. 10112

 Dear Mr. Abrams:

 On April 7th, you again devoted a substantial part of your show to the claim of former Alabama Governor Don Siegelman that I was behind his prosecution.  Your continued coverage of this issue raises questions about your journalistic standards and those of MSNBC and NBC.  During your broadcast, Mr. Siegelman referred to Ms. Dana Jill Simpson as a “respected Republican political operative,” a reference it seems you accept because of the frequent attention you give her in your broadcasts.

 

Have you, during your coverage of Ms. Simpson, ever actually looked into her claims?  For example, have you ever asked her what campaigns she worked as “an operative” with me?

And if so, did you check out what she said by calling the candidates who were my clients or their campaign managers to ask if she was involved in those campaigns? Did you review campaign expenditure reports to see if her name appeared as a paid operative?  Or did you check with the DeKalb County Republican chairman or activists (such as the Moore campaign chairman, an effort she told the Judiciary Committee she was active in) to see if she really was a “respected Republican political operative?”   

Did you inquire when it was that I first asked her to undertake unnamed campaign tasks, as she alleged happened in the years before 2001?  And did you try to ascertain whether she was telling the truth about those requests?

 

Did you inquire when and where her supposed 2001 meeting with me took place at which she was asked to follow Siegelman and photograph him?  If so, did you make any effort to see if she could document her claim?

 

And if you were personally convinced by her answers that there was a good likelihood of such a meeting, did you try to figure out if there was any way that I was likely to have been available for such a meeting?   Or is it merely enough for her to assert for you to repeat?

 

Didn’t it strike you as foolish for me to ask someone with no particular experience to undertake a task requiring adroit surveillance and shadowing skills, a mission with such potential to blow up in everyone’s faces?

Then consider Ms. Simpson’s September 14, 2007 interview with the House Judiciary Committee that followed an earlier extensive interview by a Democratic committee lawyer.  Did it not bother you Ms. Simpson failed to mention the claim she made to CBS for their February 24, 2008 story that you then repeated on February 25th?   After all, wouldn’t that be something Congressman John Conyer’s people would find interesting?

Don’t you find it odd that in 143 pages of testimony in September she said nothing about having worked with me in campaigns, nothing about being asked by me to undertake various tasks, nothing about my supposedly having asked her to follow Governor Siegelman and photograph him in a compromising position, nothing about having had meetings with me?   In fact, she never says she knows me or has met me.  Don’t you find that odd? Or were these considerations that got lost as you attempted to catch-up with CBS on the story?  Did the pressure of competition lead you to discard tough questions and sober reflection?

In fact, did you even read the transcript of Dana Jill Simpson’s testimony?  Did you try to ascertain if there was any evidence that would lead a reasonable person to believe the claims she made to the Judiciary Committee staff about Don Siegelman, Terry Butts, Judge Fuller and others were likely to be accurate?  Did it matter to you that following the release of her interview, as one observer has written, that “every single person whose name Simpson invokes as she spins her stories says that she is either lying or deluded?”  Are you aware that the list of people denying her claims includes Don Siegelman, whom she claims repeatedly urged her to provide her original affidavit?

Did you try to discover whether there was any evidence she did in fact shadow Don Siegelman?  Did you ask for travel records, itineraries, or expense reports that showed Ms. Simpson’s travel from Northeastern Alabama matched up with the Governor’s schedule?

Did you ever consider that the Governor’s security detail might have taken note of an ample-sized, redheaded woman who kept showing up at his events with a camera?  Did you talk with the Alabama Department of Public Safety? 

 

 

In fact, did you ever ask her how she attempted to find him in a compromising position?  Was it her practice to follow him from his events and shadow him late at night when he was on the road?  Peek through hotel windows?  Hang out down the hallway from his hotel room?  Were you satisfied she actually did what she was supposedly asked to do? 

 In your February 25th broadcast, she said she had phone records of calls to “Virginia and Washington” that corroborate her charges.  Have you made an effort to review those records and ascertain what they point to?  Since I lived and worked in Washington, D.C. in 2001, I can’t imagine what her cryptic reference to Virginia could mean.  The Bush/Cheney transition office (where I was rarely, working instead in Austin) was in Virginia until late 2000, before the transition was moved to a government building near the White House before year’s end.  But what number and who was she calling in Virginia (presumably) later in 2001 when she was being asked to shadow Siegelman?  And what were those Washington numbers?  Did you ask her? Or was it good enough for you that she said had them so you were content to let the matter drop?

 In fact, what did you do to ascertain if anything she told you and that you repeated or relied upon was accurate?  Or is it good enough for you to simply repeat her charges without examining them personally to satisfy yourself that she is – and has done – what she says she did?

