Category: Politics

  • Democrats; Bush won’t veto defense bill

    Obviously, Democrats haven’t been paying attention lately. They honestly think that the president won’t dare use his veto to block their pork-laden, cowardly spending bill for Iraq. Why? I’ll let the head moonbat tell you – from Anne Flaherty of AP via the Washington Examiner:

    “For the first time, the president will have to be accountable for this war in Iraq,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said Tuesday. “And he does not want to face that reality.”

    Hey, Blinky! Ya’all have been calling this “Bush’s War” since the first sandstorm slowed our advance on Baghdad. There have been two elections since the war started and the only thing you ran against was the president and the war. How is he avoiding responsibility?

    Ya’all are avoiding the responsibility of accepting the fact that there was no alternative to this war, and you’re not taking responsibility for the troops you get killed because of your careless words and your anti-American rhetoric.

    Ever since the war started you Democrats have been running away from your vote for the war. Ever since 9-11, you Democrats have been avoiding your responsibility to the citizens of this country by placing personal politics ahead of our national security.

    As Dick Cheney said yesterday, as reported in the S.A. Miller and Jon Ward of the Washington Times;

    Vice President Dick Cheney yesterday criticized Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid for making “uninformed and misleading” statements about the war in Iraq.
        “What is most troubling about Mr. Reid’s comments yesterday is his defeatism,” the vice president said in a rare Capitol Hill press conference. 
        “Indeed, last week, he said the war is already lost, and the timetable legislation he is pursuing would guarantee defeat.”

    Hear the Cheney rant at Flopping Aces, courtesy of Curt, read it in it’s entirety at the White House website or watch part of it thanks to Big Mo at Hang Right Politics.

    That’s all there’s been from the Left – hell, since before the war actually when the Bonior/McDermott surrender mission went to Iraq six months before the “rush to war” and declared that Hussein was more reliable than our own President.

    Luckily, the President doesn’t show signs of backing down, according to Bill Sammon of the DC Examiner;

    “I’m disappointed that the Democratic leadership has chosen this course,” Bush told reporters on the South Lawn. “Instead of fashioning a bill I could sign, the Democratic leaders chose to further delay funding our troops, and they choose to make a political statement.”

    Bush reiterated his vow to veto the bill, which would provide $100 billion for troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, plus billions more in unrelated “pork” spending. The bill also orders the administration to begin withdrawing forces from Iraq by Oct. 1.

    And Captain’s Quarters reported yesterday that the Democrats slipped in a minimum wage hike to insure the President wouldn’t sign the bill. What does the minimum wage have to with Iraq?

    It’s a purely partisan political exercise and the Democrats aren’t afraid to admit it. Why should they be ashamed, they’ve got their willing accomplices in the press;

    Rep. Rahm Emanuel, D-Ill., chairman of the Democratic caucus, said, “We feel very good about where the caucus is.”

    House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said Democrats will send Bush the bill with the hope that the president has a change of heart. But, Hoyer added, they don’t expect it.

    “We are very, very hopeful that the president will sign that bill, will change his mind and come to the recognition that this bill does in fact set off a new policy for our engagement in Iraq,” Hoyer said.

    See? They’re hopeful – very hopeful. And we all know how the Left measures success by intentions, not by results. So what if more troops are dying this week in Iraq as a propaganda move by al Qaida to influence public opinion in the US during this debate. Jules Crittenden has the backstory on the 9 killed yesterday that none of the wire services have deemed important enough to tell us yet.

    Vice President Cheney isn’t afraid to tell the truth, however;

    “Some Democratic leaders seem to believe that blind opposition to the new strategy in Iraq is good politics,” Cheney told reporters at the Capitol after attending the weekly Republican policy lunch. “Senator Reid himself has said that the war in Iraq will bring his party more seats in the next election.”

    “It is cynical to declare that the war is lost because you believe it gives you political advantage,” Cheney said.

