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#101 2008-11-18 4:20 pm

Steyr AUG
Agent Orange
From: 'Nam
Registered: 2001-08-24
Posts: 27547
Website

Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?

JakeTheTall wrote:

Steyr AUG wrote:

DevoDoc wrote:


Nope.  Just the ones that involve big oil reserves.

Those countries are getting attention, just not as much as one which was a destabilizing force in a strategically important part of the world.

Yeah, Congo and Sri Lanka are getting attention ?

Read all about it


Just like back in Saigon! Eh, slick?

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#102 2008-11-18 4:27 pm

sturner
Royal High Poobah
Moderator
From: Carrollton, TX USA
Registered: 2000-01-31
Posts: 13828

Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?

Geesh, you'd think that they would learn how to use the bookmark feature in Acrobat. About as useful as a scanned image.


I'm not dead yet.
There are 3 types of people, those who can count and those who can't.
"There are few things graven in stone, excepting your date of death."

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#103 2008-11-18 4:29 pm

bratboy
laden with emotion
Royal Wombat
From: Austin, Texas
Registered: 2003-01-19
Posts: 34106

Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?

Real patriots read all government documents from cover-to-cover--no "bookmarks" necessary.

cool


"One thing we've learned is there's a difference between being disappointed and having madmen in authority."

                                                                   --Paul Krugman

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#104 2008-11-18 4:34 pm

Steyr AUG
Agent Orange
From: 'Nam
Registered: 2001-08-24
Posts: 27547
Website

Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?

Those who care dont just read, they comprehend.


Just like back in Saigon! Eh, slick?

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#105 2008-11-18 4:36 pm

bratboy
laden with emotion
Royal Wombat
From: Austin, Texas
Registered: 2003-01-19
Posts: 34106

Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?

I was addressing the lurkers, not you.


"One thing we've learned is there's a difference between being disappointed and having madmen in authority."

                                                                   --Paul Krugman

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#106 2008-11-18 4:38 pm

Steyr AUG
Agent Orange
From: 'Nam
Registered: 2001-08-24
Posts: 27547
Website

Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?

Its important for them to understand the value comprehension

Last edited by Steyr AUG (2008-11-18 4:38 pm)


Just like back in Saigon! Eh, slick?

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#107 2008-11-18 4:39 pm

Farmerkev
Official Dementor
Moderator
Registered: 2003-01-03
Posts: 18624

Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?

both of you drop it or take it to pm's


Do your part to combat global warming.
Eat a cow.

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#108 2008-11-19 6:37 am

JediKnightChewie
eternal n00b
From: far from home
Registered: 2002-06-18
Posts: 4652

Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?

JakeTheTall wrote:

How many unaffiliated civilians in Iraq joined Al Queda or became sympathizers as a result of the American-led invasion ?

gods forbid someone take up a job they dont like just to put food on the table.

Most of the Iraqi people are poverty striken and in a society that is very pride based, a man who cant feed his family isnt very much of a man at all (to a greater extent then Americans look at it). There will be extremists and hate groups in the Middle East as long as there is religion. You cant blame the unaffiliated civillians joining these groups with our presence in the region. It would happen anyways, and it happens elsewhere. How many people world wide join the militarys of their country for the sake of college money, pick up a job in coal mines to feed their kids, or some other crappy/dangerous job for the sake making ends meet in a poor economy? It happens everywhere.


the c00ki33 0wns J00!

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#109 2008-11-19 6:54 am

sturner
Royal High Poobah
Moderator
From: Carrollton, TX USA
Registered: 2000-01-31
Posts: 13828

Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?

To pararphrase from a movie, "Dying ain't a good way of life."


I'm not dead yet.
There are 3 types of people, those who can count and those who can't.
"There are few things graven in stone, excepting your date of death."

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#110 2008-11-19 7:29 am

daemon
blank prince HAL
From: Golden Road (Out of Perdition)
Registered: 2008-01-03
Posts: 3650
Website

Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?

Ribtorus sig wrote:
It's not a movie.


Brigid O'Shaughnessy: I haven't lived a good life. I've been bad, worse than you could know.
Sam Spade: You know, that's good, because if you actually were as innocent as you pretend to be, we'd never get anywhere.
http://sitruc.blip.tv/file/2661495/

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#111 2008-11-19 10:35 am

JakeTheTall
Cargo Cultist
From: In Permanent Opposition
Registered: 2003-03-13
Posts: 9615

Re: Anything good about Bush's terms in office?

JediKnightChewie wrote:

JakeTheTall wrote:

How many unaffiliated civilians in Iraq joined Al Queda or became sympathizers as a result of the American-led invasion ?

gods forbid someone take up a job they dont like just to put food on the table.

Most of the Iraqi people are poverty striken and in a society that is very pride based, a man who cant feed his family isnt very much of a man at all (to a greater extent then Americans look at it). There will be extremists and hate groups in the Middle East as long as there is religion. You cant blame the unaffiliated civillians joining these groups with our presence in the region. It would happen anyways, and it happens elsewhere. How many people world wide join the militarys of their country for the sake of college money, pick up a job in coal mines to feed their kids, or some other crappy/dangerous job for the sake making ends meet in a poor economy? It happens everywhere.

I'm not "blaming" the Iraqi citizens, I'm saying that President Bush's decision to invade Iraq was a significant, required event in causing Iraqi citizens to support and become part of Al Queda.


Jesus said to the servants, "Fill the jars with water"; so they filled them to the brim.  Then he told them, "Now draw some out and take it to the master of the banquet."  They did so, and the master of the banquet tasted the water that had been turned into wine. He did not realize where it had come from, though the servants who had drawn the water knew.

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