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Politics : Sioux Nation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: SiouxPal who wrote (64803)4/20/2006 3:56:33 PM
From: T L Comiskey  Respond to of 362352
 
speaking of
Dreamz

click on photo to enlarge.........

toyota.com



To: SiouxPal who wrote (64803)4/20/2006 3:58:29 PM
From: T L Comiskey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 362352
 
On Fox
Rumsfeld Admits -
Democracy Could Fail In Afghanistan, Too
April 20, 2006

Today on Fox News Live with Bill Hemmer (time slot 12 - 1 p.m.) he had a segment with Bret Baier at the Pentagon who described seven Pakistanian soldiers killed in an ambush near the Afghanistan border. He said that attacks have increased in deadliness.

Baier said that senior commanders are tying some of the violence and most of the funding of enemy fire in Afhganistan to the growing drug trade there. He reported that It has been strong in recent years. He also had the nerve to say, "We've reported on it many times." (Comment: What? I think I've reported on it many times, Fox goes out of it's way to not talk about the poppy/heroin problem and how much it has increased since we went to war with them)

He also reported that some analysts (Comment: I guess that's better than some 'people') think the poppy/opium trade is taking over Afghanistans economy with roughly 3 billiion dollars in illicit drug trade. (Comment: It's been reported by other news sources that Afghanistan now supplies 90% of the world's heroin). Baier said that it's a problem Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld was asked about this week.

Cut to video of Donald Rumsfeld:

Donald Rumsfeld: The hold of narcotics is powerful and the money that comes through narcotics trade is enormous and is a risk to Afghanistan. It's a risk that through corruption it could adversely affect the democratic process in that country. I think the government is sensitive to that.

Bret Baier finished up by saying, "Multiple government agencies and multiple several countries are helping the Karzai government deal with that."

Comment: No mention at all that the poppy/heroin trade has become huge under the Bush Administration. Another failure to plan, another failure in the fight on terror. By setting aside Afghanistan and going to his war based on lies, this president has risked and endangered several countries. Iraq is a failure, Afghanistan is failing and now there are ambushes on the Afghanistan/Pakistan border.

I'd say this is another case of failure by the Bush Administration. As for Fox covering the drug trade many times? Yes, I've seen them cover how they had 3 or 4 guys out in the poppy fields (this was actual video) with sticks knocking down the poppy plants. That's how Fox covered it - in the pretense that they were actually cracking down on the poppy growth when in reality it's grown bigger than it's ever been since we invaded Afghanistan.

Maybe someone shouldn't have taken his eyes off of the objective and followed through on the real war on terror, captured it's leader and kept poppy production from accelerating and funding terrorism all over again.

newshounds.us.



To: SiouxPal who wrote (64803)4/20/2006 7:24:01 PM
From: Karen Lawrence  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 362352
 
"Grand Jury Hears Evidence Against Rove

By Jason Leopold

Thursday 20 April 2006

Just as the news broke Wednesday about Scott McClellan resigning as White House press secretary and Deputy Chief of Staff Karl Rove shedding some of his policy duties, Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald met with the grand jury hearing evidence in the CIA leak case and introduced additional evidence against Rove, attorneys and other US officials close to the investigation said.

The grand jury session in federal court in Washington, DC, sources close to the case said, was the first time this year that Fitzgerald told the jurors that he would soon present them with a list of criminal charges he intends to file against Rove in hopes of having the grand jury return a multi-count indictment against Rove.

In an interview Wednesday, Rove's attorney, Robert Luskin, confirmed that Rove remains a "subject" of Fitzgerald's two-year-old probe.

"Mr. Rove is still a subject of the investigation," Luskin said. In a previous interview, Luskin asserted that Rove would not be indicted by Fitzgerald, but he was unwilling to make that prediction again Wednesday.

"Mr. Fitzgerald hasn't made any decision on the charges and I can't speculate what the outcome will be," Luskin said. "Mr. Rove has cooperated completely with the investigation."

Fitzgerald is said to have introduced more evidence Wednesday alleging Rove lied to FBI investigators and the grand jury when he was questioned about how he found out that Valerie Plame Wilson worked for the CIA and whether he shared that information with the media, attorneys close to the case said.

Fitzgerald told the grand jury that Rove lied to investigators and the prosecutor eight out of the nine times he was questioned about the leak and also tried to cover-up his role in disseminating Plame Wilson's CIA status to at least two reporters."

truthout.org



To: SiouxPal who wrote (64803)10/21/2006 9:09:12 AM
From: Travis_Bickle  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 362352
 
I saw it on DVD last night, it was actually pretty good.