    He’s being kind – it’s criminal to declare the war lost to gain a political advantage. Like Uncle Jimbo says – treasonous. Punishable by hanging. But I’ll go along with David Broder’s idea of Reid’s canning (via Crotchety Old Bastard). Too bad Broder is too politically correct to advocate for the firing of Nancy Pelosi, too.

  • Obama in his own world

    Reading Stephen Dinan from the Washington Times today, I see that Obama thinks that the US has let the world down – whatever that means. But he’s going to pick the world back up. How? Why, with your tax dollars – he’s going to buy friendship like that pathetic little rich dork in grade school who handed out nickels to people to act like he’s their friend;

    Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama said yesterday that the United States has let the world down under the leadership of President Bush, who he said has been a “disappointment” to other countries, as he proposed doubling the foreign-aid budget as a way of recapturing global leadership. 

    Yeah, I’m pretty sure the Euro-weenies miss the days Bill Clinton would show up with a bag of goodies to hand out to them – and he’d ignore the goodies they had stacked in the corner from Saddam Hussein.

    Obama had more pie-in-the-sky stuff;

    Mr. Obama called for boosting the size of the U.S. Army and Marines, training more troops in language skills and expanding efforts to contain the spread of weapons of mass destruction. And he called for doubling U.S. foreign assistance spending by 2012 — a move that he said would mean $50 billion a year — noting that doing so would help meet the goal set by British Prime Minister Tony Blair. 

    I thought the military was having trouble meeting recruiting goals as it is, how’s he going to expand the military without a draft? Does he think we have a secret farm where we get soldiers bred for the job and all we have to do is increase production a hair?

    And it’s nice to see that he plans on meeting our contribution goals set by foreign governments. Maybe the Euro-weenies can dictate policy to us again, too, like they when they committed us to Kosovo and Bosnia.

    He claims that $50 billion isn’t all that much – it’s only 1% of our GDP. he sounds like a used carsalesman telling us that we can afford the monthly payment on that BMW when we know we really can’t.
     

  • Fences make good neighbors

    I’m beginning to wonder what the Left has against walls and fences. Reading the most partisan hack in the Washington Post, Eugene Robinson, on the subject of the “gated communities” in Baghdad makes me think that the Left has never liked a fence or wall;

    Basically, we’re turning Baghdad into Belfast.

    This is supposed to be a temporary expedient, a way to tamp down Iraq’s sectarian civil war — in the capital, at least, the ostensible goal of George W. Bush’s fraudulent “surge” policy — by making it harder for the antagonists to get at each other’s throats. The “peace lines” in Belfast, separating Protestants from Catholics, were supposed to be temporary, too. That network of walls was begun in the 1970s.

    The construction of barriers and checkpoints that turn Baghdad neighborhoods into what U.S. officers sardonically call “gated communities” is another sign — as if more evidence were needed — that Bush’s “surge” is nothing more than a maneuver to buy time. His open-ended commitment for U.S. forces to patrol those barriers and guard those checkpoints will become the next president’s problem.

    But the Left is adamantly opposed to walls anywhere, as near as I can tell. Republicans want a wall along our southern border to keep illegal immigrants from infiltrating into our country and then dying of thirst or from bands of roving preditors.

    The Left also oppose the Israelis building a wall to protect themselves from Palestinian baby-killers. And it almost seems to be working.

    If the Left are peace-mongers, as they claim, wouldn’t building protective walls be a reasonable alternative to snipers and armed paramilitary police forces enforcing curfews at the point of a gun? It almost seems reasonable to me.

    During the 60s, 70s and 80s, the Left resigned themselves to the fact that the Communists had erected a deadly barrier across Europe to keep the Soviet population enslaved. The Left continues to tolerate the barrier that slashes the Korean pennisula’s two opposing ideologies. 

    In fact, the Left trembled when Ronald Reagan demanded that Soviet Premier Gorbachov tear down his wall from the shadow of the Brandenburg Gate.  And they lamented the end of history, and the failures of their ideology when that wall finally fell.

