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


To: longnshort who wrote (67633)9/27/2005 4:40:31 PM
From: OrcastraiterRespond to of 81568
 
We prepare for war with every country, even Canada. It's what adults do to protect their country

LOL...we can't even secure the border with Mexico...much less Canada.

Insiders have already spilled the beans on Bush. He prepared for war with Iraq in the first weeks of his first term. Why?

Because:

"Oil is much too precious a resource to be left in the hands of Arabs". Dr Henry Kissinger.

Dr. Kissinger was Bush's first choice to head the 9-11 Commission.

Conclusion: Both Henry and George have terminal myopia caused by a severe condition of rectal cranial inversion.

You sir would be suffering from the same condition if only you had a cranium to invert.

Orca



To: longnshort who wrote (67633)9/27/2005 11:52:58 PM
From: ChinuSFORespond to of 81568
 
If that is so then who prepares for peace. Maybe Boris Yeltsin, Mahatma Gandhi etc. Not Bush. He is the one who prepares for war and gets us in a mess. Whereas Boris and Gandhi succeeded in achieving their goals. Or is it your contention that Bush has succeeded in achieving his goals of getting this country into a mess.



To: longnshort who wrote (67633)9/28/2005 10:16:40 AM
From: paretRespond to of 81568
 
How Strong is the Anti-War Movement? (Rasmussen Poll)
Rasmussen Reports ^

23% Belong to Anti-War Movement

Survey of 1,000 Adults

September 26-27, 2005

Do you consider yourself part of the anti-war movement?

Yes 23% No 61%


From a political point of view, would you say that most members of the anti-war movement are...

Very Liberal 31% Somewhat Liberal 26% Moderate 28% Somewhat Conservative 6% Very Conservative 1% RasmussenReports.com

September 28, 2005--Twenty-three percent (23%) of Americans consider themselves part of the anti-War movement. A Rasmussen Reports survey found that 61% say they are not part of that movement. Sixteen percent (16%) are not sure.

Thirty-six percent (36%) of Democrats say they're part of the anti-War movement while 40% are not.

Just 7% of Republicans identify themselves as part of that movement along with 26% of those not affiliated with either major party. Eighty-four percent (84%) of Republicans and 55% of unaffiliateds say they are not part of the movement.

Earlier surveys have found that 38% of Americans favor bringing home U.S. troops from Iraq at this time. The gap between this number and the 23% who are part of the anti-War movement may have to do with perceptions of the movement on other issues.

Overall, 57% of Americans believe most members of the anti-War movement are politically liberal. Among those who are not part of that movement, 68% see its members as liberal. This includes 44% who believe most members of the anti-War movement are very liberal.

In a nation where only only one-out-of-every-five people see themselves as politically liberal, this perception of the movement limits its appeal

The single most distinguishing characteristic of the anti-War movement is a dislike of President Bush. Ninety-one percent (91%) of those in the movement disapprove of the way the President is doing his job. That figure includes 83% who strongly disapprove of the President.

Among those who are not part of the anti-War movement, 64% give the President their Approval.

Just 9% of those in the anti-War movement say the U.S. economy is in good or excellent shape. Fifty-six percent (56%) say it's in poor shape.

Among those who are not part of the movement, 42% rate the economy as good or excellent and 24% say poor. (Rasmussen Reports measures perceptions of the economy on a daily basis.)

Fifty-two percent (52%) of those in the anti-War movement have a favorable opinion of the United States. Thirty percent (30%) have an unfavorable opinion.

Among those who are not part of the movement, 84% have a favorable opinion of the United States and 10% have an unfavorable view.

Related surveys have found that Americans are divided as to whether the War in Iraq is part of the War on Terror or a distraction from it. Just 40% of Americans now believe that the U.S. and its allies are winning the War on Terror.

Rasmussen Reports is an electronic publishing firm specializing in the collection, publication, and distribution of public opinion polling information.

Rasmussen Reports was the nation's most accurate polling firm during the Presidential election and the only one to project both Bush and Kerry's vote total within half a percentage point of the actual outcome.

During Election 2004, RasmussenReports.com was also the top-ranked public opinion research site on the web. We had twice as many visitors as our nearest competitor and nearly as many as all competitors combined.

Scott Rasmussen, president of Rasmussen Reports, has been an independent pollster for more than a decade.

To keep up with our latest releases, be sure to visit the Rasmussen Reports Home Page.



To: longnshort who wrote (67633)9/28/2005 10:27:46 AM
From: paretRespond to of 81568
 
Homosexual Brain Washing Out of Control
............................................................
ReligionJournal ^ | 9/28/05

Superintendent instructs schools: "Parents do not have to be informed about 'diversity' classes."

After a Massachusetts school board decided to incorporate so-called diversity training in its classes, which includes indoctrination in the homosexual lifestyle, local superintendent Paul Ash notified schools that parents need not be contacted about the program.

Last April, as reported by LifeSiteNews.com, one parent of a six-year-old kindergartner, David Parker, was arrested, allegedly for "trespassing" at his son's elementary school while attending a scheduled meeting with the principal and the city's director of education. He had arranged a meeting to object to the homosexual curriculum materials and discussions his son was subjected to in his kindergarten class.

The "diversity" training includes materials such as the book by Robert Skutch, "Who's in the Family," which depicts families made up of all manner of combinations including same-sex parents. Parker, as a Christian, objected to his son's exposure to such indoctrination, and requested that he be notified when such discussions took place.

After refusing to leave the school until he was given an assurance that he would be notified before any discussion of homosexuality occurred in the classroom, the principal and director of education called police who put Parker in jail overnight. His trial, originally scheduled for last Wednesday, was postponed until next month.

The Superintendent, in a letter to the Lexington public school board last week wrote, "Activities and materials designed to promote tolerance and respect for individuals, including recognition of differences in sexual orientation ...do not trigger the notice and opt out provisions of Section 32A." The opt-out provision, 32A, maintains that parents be notified if a school teach on "human sexual issues." To Ash, homosexuality is not a sexuality issue.

Concerned Americans rallied in support of Parker Sept. 11, at a demonstration held at Lexington Green, the site of the opening battle of the Revolutionary War more than 200 years ago. Parker was prevented from addressing the media by the police, arguing that it could spark violence between his supporters and a large number of counter-demonstrators.

"This is not about creating a forum for hate ...for any segment of society," Parker said after his arraignment in April, according to a boston.com report. "I'm just trying to be a good dad."