 Does it bother you that your coverage asserts, as Governor Siegelman summarized it in his April 7th appearance on your program, that he is the victim of a vast conspiracy involving two U.S. Attorneys, the Alabama Attorney General, unnamed career officials in the Public Integrity Unit at the U.S. Justice Department, unnamed higher-ups in the Justice Department and, oh yes, Karl Rove and that there is not a single piece of paper, not a single email, not a single conversation, not a single disgruntled career employee who’s came forward, not one credible witness to the workings of the conspiracy?

And do you really believe such a scheme could be operated so efficiently and effectively that it would manipulate the career prosecutor who brought the case so that he did not understand he was doing the bidding of this vast conspiracy?   And that the FBI agents who conducted the investigation could similarly be so easily and subtly subverted?

In fact, it seems you believe that the absence of any concrete evidence is itself evidence of the conspiracy.  If you don’t have any proof Karl Rove did it, that absence is proof enough.  I am that good.

And is it your habit not to challenge a guest, as long as he is following your chosen theme for the night?  For example, let’s take your December 13, 2007 broadcast.   

Scott Horton said “We don’t have all the links in place but we do know that certainly beginning from 2002, Karl Rove out of the White House was deeply involved in the election of Rob [sic] Riley, structuring it, raising money for it, putting together a strategy for it.  A part of that strategy involved the criminal justice system nailing charges, landing charging [sic] on Siegelman on some sort.  As we know that it involved at some point, consultation with the Justice Department and also two U.S. Attorneys in Alabama…”

Just how does Mr. Horton know all this “certainly”?  Did you ask him what proof he had that I was deeply involved in Congressman Riley’s gubernatorial bid?  What evidence does he have that I structured it, raised money for it, put together a strategy for it?  What evidence does he have that “my” strategy included indicting Siegelman?  With whom and when did I consult with the Justice Department about this “strategy?”  When did I consult with the two U.S. Attorneys in Alabama about it?  He said, “we do know that certainly” this all happened.  If you consider yourself a journalist or even a lawyer, wouldn’t this be the point where you should have asked Mr. Horton, how do you know that, what evidence do you have? 

What about you?  Did you review campaign spending and news report to identify the Riley campaign consultants or ad team and call them to see if I played a role?  Did you do some sleuthing of your own, phoning Republicans in Alabama who might have been in a position to know? Did you call any major donors to Congressman Riley’s gubernatorial bid and ask if they were contacted by me and encouraged to give money? Did you talk with your colleagues in NBC covering the White House and ask them how credible the argument might be that I was serving as the political consultant and campaign manager of a candidate for Governor of Alabama in 2002 while also serving as Senior Advisor to the President of the United States?  Or because Mr. Horton’s assertions fit your story line for the night, did you think he didn’t need to prove anything he claimed and you didn’t need to do any work?

As a matter of fact, I had other things to occupy my time in the White House in 2002 rather than “structuring” a campaign for an Alabama gubernatorial candidate, calling people to raise money for his race, and going through the arduous task of “putting together a strategy.”  And I certainly didn’t meet with anyone at the Justice Department or either of the two U.S. Attorneys in Alabama about investigating or indicting Siegelman.  My involvement in the campaign was to approve a request that the President appear at a Riley campaign fundraising event, one of several score fundraising events the President did that election cycle.

It boils down to this: as a journalist, do you feel you have a responsibility to dig into the claims made by your guests, seek out evidence and come to a professional judgment as to the real facts?  Or do you feel if a charge is breathtaking enough, thoroughly checking it out isn’t a necessity?

I know you might be concerned that asking these questions could restrict your ability to make sensational charges on the air, but don’t you think you have a responsibility to provide even a shred of supporting evidence before sullying the journalistic reputations of MSNBC and NBC?

People used to believe journalists were searching for the truth.  But your cable show increasingly seems to be focused on wishful thinking, hoping something is one way and diminishing the search for facts and evidence in favor of repeating your fondest desires.  For example, while you do ask Siegelman what evidence he had to back up his charges, you did not press him when he said “We don’t have the knife with Karl Rove’s fingerprints all over it, but we’ve got the glove, and the glove fits.”   

The difficulty with your approach is you reduced yourself to the guy in the bar who repeats what the fellow next to him says – “The glove fits! The glove fits!” - only louder, because it suits your pre-selected story line (”Bush Justice”) and you don’t want the facts to get in the way of a good fable.  You have relinquished the central responsibility of an investigative reporter, namely to press everyone in order to get to the facts.  You didn’t subject the statements of others to skeptical and independent review.  You have chosen instead to simply repeat something someone else says because it agrees with the theme line your producers slapped on your segment, created the nifty graphic for and promoted in the ads before your appearances.

