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


To: American Spirit who wrote (74501)3/15/2006 12:48:57 AM
From: ChinuSFORead Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
So AS, let's talk real politics. Tell me one thing that Bush has been successful. One policy of his which he can say, yes I did that for the country when I was President.

You know what, I can think of one. He was successful is persuading Google to turn over their search records. Is that fair enough to say about Bush's accomplishments.



To: American Spirit who wrote (74501)3/15/2006 12:49:32 AM
From: zonkieRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
Of course I can't prove junior is/was gay but there are people who say they can. I can't prove he really won either of his presidential elections either.

Thirty ex Yale classmates of junior's would disagree with you. They said junior's nickname was lips when he was at Yale and he got that nickname because of the blowjobs he gave.

____________________________

Evidence of Bush's non-heterosexual proclivities keeps surfacing. Kitty Kelley's Bush Family expose' "The Family" (2004) had noted George W. Bush's homosexual relationsip with Victor Ashe, the Mayor of Knoxvillle, Tennessee.

Ashe, like Bush, is a member of the Yale University based Order of Skull and Bones, and was later appointed US Ambassador to Poland by Bush in December, 2003, after probes and inquiries by Congress.

George W. Bush, who was the head cheerlader at all-male Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, as well as cheerleader at all-male Yale University has been quoted as saying, "I want to thank my old college classmate (you used to call him Bulldog, we call him Victor) the Mayor of Knoxville Victor Ashe," at the Van Hilleary for Governor Luncheon, Knoxville, Tennessee, Oct.

Oddly enough the fake reporter/ male prostitute Jeff Gannon was also named "Bulldog" on his gay sex sites like HotMilitaryStud.com, MilitaryEscorts.com and MilitaryEscortsm4m.com.

Pirate News producer John Lee (http://piratenews.org/bushgaygate.html) notes that Bush has other gay nicknames for White House familiars --

* 'Turdblossom' for gay puppeteer Karl Rove.

* 'Pooty Poot' for Vladimir Putin, Russian President and Commie KGB chief.

* 'Mr. Big O' for lispy treasury secretary Paul O'Neill, ex-CEO of ALCOA Corporation in Alcoa, Tennessee.

* 'Sally Suck-em-silly' for the late David Lewis

Kiity Kelley writes that "George earned the nickname 'Lips Bush' for his skill at giving blow jobs to his fraternity buddies."

Lee, in George Bush's GayGate, writes -- "Why is Bush so hostile to the idea of gay marriage? Perhaps because until 1987, George W. Bush was gay.

"According to a group of 29 Yale classmates who comprise Gay Ivy Leaguers for Truth, Bush was 'known to be at least sexually experimental throughout his time in college.'

"One of Bush's alleged former boyfriends, Anthony Berusca (Class of '70), told The Dallas Morning News that Bush was 'deeply conflicted about being gay, even somewhat self-hating.'

"Berusca is convinced that this conflict led to Bush's drinking problems, but describes the President as a 'gentle, caring lover.'


"In 1986, the Bush family arranged for George to join Worthy Creations, a church group in El Paso that focuses on converting homosexuals through faith.

"A year later, Bush claimed to be straight, born again, and engaged to Laura Welch (Kitty Kelly in "The Family" wrote that Bush's twin daughters were not his offspring, but from a donor at a fertility clinic).

And what is Skull and Bones? The Power Elite networks of the Order of Skull and Bones and its influence in politics, government, education and business was researched and analyzed by the late historian Antony C. Sutton in his ground-breaking book "America's Secret Establishment: An Introduction to the Order of Skull and Bones" (TrineDay.com)

Confession and blackmail are part of the rites of initiation for the Order, as new members must divulge their sexual histories to other Bonesmen, so they will always be compliant in the future.

Senator John F. Kerry of Massachusetts and former President George Herbert Walker Bush are also members of the Order of Skull and Bones.

It was noted that Kerry, allegedly running against fellow Bonesman George Bush Jr. in the 2004 election, rolled over and played dead during most of his "campaign."

The admission of fake reporter/ male prostitute Jeff Gannon (aka James Guckert) to the White House and his unexplained sleepovers have added more evidence to a Gay White House with wags now claiming that GOP stands for 'Gay Old Party.'

After all, even Republican National Committee chair Ken Mehlman is gay.

So when will George Bush come out of the closet?

Don't hold your breath...

More.......

google.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (74501)3/15/2006 10:22:42 AM
From: jlallenRespond to of 81568
 
lol

What a moronic post....don't you ever get tired of sounding like an idiot....

J.



To: American Spirit who wrote (74501)3/15/2006 10:32:49 AM
From: jlallenRespond to of 81568
 
House Democrat Boasted of Saving Tribal-Contributions Loophole

by Amanda B. Carpenter
HUMAN EVENTS
Posted Mar 14, 2006

Today, Democrats are trying to make an issue of Republicans' being influenced by contributions from Indian tribes, but four years ago at least one leading Democrat bragged about stopping Republicans from closing the campaign-finance-law loophole that has allowed Indian tribes to maintain an inordinate influence in Washington.

Shortly after the House passed the 2002 Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act, Rep. Dale Kildee (D.-Mich.), co-chairman of the House Native American Caucus, boasted that Democrats had stopped the House Republican leadership from closing the loophole that allows Indian tribes to contribute to an unlimited number of federal candidates without facing an aggregate cap.

