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Who lied?
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Who lied?
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Who lied?
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Who lied?
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Who lied?
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Who lied?
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Who lied?
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Who lied?
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Who lied?
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Who lied?
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Setting aside motives, I think legislators did not have the same access to intelligence that the executive branch has -- some less than others -- and most of them did not bother to study what they could see. |
Who lied?
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And you have Democratic friends but would not vote for a Democrat running against Pombo? What's up with that? Hypothetically speaking, a "high-placed" Democratic in D.C. these days is what? An office-building window-washer? Quote:
(2) If you want to have a real conversation about whether Bush lied, you have to look at what he was being told and what he said. Although you get hints of that from the better newspapers, and maybe even from your Democratic pals in D.C., you're going to learn more from books with inside sources -- e.g., Woodward's books, or Suskinds. (3) If you read those books, you will see that the admininstration consistently has misled people. Here is one example; here is another. (4) I do not believe that Bush or anyone else in his administration thought there were no WMD in Iraq but said there were. (5) I think that a decision was made to invade Iraq -- not irrevocably, but presumptively -- and then the administration's work shifted towards making a public case and building public and international support. To this end, they stressed the WMD angle, not because it was the most important to them necessarily, but because it worked the best. (Wolfowitz basically said this a few years ago.) In making the public case, they presented as facts things they did not know to be facts. They were reckless with the truth, gambling that events would prove them right. (5)(a) A couple of posts ago, you were all over me for referring to a Washington Post news article about Charles Duelfer's congressional testimony about the search for WMD as "fact." Why don't we apply the chatboard evidentiary standards to our political leaders? Bush and those working for him said a lot more based on a lot less, and yet you apparently will not admit that he crossed the line. (6) In contemporary politics, a more complicated idea like "Bush was reckless with the truth" gets simplified to "Bush lied." You could blame the politicians for this, but I also would blame the media, which fails to give sustained attention to communicating anything with nuance, or to sort things out for the public when politicians make competing claims, and the public, which doesn't demand more. |
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As a moderate, the Democrats scare me. This shit they're doing with Joe Lieberman shows a party hijacked by a minority of clueless lunatics. We need the Democrats to take at least one of the branches, to keep some of the gridlock and checks and balances that makes for good govt. If the lunatics take over and run impossible candidates, the Dems are going to go the way of the Whigs, and the more organized lunatics in the GOP are going to get stronger. The Dems need more, not less, Joe Liebermans. |
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You seem to think that they're going after Lieberman because he strayed too far to the right. Not so. Kos -- for example -- seems to love Mark Warner, whose positions are indistinguishable from Lieberman's. Mark Schmitt explains Joe's problem here. In short, he's too happy to turn his sanctimony on other Democrats. The loyalty runs only one direction. On issues like Iraq and Social Security, he wants to be a player so badly that he sells out his own side. Joe Lieberman's positions are fine, but enough of him. etft[itle] |
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OK, that's an interesting point I hadn't considered. But if that's the case, isn't the Democratic party cutting off its nose to spite its face here? I mean, why support a strident left winger who's only going to make the party seem imbecilic over a well liked centrist? Joe Lieberman is one of the few Democrats who has some across-the-aisle respect and reflects well on the party. I don't know Lamont that well, but he's so far appeared shrill. They all sell out thier side to be players. I think in Lieberman's case the man is truly a moderate, somewhat hawkish Democrat, and I think your party needs that voice, from someone with his stature in particular. Call me nuts, I just don't think you piss all over the Jomentum. Or maybe I just like the guy because he seems principled to me. SD |
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