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Politics : Don't Blame Me, I Voted For Kerry -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: laura_bush who wrote (9573)3/22/2004 11:35:48 AM
From: stockman_scottRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
Voting for Bush is like voting for Ken Lay...They both are masters at running companies into the ground...Unfortunately, Bush is in way over his head as CEO of our country...4 more years of his regime would be a disaster...Thats why the Dems are so energized and wealthy and thoughtful folks (like George Soros) will make sure the funds are available to educate the masses.

-s2@LetsTakeBackTheCountry.com



To: laura_bush who wrote (9573)3/22/2004 8:15:52 PM
From: Lizzie TudorRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
LOL, this is too funny- this bus full of unemployed cranky people is following the Bush "jobs and growth" bus tour with a slightly different message. <ggg>

Labor Bus Tour Highlights Unemployment

Labor Bus Tour Through Rust Belt States Highlights Plight of Unemployed, Weak Jobs Market

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Laid-off workers, students, a priest and creators of anti-offshoring Web sites are among the 51 people taking a bus tour through Rust Belt states this week to talk about job struggles, countering similar trips by the Bush administration to promote a growing economy.

Every state and Washington, D.C., will have a representative riding the red, white and blue flag-covered buses on the "Show Us the Jobs" tour organized by the AFL-CIO and Working America, an activist affiliate of the labor federation.

"I think we need to get the word out there that the economy is not as rosy as people are saying," said Kevin Gregory, 41, of Millinocket, Maine, who was laid off in January 2003 from the Great Northern Paper Mill after 17 years.

The labor tour follows two bus trips by President Bush's Cabinet secretaries to promote the administration's economic policies. In February, Commerce Secretary Donald Evans, Labor Secretary Elaine Chao and Treasury Secretary John Snow embarked on a "Jobs and Growth Tour" to Oregon and Washington -- both of which Bush narrowly lost to Al Gore in 2000. Last summer, they traveled to Wisconsin and Minnesota.

biz.yahoo.com