A Feb. 15, 2002, statement on the letterhead of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (headlined "Democrats Foil House Republicans' Effort to Limit Native American Political Donations") specifically accused "Speaker Dennis Hastert, Majority Leader Dick Armey and Whip Tom DeLay" of leading an effort to "severely restrict donations by Native American tribes."

The statement said the Republican leaders’ amendment was killed "by the united opposition of the Democratic House caucus, and a handful of pro-Indian Republican congressman."

Democrat Double-Speak

Today, accusatory Democrats are pointing at contributions that DeLay and Hastert received from casino-owning Indian tribes that were clients of convicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff. But in 2002, Democrats were accusing the same GOP leaders of trying to limit tribal political clout by limiting tribal contributions. In this election cycle, despite all the attention paid to Abramoff-client-related contributions to Republicans, it turns out that Democrats have received more in tribal contributions than Republicans, according to data collected by OpenSecrets.org.

The 2002 statement on DCCC letterhead (see at link below) quoted Kildee as saying:

<<< "Just as the political clout of Native Americans is rising in Washington, D.C., the Republican leadership's amendment would have cut off the tribes' ability to be real political players on the national scene." >>>

The part of the campaign-finance law that limits the amount any single donor can contribute to a single candidate refers to donors as “persons.” But the part of the law that puts an aggregate cap on the amount a single donor can contribute to multiple candidates refers to "individuals." The Federal Election Commission (FEC) has ruled that an Indian tribe is a "person" under the law, but not an "individual." Tribes, therefore, have been subject to the limit on the amount that can be given to an individual candidate, but not to the cap on the aggregate amount they can give to candidates across the board.

The Republican-backed amendment Kildee referred to would have applied the aggregate limit to Indian tribes. But the amendment never made it to the House floor.

The Palm Springs (Calif.) Desert Sun reported on the amendment battle in a Feb. 23, 2002, article titled, "Tribes: Reform Law’' Early Draft Had Unfair Limits."

"Supporters of tighter limits on tribal campaign contributions say tribes are beneficiaries of a 'loophole' that exempts them [from] the same contribution limits placed on individuals," said the Desert Sun.

"A network of legislators, Indian advocates and tribal gaming lobbyists is taking credit for stopping the effort they suspect was an attempt to undermine reform by eroding support for Shays-Meehan among Indian-friendly representatives," said the Desert Sun.

"Kildee, who founded the Native American Caucus in 1997, said it wasn't until February 13, just hours before the Shays-Meehan floor debate, that the effort to limit tribal contributions to federal candidates was defeated," said the paper.

"If added, tribes would have been prevented from spending more than $25,000 on candidates in any election cycle," said the Desert Sun. "Tribes, like individuals and other groups, are already limited to spending $1,000 on any individual federal candidate per election. The proposed change would have hampered tribes' flexibility to spread contributions across many candidates, a common tactic among special interest groups."

Unlike other special interest groups, however, Indian tribes are not required to form Political Action Committees when they contribute funds to federal candidates or to report their contributions to the FEC.

The Feb. 15, 2002, statement on DCCC letterhead in which Kildee accused Republican House leaders of trying to "cut off the tribes' ability to be real political players on the national scene" was provided to this reporter by a Republican congressional aide who insisted on re's online archives, and a DCCC spokesman said he could neither deny nor verify the statement because it dates back three DCCC administrations. Kildee’s office, however, confirmed he said what the statement said he did.

This reporter provided a copy of the statement to Kildee's press secretary Scott Kuschmider who responded via email:

"Thank you for contacting me. Congressman Kildee can verify the quote from the DCCC release in 2002 and today stands by the statement he made at the time concerning the defeat of the Armey amendment."
The statement on the DCCC letterhead also attributes a quote to Rep. Nita Lowey, who was then-chairwoman of the DCCC, and whose name appears on the letterhead:

<<< "This week Republicans tried to limit the political giving ability and power of Native Americans. But two weeks from now, the Republicans want Indian tribes to attend a fundraising event in Washington D.C. What's wrong with this picture?" >>>

Representatives Dave Camp (R.-Mich.) and J.D. Hayworth (R.-Ariz.), who is co-chairman of the Native American Caucus, may have been two of the "handful of House Republicans" the statement credits with working to preserve the Indian contribution loophole in 2002, although Camp and Hayworth argued it isn't a loophole. In 2001, a day before Shays-Meehan was referred to the House Administration Committee, then-chaired by Ohio Republican Rep. Bob Ney (who stepped aside as chairman earlier this year after it was reported he was a target of the Justice Department's Abramoff-related investigation), Camp and Hayworth wrote a letter to Ney stating that to “change the federal election laws to subject tribes to aggregate contribution limitations that currently apply to an individual donor, as some suggested, would unfairly and unnecessarily target the Native American community."

In the Feb. 23, 2002, report in the Desert Sun about the loophole-closing amendment, Rep. Kildee credited Hayworth as one who had helped thwart it. The paper said Hayworth had "urged his Republican colleagues to resist the low-profile efforts to amend Shays-Meehan to restrict tribes."

"We were singling out Indian tribes and trying to dilute their ability to be involved," Hayworth was quoted in the paper speaking of the Republican-led effort. "I'm not sure how it came up."

Miss Carpenter is Assistant Editor for HUMAN EVENTS.

humaneventsonline.com

humaneventsonline.com