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Who should be bomb next?

Posted By: gt on 2005-10-12
In Reply to:

Check thsi out..I hope it works, if not check out Crooks and Liars website and watch it there.  People are asked which country we should bomb next and they actually name other countries!!  And their knowledge of geography is frightening.  If I was asked..what country should be bomb and invade next I would say NONE, LEAVE THE WORLD ALONE!  Amazing.


Who would you bomb next?


CNNN (not US) asks people On the Streets of America who they would bomb next.


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Your very first sentence, "Trying to bomb...

... a grassroots political force into extinction will be about as effective and trying to bomb Iraq into democracy," reminds me very much of a quote by Michael Corleone in Godfather II, where they're in Cuba trying to "do business" while in the midst of unrest and rebellion of the people. 


Michael Corleone: I saw a strange thing today. Some rebels were being arrested. One of them pulled the pin on a grenade. He took himself and the captain of the command with him. Now, soldiers are paid to fight; the rebels aren't.
Hyman Roth: What does that tell you?
Michael Corleone: It means they could win.

Although Israel has very sophisticated American-made weapons, maybe, as above, that won't be enough. 


Conservative Sites for Non-Bomb-Throwers

I'm posting this again, since it got lost in the shuffle. 


I realize I'll get bomb-throwers, but I could care less.  I will probably just ignore it.  These people are literally drunk on Kool-Aid!There are other forums for overall conservative thinkers.  If you go to activitypit.com, it's for RedEye fans (like me).  The show itself is very funny in my opinion.  Of course, they do have some libs on there, but they don't behave anywhere near like these people.  I've become very good friends with a couple people from there.  I found out one of them lives in the same city as me.  Talk about a small world!  Here are a couple links from RedEye's Activity Pit:


http://bighollywood.breitbart.com/                 On the right side of this there are a lot of places to go.

 






There are many more.  Here are a few off the top of my head:


townhall.com


heritage.org


pajamastv.com


newsbusters.org


tammybruce.com


nationalreview.com


hotair.com


michellemalkin.com


newt.org

 


Of course, let us not forget:


rushlimbaugh.com


marklevinshow.com


hannity.com


anncoulter.com


lauraingraham.com


 


Another thing many don't know is that The History Channel is owned/run by libs, so watch with caution.  I personally prefer War Stories with Oliver North on FNC.  Tammy Bruce was formerly president (or whatever they call it) of NOW, but not now.  She has a very interesting story to tell about their ways of doing business.  I wonder if any libs will look into this.  And imagine this, a conservative lesbian!


 


So enjoy, you few conservatives!  


Here are some others: breitbart.com, http://littlegreenfootballs.com/weblog/, townhall.com,



The other friend, who lives in a very liberal state, was thrilled that she and her husband met ONE conservative couple. 


Conservative Sites for Non-Bomb-Throwers

I'm posting this again, since it got lost in the shuffle. 


I realize I'll get bomb-throwers, but I could care less.  I will probably just ignore it.  These people are literally drunk on Kool-Aid!There are other forums for overall conservative thinkers.  If you go to activitypit.com, it's for RedEye fans (like me).  The show itself is very funny in my opinion.  Of course, they do have some libs on there, but they don't behave anywhere near like these people.  I've become very good friends with a couple people from there.  I found out one of them lives in the same city as me.  Talk about a small world!  Here are a couple links from RedEye's Activity Pit:


http://bighollywood.breitbart.com/                 On the right side of this there are a lot of places to go.

 






There are many more.  Here are a few off the top of my head:


townhall.com


heritage.org


pajamastv.com


newsbusters.org


tammybruce.com


nationalreview.com


hotair.com


michellemalkin.com


newt.org

 


Of course, let us not forget:


rushlimbaugh.com


marklevinshow.com


hannity.com


anncoulter.com


lauraingraham.com


 


Another thing many don't know is that The History Channel is owned/run by libs, so watch with caution.  I personally prefer War Stories with Oliver North on FNC.  Tammy Bruce was formerly president (or whatever they call it) of NOW, but not now.  She has a very interesting story to tell about their ways of doing business.  I wonder if any libs will look into this.  And imagine this, a conservative lesbian!


