Thursday, October 09, 2008

Joe Biden in Tampa



Vice-Presidential candidate Joe Biden was at the University of South Florida yesterday. Biden quoted Sen. Bob Casey, "You can't call yourself a maverick when all you've ever been is a sidekick."

Biden scored the first three presidential and VP debate as wins.

"If this was a best-of-five series it be over."

The Obama campaign has been counter-attacking the negative McCain ads and talking points. "I guess when you vote with George W. Bush 90 percent of the time, your best hope is to attack your opponent 100 percent of the time," Biden told the crowd. The McCain attacks are turning people off.


Tim Sloan attended the Biden rally wearing a shirt that said "Bush's last day, the end of an error." He lauded Biden for pushing back against the McCain attacks.

"McCain said he wouldn't run a campaign like this," Sloan said. "Even in his ads, it's all about the negatives of Obama instead of what he would do."


John McCain has failed to give voters a reason to vote for him. The McCain campaign message is don't vote for Obama because he is an unpatriotic terrorist-loving Muslim. McCain supporters have been shouting "treason," "terrorist" and "kill him" when Obama is mentioned at McCain/Palin rallies. The Minutemen and Little Green Footballs readers aren't enough to get McCain into the White House.

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Thursday, December 06, 2007

Bush: Stay In Iraq Forever

President Bush wants to maintain an "enduring" relationship with Iraq. The short version is a continued U.S. military presence.


Security: To support the Iraqi government in training, equipping, and arming the Iraqi Security Forces so they can provide security and stability to all Iraqis; support the Iraqi government in contributing to the international fight against terrorism by confronting terrorists such as Al-Qaeda, its affiliates, other terrorist groups, as well as all other outlaw groups, such as criminal remnants of the former regime; and to provide security assurances to the Iraqi Government to deter any external aggression and to ensure the integrity of Iraq's territory.


Senators Jim Webb (D-VA), Bob Casey (D-PA), Robert Byrd (D-WV), Ted Kennedy (D-MA), Carl Levin (D-MI) and Hillary Clinton (D-NY) responded to that with a terse letter to the President. Short version: not without Congressional approval.


The future of American policy towards Iraq, especially in regard to the issues of U.S. troop levels, permanent U.S. military bases, and future security commitments, has generated strong debate among the American people and their elected representatives. Agreements between our two countries relating to these issues must involve the full participation and consent of the Congress as a co-equal branch of the U.S. government. Furthermore, the future U.S. presence in Iraq is a central issue in the current Presidential campaign. We believe a security commitment that obligates the United States to go to war on behalf of the Government of Iraq at this time is not in America’s long-term national security interest and does not reflect the will of the American people. Commitments made during the final year of your Presidency should not unduly or artificially constrain your successor when it comes to Iraq.


The letter is a waste of time. When does Bush ever listen to anyone that is not a neoconservative when it comes to foreign policy matters. I am open to bases in Kurdistan, as well as diplomatic efforts to ease the tensions between the Kurds and Turkey. The Kurds have made it quite clear they have no interest in a longterm U.S. military presence.

The sad thing is the Kurds are the most friendly Iraqis towards the United States. When they want Americans gone that shows all efforts to win the hearts and minds of Iraqis is over. Nouri al Maliki only wants the United States to stay because his days of political power are over the moment the last boots leave the ground.

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