    I guess walls are only a good idea when they’re used to preserve Leftist ideology against evil capitalists instead of a bulwark for peace.

    Omar from Iraq the Model (writing on Pajamas Media) gives his thoughts on the walls from an Iraqi point of view – not from a partisan-hack-masquerading-as-a-journalist-point-of-view.

    Maybe Robinson should have taken the time to ask Iraqis what they thought of the walls instead of just going off-cocked against the Administration, specifically, and Republicans, generally, in his usual modus operandi. 

  • Harry Reid sucks canal water

    Reading Fox News Channel today, about Reid’s speech intended for this afternoon, I get the distinct impression that Harry “Walter Mitty” Reid thinks he’s got gonads;

    If the president disagrees, let him come to us with an alternative. Instead of sending us back to square one with a veto, some tough talk and nothing more, let him come to the table in the spirit of bipartisanship that Americans demand and deserve,” Reid will say according to excerpts of the speech to be delivered to the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.

    Reid will also criticize Bush for a speech last week in which the president asserted that the troop surge he proposed in January — and which is only three-fifths complete — is showing hopeful signs of progress.

    “The White House transcript says the president made those remarks in the state of Michigan. I believe he made them in the state of denial,” Reid will say.

    Ho-ho. Funny fricken guy. I think Reid is in a catatonic state. By the way, Dingy Harry, it’s not the President’s job to write legislation, just like it’s not the Senate’s job to micromanage our National Security.

    On the “up” side, the Washington Post reports that Reid is steering clear of his “woe is us – all is lost” speech from last week;

    Reid did not repeat his assertion last week that “this war is lost,” a comment that drew sharp criticism from Republicans, who branded the Senate majority leader as defeatist. But according to the excerpts, Reid mixes sharp criticism of Bush with praise for Congress’s efforts to end the conflict and appeals to antiwar voters to be patient.

    But Reid wants to be a general so bad he can almost taste it;

    In defending his order to increase U.S. troop strength in Iraq by about 30,000 as part of a plan to secure Baghdad and western Iraq, Bush “tells us it’s ‘surge or nothing,’” and that the choice is to “stay the course or fail,” Reid said. “With all due respect, our president is wrong, and the new Congress will show him the way.”

    Despite Reid’s legal advice, which must be coming from the tearful Code Pink protesters, Congress has nothing to say to about fighting wars except to fork over the cash, or don’t fork over the cash. I cringe at the thought of those defeatists writing op orders for squad leaders in Sadr City.

    But Reid already knows that;

    As for antiwar voters who expect the Democratic majorities in the House and Senate to take action to end the war, the Senate majority leader says, “I understand the restlessness that some feel. Many who voted for change in November anticipated dramatic and immediate results in January. But like it or not, George W. Bush is still the commander in chief — and this is his war.”

    So this tough talk is all about appeasing the Kos Kids and Code Pink hags. Nice constituency you got there, Harry.

    Reid also calls Bush “the odd man out” on Iraq war policy and says meetings with him are not substantive but merely “carefully scripted sessions where he repeats his talking points.”

    He’s the “odd man out” on Iraq because he’s leading the country, not following the latest rant of squeakiest wheels like you’re doing, Senator. See, this is leadership;

    “And, therefore, I will strongly reject an artificial timetable withdrawal and/or Washington politicians trying to tell those who wear the uniform how to do their job,” [President Bush] said. “I will, of course, be willing to work with the Congress, both Republicans and Democrats, on a way forward. . . . But I also made it clear that no matter how tough it may look, that for the Congress to micromanage this process is a mistake.”

    I figured you missed that class, Harry, since you stick your crooked, wrinkled finger in the air to determine which way you go for the moment. Leaders lead despite what detractors and sideline quarterbacks might say. So sit down, shut up and get out of the way. But he can’t. from the AP via the DC Examiner;

    Reid said Bush was in “a state of denial” over the war, and likened him to another commander in chief four decades ago. “I remember when President Johnson, trying to save his political legacy, initiated the first of many surges into Vietnam in 1965,” he said.

