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Politics : GOPwinger Lies/Distortions/Omissions/Perversions of Truth -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Lazarus_Long who wrote (73372)7/26/2006 6:20:41 PM
From: American Spirit  Respond to of 173976
 
Bush Stole Ohio 2004 Election, New Evidence Proves

(*Over 80,000 Kerry votes switched to Bush votes as one example, that alone enough to swing election)

rollingstone.com You probably saw RFK Jr.’s article in Rolling Stone. He claims 357,000 votes were stolen from Kerry in Ohio alone, throwing the entire election to Bush. RFK Jr. has just filed suit against the voting machine companies.

blackcommentator.com The non-partisan GAO found that Ohio 2004 could have been stolen. They investigated and discovered widespread fraud and abuse on the part of the GOP.

bradblog.com – Brad is the #1 internet detective amassing intel on GOP election fraud, particularly Ohio 2004. Apparently, he has a whistleblower from Diebold who is willing to talk, and just a ton of facts, figures and testimonies.

betterworldlinks.org List of articles on recent election fraud in the US.

oilempire.us Election fraud in the US is not a conspiracy theory, it happened. The only questions are, how far did they go? Is the system still rigged as we speak? Will elections continue being stolen? And how do we stop it and punish those who are responsible?

theinquirer.net In-dept article about how manipulation of voting machines made by a friendly manufacturer could be used to fix an election, and how this may have already become a reality.

aei.org This is a thorough examination of how Gore lost thousands of votes in Florida 2000 due to ballot errors.

amazon.com Greg Palast’s book shows how the GOP consulting firm hired by Jeb Bush deliberately scrubbed 57,700 mainly-black voters from the Florida rolls in a fraudulent manner with help from the Texas Governor’s office.

amazon.com Hightower’s book about how our democracy has been stolen by “kleptocrats”.

makethemaccountable.com Christopher Hitchens (Bush supporter) went to Ohio after the 2004 election and found at least 40,000 votes were stolen from Kerry. RFK Jr. found additional evidence over the course of the next year, not even including possible Diebold voting machine fixing, resulting in a 357,000 statewide theft.

en.wikipedia.org About the infamous dirty tricks and race-baiting of Lee Atwater, mentor to Karl Rove and GW Bush.

en.wikipedia.org - Karl Rove is a man with a mission, to win by any means, and laws and ethics rules be damned.

swiftvets.eriposte.com Website detailing how the “Swiftvets For Truth” were a Bush-Cheney-Rove-Delay dirty trick and complete hoax. Every single Swiftvet accusation against Kerry is proven to be untrue. Basically, they just made up whatever smears they could think of, just the way some of them did to McCain in 2000 during the South Carolina primary. There is a lot more on this, including how Swiftvets funder Perry Homes was reimbursed 26 million dollars by the Delay Foundation, supposedly for a construction job. This connects the “smearvets” with Rove’s GOP.

This is a big subject, and nothing is at stake but our entire democracy. Time to defend our precious and fragile democracy from these rightwing crooks and liars.



To: Lazarus_Long who wrote (73372)7/27/2006 10:24:50 PM
From: American Spirit  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 173976
 
Bush says: 'Bring them on!' to attackers of U.S. troops

(* Remember this from 2003? How many US troops died as a result of the worst commander in chief in history's huge gaffe?)

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Bush said Wednesday that American troops under fire in Iraq aren't about to pull out, and he challenged those tempted to attack U.S. forces, "Bring them on."

"We got the force necessary to deal with the security situation," President Bush said of U.S. troops in Iraq.
By Luke Frazza, AFP

"We'll stay the course in Iraq," Bush said. "We're not leaving until we accomplish the task, and the task is going to be a free country run by the Iraqi people." He and his aides offered no timetable for the withdrawal of American forces. (Related: Text of Bush's Wednesday comments)

More than 65 U.S. troops have died in Iraq since Bush declared on May 1 that major combat had ended. Twenty-six were killed in combat, the rest in accidents.

Bush pledged to find and punish "anybody who wants to harm American troops," and said the attacks would not weaken his resolve to restore peace and order in Iraq.

"There are some who feel like that the conditions are such that they can attack us there. My answer is bring them on," Bush said. "We've got the force necessary to deal with the security situation."

White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said Bush's combative tone was not meant to invite attacks on Americans. "I think what the president was expressing there is his confidence in the men and women of the military to handle the military mission they still remain in the middle of," Fleischer said.

But Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., called the president's language "irresponsible and inciteful."

"I am shaking my head in disbelief," Lautenberg said. "When I served in the Army in Europe during World War II, I never heard any military commander — let alone the commander in chief — invite enemies to attack U.S. troops."

Rep. Dick Gephardt, D-Mo., said, "I have a message for the president: enough of the phony, macho rhetoric."

"We should be focused on a long-term security plan that reduces the danger to our military personnel," said Gephardt, who is running for president. "We need a serious attempt to develop a postwar plan for Iraq, and not more shoot-from-the-hip one-liners."

On Tuesday, assailants traveling in a vehicle in central Baghdad fired a rocket-propelled grenade at a U.S. military vehicle, wounding three soldiers. Another grenade slammed into a U.S. truck on a road south of Baghdad, injuring three soldiers, one of whom died at a field hospital overnight.

The president also gave a forceful defense of the Iraqi war. He rejected a question about whether there was a gap between the Iraqi weapons program reported by intelligence and administration officials before the war and the scant evidence found since.

"Saddam Hussein had a weapons program," Bush said. "Remember, he used them — he used chemical weapons on his own people."

Bush made no mention of the failure of U.S. teams to find evidence of weapons of mass destruction, but said, "We're bringing some order to the country and we're beginning to learn the truth." Bush did not explicitly promise that weapons or evidence of a weapons program will be found, but he said, "It's just a matter of time, a matter of time."

Twenty-three% of Americans believe the United States has found weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, down from 34% in May, according to the poll released Tuesday by the Program on International Policy Attitudes at the University of Maryland.

Fleischer put a new twist on the weapons issue. "I think the burden falls on those who think he didn't have them to explain when he destroyed them and why, after he destroyed them, he didn't tell anybody or show anybody," Fleischer said.

Bush also expressed impatience with the criticism leveled at his administration in recent weeks.

"See, we've been there for, what — I mean, how many days?" Bush said. "Frankly, it wasn't all that long ago that we started military operations. And we got rid of him, much faster than a lot of people thought."

Bush fielded several questions on a wide array of topics in the Roosevelt Room, where he announced Randall Tobias as his choice to head a new program to battle AIDS in Africa and the Caribbean.

The president said he had spoken Wednesday morning to Russian President Vladimir Putin to thank him for help with confronting weapons programs in North Korea and Iran. Bush also talked by phone with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, Jordan's King Abdullah II and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon about progress toward peace in the Middle East.

"The best way to describe it is, we're really happy with what we've seen so far," Bush said. "But we're realists in this administration. We understand that there's been years of hatred and distrust, and we'll continue to keep the process moving forward."

Bush also spoke by phone with Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who took over the presidency of the European Union on Tuesday.

Bush spoke about human suffering and unrest in Liberia, but he stopped short of saying whether his administration should send peacekeepers to the West African nation — an idea opposed by a U.S. military already committed to other world trouble spots.