Katas wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
1) What plan?
Old Bush speech43 wrote:
My plan pays down an unprecedented amount of our national debt, and then when money is still left over, my plan returns it to the people who earned it in the first place.
Now, admittedly, this was pre 9/11... but even at that time, the analysis said it wasn't that simple.
Glenn Kessler for the Washington Post wrote:
President Bush, in his speech last night, introduced a new concept for paying down the national debt over the next 10 years. The assumptions supporting his plan involve highly technical issues. But it is the budgetary equivalent of playing baseball and telling your opponent in the middle of the game that you can now score a run by reaching third base.
And in 2007, CBS had an article about a similar speech and the national debt or lack of mention about it.
CBS News articleAccording to which analysts? I'm not impressed with the Washington Post. I'm also not impressed with a cartoon that compares the accuracy of a prediction about a plan with the accuracy of comments regarding what is actually written in one. One is just that, a prediction, the other is a matter of fact in the moment.
Quote:
Diamondeye wrote:
2) On several occasions the military mistakenly reported tht it HAD found WMD.
FOX News wrote:
The weapons are thought to be manufactured before 1991 so they would not be proof of an ongoing WMD program in the 1990s. But they do show that Saddam Hussein was lying when he said all weapons had been destroyed, and it shows that years of on-again, off-again weapons inspections did not uncover these munitions.
So it's true, there were WMD, but the WMD were not nuclear, there was no WMD program being started/continued, and the smoking gun was not going to be a mushroom cloud. Some of these WMD may have been from the Reagan era, when Donald Rumsfeld was shaking hands with the fool.
1) Whether they were nuclear is immaterial to an announcement they'd been found
2) We're all well aware of what they actually turned out to be. That has nothing to do with an announcement based on an
erroneous report. There's no reason to call the President a liar for announcing WMDs have been found when A) they technically have B) the search is ongoing and C) The report is an error on the part of the military.
Diamondeye wrote:
3) We don't torture.
Quote:
Washington Post article (USA Today link)Washington Post interview wrote:
"We tortured Qahtani," said Susan J. Crawford, a retired judge who was appointed convening authority of military commissions in February 2007.
Washington Times articleTFA wrote:
Sen. Russ Feingold, Wisconsin Democrat, rejected claims made by Mr. Cheney in recent days that classified CIA memos prove that waterboarding and other techniques approved by the Bush administration Justice Department protected the nation from more terrorist attacks after 9/11.
"Nothing I have seen -- including the two documents to which former Vice President Cheney has repeatedly referred -- indicates that the torture techniques . . . were necessary," said Mr. Feingold, a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee who has access to classified documents. "The former vice president is misleading the American people when he says otherwise."
Yes, I'm well aware that George Bush's political enemies claim what was done was torture, and this judge may feel that way as well. The fact of the matter is that we picked the definition in the statute apart in detail ourselves on this board, and it could not be demonstrated based on that law that anything that has been done is torture. Just because some people feel it is means nothing; some people feel depriving inmates of television is torture.
The bottom line is that this cartoon says far more about the degree to which the left has glossed over uncomfortable details to paint Mr. Bush as a liar than anything else.
For example What if the WMDs were in Syria?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WMD_conjecture_in_the_aftermath_of_the_2003_Iraq_Warhttp://www.foxnews.com/politics/2006/06/22/report-hundreds-wmds-iraq/ The claim that "No WMD were in Iraq" is especially questionable, since A) there were, even if they were pre-1991, B) Saddam Hussein claimed to have destroyed such weapons and clearly hadn't and C) Confusion caused by these weapons almost certainly contributed the the impressiont hat there was an active program
After spending 8 years calling Mr. Bush a liar on such thin justification the left is in no position to complain about Joe Wilson.