    Reid said thousands more U.S. troops died in Vietnam in the years that followed. Now, he said, Bush “is the only person who fails to face this war’s reality – and that failure is devastating not just for Iraq’s future, but for ours.”

    Except that this President isn’t trying to save a legacy – he’s trying to fight a REAL WAR that is a REAL THREAT to the US and it’s citizens. Not some sorry-ass excuse of a “war for containment” fought for the glorification of the “best and the brightest” of Camelot to prove Democrats could be tough on Communism, too.

    And what brand of pussy releases his speech hours before he gives it? Another way to stick your finger in the air to tell which the wind is blowing, I guess.

  • Typical leftist techniques

    I was reading Curt at Flopping Aces early this morning – after my first morning cup – and saw his piece on “Celebrity Idiots Attack Karl Rove” and it sounded so familiar. Well, it’s familiar because it’s the same way I’ve been attacked by supposed friends and new acquaintances who’ve decided to wade into a political discussion with me. When they discover my political views, they feel it’s their appointed duty to convert me into “one of them”.

    When I try to avoid the conversation (usually when my wife is around because she hates it when my face gets red and I turn into “that guy”), they continue on with their blathering and grab me by the arm to keep me rooted in my spot while their spittle runs down their chin and the volume increases. I’ll make a one line reply  – a statement of indisputable fact – and the saliva count increases along with the decibles. As if volume and spittle production increases will convince me to be an intellectually-vacant moron. 

    The fewer facts presented only increases the volume – and the namecalling. At first, they avoid calling me names and the start with the President, then work through his staff, then Haliburton, and somehow Ken Lay always gets thrown in.

    When I don’t react to all of those vacuous debating techniques, the gun gets turned on me. First, by making sideways, glancing blows like “…well, anyone who thinks otherwise must be a moron…”, or “aren’t you ashamed of what those cretins have done to your party?”

    Then suddenly, I’m a jackbooted thug who eats puppies alive, kicks old people and murders unsuspecting teenagers.

    The more I appear like I won’t be convinced to surrender my soul to the gods of their weird religion, the angrier, louder, and more irrational they become. You can see examples of this behavior across the internet – especially in the comments section of HuffPo. And in my email.

    When I read about Al Sharpton getting death threats, I know it’s BS. The Left are the side that make death threats, hell, I’ve gotten them here. They like to say they get death threats – who would waste the time to make a death threat to those three pinhead Dixie Chicks? Who has time for that?

    I’ve never seen a Conservative on television get fist-pounding mad on any of the talk shows, but you see the Left doing it all the time. The closest I’ve seen from the Right is Bob Novak walking out of a CNN broadcast during a commercial break. The biggest emotional outburst from a conservative was Dick Cheney calmly telling Pat Leahy to attempt asexual reproduction. That’s it. That’s all they have.

    But almost nightly you can see the Left in hystrionics over something or other – especially when they have no real facts. I’ve never seen a Conservative crying in the Congressional hallways because no one is listening to them, but we were treated to that just a few weeks from Code Pink – grown men in pink sweatshirts with tears streaming down their faces because Nancy Pelosi won’t end the war in Iraq yesterday. I guess they’re comfortable with their masculinity – but the rest of us aren’t. Comfortable with their masculinity, I mean.

    You read about John “Christmas in Cambodia” Kerry storming into a confirmation hearing in a committee in which he’s not even a member, and grilling a political foe, then storming out again – the Left takes great glee in emotional, pointless gestures like denying an ambassadorship to Belgium. Then the feigned outrage at the recess appointment to Belgium (it’s fricken Belgium for pete’s sake).

    Despite the fact that there’s no real evidence that Alberto Gonsalez ordered the firings of several federal prosecutors for political reasons, the Left is jumping up and down screaming for his head. But, I guess they don’t see that keeping Sam Fox from being ambassador to Belgium as the same thing, huh?