Sincerely,

Karl Rove

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Obama: Punishing the Rich More Important Than Helping the Middle Class

Posted by The Dude on April 18, 2008

One thing I loved about the debate this week was the utter incompetence that our (possible) future president showed on the issue of taxes. There are 100 million people in this country who would be negatively affected by an increase on capital gains taxes (most of them in the middle class), but Barack Obama didn’t seem to care about them. His goal is to punish rich people and he doesn’t care how it affects the rest of the population.

This showed a fundamental flaw in his character and philosophy. He thinks the only way to help one person is to take something from another person. This is a ridiculous proposition that has been disproved many times.

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Since the Dude is definitely no economist, I highly reccommend that you read this Wall Street Journal column. It says it better than the Dude ever could:

Here’s an excerpt:

“As the nearby (above) chart shows, when the tax rate has risen over the past half century, capital gains realizations have fallen and along with them tax revenue. The most recent such episode was in the early 1990s, when Mr. Obama was old enough to be paying attention. That’s one reason Jack Kennedy proposed cutting the capital gains rate. And it’s one reason Bill Clinton went along with a rate cut to 20% from 28% in 1997.

Either the young Illinois Senator is ignorant of this revenue data, or he doesn’t really care because he’s a true income redistributionist who prefers high tax rates as a matter of ideological dogma regardless of the revenue consequences. Neither one is a recommendation for President.”

Think about it…

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UK Prime Minister: “The world owes President Bush a huge debt of gratitude”

Posted by The Dude on April 18, 2008

I know most of the people who read this blog do not like President Bush, but I think recent history shows that President Bush will go down in history as a good-to-great president.

People love to argue that Bush has turned the world against us and everyone hates us now but the facts do not bear this out. Since Bush has been in office, many countries have elected pro-American leaders including Gordon Brown in England, Angela Merkel in Germany, Nicolas Sarkozy in France, Silvio Berlusconi in Italy and Stephen Harper in Canada, just to name a few.

                  

THIS IS NOT AN ACCIDENT. But, why then, does the media harp on this tired line the Democrats love to throw out there that the world hates America? I think the brilliant intellectual Dennis Prager nailed it on his radio show and in this column, where he wrote:
“But it is not true that the world hates America. It is the world’s left that hates America.”
He went on to say:
“However, because the left dominates the world’s news media and because most people, understandably, believe what the news media report, many people, including Americans, believe that the world hates America.”

Could it be that Bush is actually respected in the world for his stance against Islamic-Terrorism? Do others around the world secretly wish their leaders were as strong and steady as our U.S. President?

The Dude Says:
Sorry all you Bush haters out there, but the world isn’t quite as certain about the terrible Bush Presidency as you are. I’m just saying…

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Global Warming Got You Down? No Worries, You’re Probably Just Suffering From Eco-Anxiety

Posted by The Dude on April 17, 2008

While, I’m sure this woman means well, she is just plain nuts. The media’s global warming-scare mongering has caused her to totally change her life. And they say, George Bush is the one using the scare tactics! 

Now, there are all these so-called “Eco-therapists” trying to capitalize on others ignorance by praying on the weak and crazy, and telling them they can cure their eco-anxiety by doing things like hugging trees and carrying rocks in their pocket. Hmmm…

 PhotobucketFeel better?

Here’s an excerpt from this story

“Edwards suffers from eco-anxiety, the growing angst experienced by those who can’t handle the thought that they — or anyone — are in some way contributing to global warming, species extinction and dwindling natural resources.  She recently launched a blog called “Eco-Anxiety” because she believes environmental dangers should be taken seriously. “This is severely disturbing,” she says.”

I’m sorry Ms. Edwards, but I beg to differ. I think totalitarianism, terrorism and severe poverty in much of the world is disturbing, but global warming (or is it climate change now? Since the UN report came out saying the Earth hasn’t heated any in 10 years..i’m confused) doesn’t quite strike fear into my heart.

In fact, there have been many studies that show a warmer climate might actually make the world more hospitable. 

Am I convinced either way? Nope. But, unlike a lot of people, I will keep an open mind.  

Can world afford global warming fight? 

How the Major Networks Silence the Debate on Climate Change

The Truth About Carbon Credits

The Climate Change Convention

The Polar Bears are Alright

“If You Think Taxes Are High Now, Just Wait Until Congress Tries to ‘Fix’ Global Warming”

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