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Politics : Impeach George W. Bush -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: MSI who wrote (13121)6/5/2002 1:34:39 PM
From: jttmab  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
Anybody see a pattern here?
It's all about all-powerful central government realizing it can do whatever it wants, as long as the people don't wake up, are afraid, or keep arguing among themselves about irrelevancies.


Absolutely, and they set the pattern on day one. It's been a constant stream of inconsistencies and lies from the beginning. Free trade and tariffs. Opposition to arms treaties because they aren't verifiable and pushing an arms treat that isn't verifiable. You can drill for oil and protect the environment, in Alaska; but you can't do it in Florida. Approve drilling plans for Florida in January and buy back the mineral rights in May. Claim your for State and Individual Rights and expand the power of the Federal government of eminent domain; subvert the voters of the State of Washington who voted twice to allow doctor assisted suicide [attempted and failed].

Not good news for a Democratic Republic.

jttmab



To: MSI who wrote (13121)6/5/2002 1:57:44 PM
From: jttmab  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 93284
 
I do think that the Bush Administration is 'good for Europe'.

Europe to Compete With U.S. Global Positioning System
By Caroline Chaumont
Special to The Washington Post
Thursday, May 30, 2002; Page E04

Rockets are supposed to begin lifting off in 2006 to carry 30 European satellites into orbit. The satellites will emit signals that will allow people with receivers -- drivers, sailors, rescue workers and pilots, for example -- to determine their precise locations on Earth.

It is similar to what the U.S. Global Positioning System already does, and the pending launch of a rival is fueling a new transatlantic dispute.

U.S. officials have called Europe's $3.2 billion Galileo project wasteful and say Europe could better spend the money upgrading its armed forces. But European governments argue that Galileo is crucial to the future of their high-tech industries and to loosening their dependence on the United States.

Transportation ministers of the 15 European Union countries approved the project in March. Now U.S. and EU officials are meeting to see whether they can make the systems compatible and ensure that a standard receiving unit could work with both systems.

Objections to Galileo stem in part from longtime U.S. claims that Europe doesn't pay its fair share of defense costs. But the satellite project also could become a classic trade dispute if the United States concludes that its companies are being unfairly cut out of Galileo-related business........

The debate came as many European policymakers were concluding that the Bush administration is "unilateralist," willing to press ahead without consulting its allies. The United States had dropped out of the Kyoto global-warming treaty, was planning a missile-defense system and taking what Europeans see as an excessively military approach to terrorism............

washingtonpost.com

jttmab



To: MSI who wrote (13121)6/5/2002 2:01:50 PM
From: Karen Lawrence  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 93284
 
Posted by First Degree over at RB referring to Monday's headlines, he adlibs...lolol

Bush: "US needs better intelligence." So quit