    The left has nothing. No science, no morals, no sense of history – just emotional outbursts.  That’s why I don’t go out much anymore. And that’s why Leftists live in an echo chamber – no rational person wants to talk to them.

  • The war is still lost

    So, the war is still lost according to Reid’s defenders in Congress – despite the fact that his press office told me on the phone that Reid was misquoted on Friday. John Murtha, afraid that Reid might steal his title as the biggest troop-hater is reported by Fox News as saying;

    “I am proud of these troops and what they have done,” said Murtha, D-Pa. “They won the war and the mission was accomplished. We cannot win it militarily. It can only be won diplomatically.”

    In typical Democrat fashion, Murtha tries to have it both ways. The troops have done a great job losing the war.

    Not to be out done, Dennis Kucinich, who has been stoned since August 1, 1990, apparently, yips;

    “Our soldiers didn’t lose the war,” said Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio. “I maintain the war was lost the minute the White House fabricated a cause for war.”

    How did the Bush White House fabricate a cause for war when we’ve been at war with Hussein since he invaded Kuwait, Dennis?

    But at least fewer Republicans are jumping ship like they did earlier this year;

    “Whether or not some choose to acknowledge it, we are at war with militant Islamists who seek our destruction,” Ros-Lehtinen said. “Yet some on the other side of the aisle today announced that the war is lost in Iraq. This comment shows little understanding of the ability and determination of our men and women in the Armed Forces.”

    But other Republicans, like Chuck Hagel, can’t help themselves from caving in to the anti-war rhetoric from Reid, like he did this morning in the Washington Post;

    We are at a crossroads at home. One option is that Congress can pass and the president can sign a war-funding bill that gives our troops the resources they need and places responsible conditions on that funding that will press the Iraqi government to perform and make the tough choices. President Bush should not see this as a threat from Congress but as a reasonable progression of events after four bloody and costly years.

    The other option is that the president can veto the funding bill, Congress can overplay its hand, and both sides can get locked into a political standoff — with U.S. troops caught in the middle. This would not produce constructive pressure on the Iraqi government to reconcile its differences, and it would ensure that the United States would remain trapped in Iraq, doing ever-greater damage to our force structure and military capabilities.

    See? If the President just signs on to the Democrats’ $40 billion of pork and wasteful spending everything will be just fine. If the President capitulates and surrenders to the Democrats (and their al Qaida allies), we all win, sort of. Nevermind that a withdrawal timeline was never part of the trumpeted ISG study, and is the major point of contention between the Democrats and the President.

    When Democrats don’t fund our troops, it’ll be the President’s fault that he’s still leading the nation instead of sticking his finger in the wind like Hagel.

    The Democrats are adamant that the President sign their ill-crafted and cobbled-together legislation even though they, themselves, don’t believe in it. But it’s all they can get passed – and they aren’t sure what Plan B should include. From Reuters via WaPo;

    But when a Democratic-controlled panel of Senate and House of Representatives members meets on Monday to iron out differences between their respective bills, the product is expected to contain 2008 withdrawal dates.

    Many lawmakers have been speculating those dates might be nonbinding, as sketched out by a Senate-passed bill.

    More non-binding BS. And the President told them a month ago he was going to veto their sludge, so why are they just now getting around to “mulling” their options as AP reports;

    Democrats are considering their next step after President Bush’s inevitable veto of their war spending proposal, including a possible short-term funding bill that would force Congress to revisit the issue this summer.

    Another alternative is providing the Pentagon the money it needs for the war but insisting that the Iraqi government live up to certain political promises. Or, sending Bush what he wants for now and setting their sights on 2008 spending legislation.

    This is what is considered “leadership” by the Democrats. Instead of dictating what they’ll accept, they navel-gaze and pontificate and keep their fingers crossed that more troops will die in Iraq so the American people will back their assanine duct-tape and baling-wire spending plans.