 


So enjoy, you few conservatives!  


Here are some others: breitbart.com, http://littlegreenfootballs.com/weblog/, townhall.com,



The other friend, who lives in a very liberal state, was thrilled that she and her husband met ONE conservative couple. 


If Netanyahu continues to bomb Gaza,
then Obama has to do some action, words are not enough anymore regarding this conflict.
Most probably Obama, as he is a wise guy, he will curtail US' financial and weapon support to Israel.

Obama will not start the bombing and he will not torture.


Jesse Jackson gets bomb threats over Imus case...sm
Jesse Jackson gets bomb threats over Imus case

April 15, 2007
BY DAVE NEWBART Staff Reporter/ dnewbart@suntimes.com
The Rev. Jesse Jackson has been hit with a series of bomb threats since leading a charge to get shock jock Don Imus fired.

Jackson said he fielded a call Saturday morning urging him to watch his back and warning him to stay away from Rainbow/PUSH headquarters on the South Side.

Friday, a Jackson staffer took a call from someone who claimed to have planted a bomb at the headquarters at 50th and Drexel. The building was evacuated about 12:30 p.m., and police swept the building with bomb-sniffing dogs. Nothing was found.

Jackson said he has received 10 to 12 threats starting Wednesday or Thursday. The calls have gone to his office, his home and his cell phone. Although he hasn't fielded most of the calls, he said he believes there are different people behind them.

A police spokeswoman said an investigation is ongoing.

In New York, meanwhile, WCBSTV.com reported the Rev. Al Sharpton has also received death threats after criticizing Imus.

Imus was fired from his radio show for calling members of the Rutgers women's basketball team nappy-headed hos.
Like that'll happen. Trying to bomb a grassroots political force
into extinction will be about as effective and trying to bomb Iraq into democracy.

Thanks to their last fiasco when they tried this in Lebanon, Hezbollah has an 80+% approval rating among Lebanese factions (13 points higher than O) and its support among Lebanese Sunni Sunni, Christians and Druze soared in 2006. Their demonstrations attracted hundreds of thousands of protestors, especially in the aftermath of Israel's failed massacre, when protests against PM Siniora sent his approval ratings into a deep-6.

Hezbollah was given veto power in the parliment via the Doha Agreement in 2008 and under its newly formed National Unity Government, Hezbollah gained the Labor Minister's appointment and holds 11 out of 30 seats, or slightly over one-third alongside Greek Orthodox and Catholics, Maronites, Armenians, Shia, Sunni and Druz.

So you see, instead of giving Hezbollah the boot, Israel legitimized their standing the Lebanese government.


http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0728/p06s01-wome.html
http://www.mideastmonitor.org/issues/0609/0609_6.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006%E2%80%932008_Lebanese_political_protests
http://www.tayyar.org/Tayyar/UnityGovernmentEN.htm
http://www.cfr.org/publication/9155/hezbollah.html?breadcrumb=%2F
Bush staff wanted bomb-detect cash moved

(Almost five years after 9/11, just how committed is Bush to keeping Americans safe?)


Bush staff wanted bomb-detect cash moved





By JOHN SOLOMON, Associated Press WriterFri Aug 11, 5:56 PM ET



While the British terror suspects were hatching their plot, the Bush administration was quietly seeking permission to divert $6 million that was supposed to be spent this year developing new homeland explosives detection technology.


Congressional leaders rejected the idea, the latest in a series of steps by the Homeland Security Department that has left lawmakers and some of the department's own experts questioning the commitment to create better anti-terror technologies.


Homeland Security's research arm, called the Sciences & Technology Directorate, is a rudderless ship without a clear way to get back on course, Republican and Democratic senators on the Appropriations Committee declared recently.


The committee is extremely disappointed with the manner in which S&T is being managed within the Department of Homeland Security, the panel wrote June 29 in a bipartisan report accompanying the agency's 2007 budget.


Rep. Martin Sabo, D-Minn., who joined Republicans to block the administration's recent diversion of explosives detection money, said research and development is crucial to thwarting future attacks and there is bipartisan agreement that Homeland Security has fallen short.


They clearly have been given lots of resources that they haven't been using, Sabo said.