    But they can’t dictate, because what they won’t admit is that the majority of Americans don’t trust Democrats with foreign policy. If the majority of Americans had the opinions on the war that the Democrats claim we have, they’d have a bullet-proof majority in Congress instead of a razor-thin majority. And Nancy Pelosi’s poll numbers wouldn’t have tanked after her ring-kissing exercise in Syria.

    But don’t worry. When Hillary is President, she’ll appoint her husband to be a roving diplomat, according to AP via the Washington Times;

     Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton said yesterday that if she is elected president, she would make her husband a roaming ambassador to the world, using his skills to repair the nation’s tattered image abroad.
        “I can’t think of a better cheerleader for America than Bill Clinton, can you?” the New York Democrat asked a crowd jammed into a junior high school gymnasium. “He has said he would do anything I asked him to do. I would put him to work.”

    Isn’t that what got us into this mess in the first place? Half-assed engagements with our nation’s enemies like Somalia, Haiti, Iraq, Serbia, Bosnia, East Timor, Iraq again, the Sudan, Afghanistan, Iraq again, Rwanda. And don’t forget his apologies to Africans for our role in the slave trade.

    And then to provide some comic relief, Clinton makes this bizarre statement;

    “They have shown contempt for our government,” Mrs. Clinton said. “We’ve got to get back to having qualified people, not cronies, serving in the government of the United States.” 

    As if Whitewater, the missing FBI files, the Travel Office firings, Vince Foster’s death, the IRS investigations, the Kathrine Willy seduction, the Juanita Broadrick cover-up and all of the other, more obvious and famous corruption, crony-ism and deception never happened.

    Yeah, we need more of that.  That’s real Democrat leadership.

    At Hang Right Politics, COgirl reports Nevadans’ opinions of Harry Reid’s comment.

    Dafydd at Big Lizards analyzes the events in Iraq that Reid used to support his pre-emptive surrender.

    No rant against Reid is complete without Joe Lieberman’s response;

    With all due respect, I strongly disagree. Senator Reid’s statement is not based on military facts on the ground in Iraq and does not advance our cause there.

    Michele Malkin has anti-war quotes from John Edwards, email responses from troops and pointed me towards Mohammed from Iraq the Model who asks;

    Instead of telling us to stop fighting back, I’d like to see some people stand up and protest the crimes of the terrorists and tell them to stop the killing and destruction…turn the stop-the-war campaign against the terrorists, is that too much to ask for?

    If we can’t even blame the lone guy that gunned down 32 people last week, how are we gonna summon the testicular fortitude to condemn an entire organization of psychopaths? I guess those poor Iraqis must be laboring under the misperception that we’re a rational people.

  • Sometimes I forget; today I remembered

    Sometimes I get so wrapped in the politics of this war against terror, I forget what it’s really about. When Harry Reid makes bonehead comments about losing the war in Iraq, when John Murtha calls our troops murderers, when Dick Durbin calls our troops SS concentration camp guards, when Nancy Pelosi kisses the ring of terrorist supporting despots, I get so fricken angry that all I can do is just pound out my thoughts about the hatred I have for those sorry excuses for humans on this poor cracked and dented keyboard.

    Today, though, I forgot about them for a minute.

    Most of my readers know that every Saturday morning I go to Walter Reed Army Medical Center for my weekly dose of SOS (it stands for “Shit on a Shingle”; hamburger gravy over scrambled eggs and a biscuit – the real reason I stayed in the Army for twenty years). I love being among soldiers, and I love SOS so it’s the highlight of my week.

    Today was a little different. My wife and I were coming out of the parking garage and a young soldier and his wife were making their way into the hospital, too. He was in a wheel chair and his right leg was gone just below his thigh – I noticed he was wearing an 82d Airborne Division T-shirt. So as I walked by him, I shook his hand and said “Thanks, Airborne”. He gave me a big smile and took my hand firmly and said “Thanks” to me.