Homeland Security said Friday its research arm has just gotten a new leader, former Navy research chief Rear Adm. Jay Cohen, and there is strong optimism for developing new detection technologies in the future.


I don't have any criticisms of anyone, said Kip Hawley, the assistant secretary for transportation security. I have great hope for the future. There is tremendous intensity on this issue among the senior management of this department to make this area a strength.


Lawmakers and recently retired Homeland Security officials say they are concerned the department's research and development effort is bogged down by bureaucracy, lack of strategic planning and failure to use money wisely.


The department failed to spend $200 million in research and development money from past years, forcing lawmakers to rescind the money this summer.


The administration also was slow to start testing a new liquid explosives detector that the Japanese government provided to the United States earlier this year.


The British plot to blow up as many as 10 American airlines on trans-Atlantic flights was to involve liquid explosives.


Hawley said Homeland Security now is going to test the detector in six American airports. It is very promising technology and we are extremely interested in it to help us operationally in the next several years, he said.


Japan has been using the liquid explosive detectors in its Narita International Airport in Tokyo and demonstrated the technology to U.S. officials at a conference in January, the Japanese Embassy in Washington said.


Homeland Security is spending a total of $732 million this year on various explosives deterrents and has tested several commercial liquid explosive detectors over the past few years but hasn't been satisfied enough with the results to deploy them.


Hawley said current liquid detectors that can scan only individual containers aren't suitable for wide deployment because they would bring security check lines to a crawl.


For more than four years, officials inside Homeland Security also have debated whether to deploy smaller trace explosive detectors — already in most American airports — to foreign airports to help stop any bomb chemicals or devices from making it onto U.S.-destined flights.


A 2002 Homeland report recommended immediate deployment of the trace units to key European airports, highlighting their low cost, $40,000 per unit, and their detection capabilities. The report said one such unit was able, 25 days later, to detect explosives residue inside the airplane where convicted shoe bomber Richard Reid was foiled in his attack in December 2001.

A 2005 report to Congress similarly urged that the trace detectors be used more aggressively, and strongly warned the continuing failure to distribute such detectors to foreign airports may be an invitation to terrorist to ply their trade, using techniques that they have already used on a number of occasions.

Tony Fainberg, who formerly oversaw Homeland Security's explosive and radiation detection research with the national labs, said he strongly urged deployment of the detectors overseas but was rebuffed.

It is not that expensive, said Fainberg, who retired recently. There was no resistance from any country that I was aware of, and yet we didn't deploy it.

Fainberg said research efforts were often frustrated inside Homeland Security by bureaucratic games, a lack of strategic goals and months-long delays in distributing money Congress had already approved.

There has not been a focused and coherent strategic plan for defining what we need ... and then matching the research and development plans to that overall strategy, he said.

Rep. Peter DeFazio (news, bio, voting record) of Oregon, a senior Democrat on the Homeland Security Committee, said he urged the administration three years ago to buy electron scanners, like the ones used at London's airport to detect plastics that might be hidden beneath passenger clothes.

It's been an ongoing frustration about their resistance to purchase off-the-shelf, state-of-the-art equipment that can meet these threats, he said.

The administration's most recent budget request also mystified lawmakers. It asked to take $6 million from Homeland S&T's 2006 budget that was supposed to be used to develop explosives detection technology and instead divert it to cover a budget shortfall in the Federal Protective Service, which provides security around government buildings.

Sens. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., and Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., the top two lawmakers for Senate homeland appropriations, rejected the idea shortly after it arrived late last month, Senate leadership officials said.

Their House counterparts, Reps. Hal Rogers, R-Ky., and Sabo, likewise rejected the request in recent days, Appropriations Committee spokeswoman Kirsten Brost said. Homeland said Friday it won't divert the money.

___

Associated Press writer Leslie Miller contributed to this story.




Please review the Iraq Liberation Act and the speech given by clinton in 1988 explaining why he bomb
Operation Desert Fox. Bush, nor conservatives, were the first to call for regime change in Iraq. Clinton signed in a LAW calling for just that. I posted the act below. Both sides have called for regime change, only one side made it a law...that would be yours. Can we move on to another subject now?