    Then I asked him what unit he was in and he told me he’d been attached to the ’05 (That’s the 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment) when he’d been wounded in Tikrit. That’s what he called it – wounded. His whole right leg was gone, but he called it a wound. So I grabbed his wheelchair and started pushing him toward the elevators and we talked – I’d told him I’d been in the Three-Two-Five 25 years ago and he laughed and asked how my knees were holding up. We carried on like two old friends, two brother paratroopers reminiscing.

    He told me that he was convalescing well and he hoped to be out of the hospital soon and that he wanted to remain on active duty. That he’d heard other guys whining about their condition, but he was going to hold up just fine. I told him that he sounded like he was holding more than just fine and we smiled at each other. I hope he didn’t notice I was holding back tears – tears of pride in the generation that succeeded mine. 

    We all got on the elevator and went up to the third floor where my wife and I were getting off. He stuck his hand out and thanked me for my service. HE THANKED ME! I was dumbfounded. This twenty-year-old kid, missing his leg, was thanking me for my service. I grabbed his hand and thanked him for doing what I couldn’t do any more, and I got off the elevator in a partial daze.

    It was at that moment I realized these kids don’t care about the politics, they don’t give a tiny rat’s ass that Code Pink stands their drones up in front of Walter Reed with idiot Bush=Hitler signs. They don’t care that Nancy Pelosi is the Speaker of the House or that Harry Reid makes moronic statements that he later “regrets” were taken out of context. They don’t care what Jack Murtha or Dick Durbin say about them.

    All they care about is their job, doing it right, keeping us safe and living up to legacy that they’ve been left by the generations of warriors that came before them. All the talk about conditions at Walter Reed, all the surrender flag-waving rhetoric and hippie drum beating is just background noise. These folks are writing our history and they don’t have time for the critics and naysayers.

    Sometimes I forget that this war isn’t about the politics, but today a young paratrooper and his young wife reminded me. And I think we’ll all be just fine.

  • Vermont Senate confused about it’s job

    AP is reporting that the Vermont Senate, while the Republican Lt. Governor was off one day, has voted to impeach President Bush and Vice President Cheney;

    The non-binding resolution was approved 16-9 without debate — all six Republicans in the chamber at the time and three Democrats voted against it.

    As if there wasn’t enough evidence that the hard working dairy farmers in Vermont are being held hostage by slow-witted flatlanders, the vermont Senate thinks this vote will actually have an effect on the war in Iraq;

    “I think it’s going to have a tremendous political effect, a tremendous political effect on public discourse about what to do about this president,” said James Leas, a vocal advocate of withdrawing troops from Iraq and impeaching Bush and Cheney.

    I’m not sure how it is now, but when I lived in Vermont two decades ago, the legislature was part-time. It’s probably full-time now because a search hasn’t turned up any information to the contrary, and this a perfect example of what you get when politicians have too much time and not enough State on their hands.

    UPDATE: More whacky quotes from the self-important flatlanders who have seized Vermont, courtesy of the Burlington Free Press;

    “I don’t think Bush will get impeached, but it is an important statement,” [Richard] McCormack said. “The president has wrapped himself in the flag and there are a lot of good people who think it is more patriotic to support Bush than oppose him.”

    McCormack said impeachment resolutions are “an assertion of patriotism.” He said, “Many people oppose Bush because of his contempt for our national institutions.”

    I guess contempt for national institutions might include waiting for the President of the Vermont Senate to take a day off and rabble seizing power just long enough to pass an idiot, unConstitutional nonbinding resolution to appease other idiots and morons who don’t understand that legislating is not just making empty, pointless gestures as if you were players in “Lord of the Flies”.

    And it ain’t over yet;

    Rep. David Zuckerman, P-Burlington, began gathering signatures on a House impeachment resolution Friday afternoon. He expected to file the resolution with the clerk of the House on Tuesday afternoon, so it would be up for consideration Wednesday.

    It’s not the Vermont that I fell in love with anymore. There is hope for Vermont’s future in the comments on the BFP article, though. I’m pullin’ for ya, guys.