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Barack Obama is on the path to the Heavyweight Championship of the world. Or the U.S. presidency... . . read more

Republican candidate for U.S. President John McCain makes much of his military service in the Vietnam war but some veterans of that war don't make much of him, or his actions.

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Does Bush believe that ‘victory,’ which to him is apparently an Iraq with a western-style democracy, forced upon it against the will of the people, has been achieved? That is too much of a stretch even for the intellectually-challenged Mr. Bush to believe. But using Hitler’s ‘Big Lie’ theory, perhaps he hopes that U.S. citizens will buy it.

The ‘Big Lie’ theory comes from Mein Kampf, Hitler’s autobiography, and is this: "in the big lie there is always a certain force of credibility; because the broad masses of a nation… more readily fall victims to the big lie than the small lie, since they themselves often tell small lies in little matters but would be ashamed to resort to large-scale falsehoods. It would never come into their heads to fabricate colossal untruths, and they would not believe that others could have the impudence to distort the truth so infamously.” So if Mr. Bush would have us believe that a new democratic Iraq is dawning, he is telling ‘the big lie.’

But perhaps neither of these explains the president’s apparent willingness to accept a troop withdrawal timeline (he calls it a time ‘horizon,’ apparently believing that the U.S. citizenry is too stupid to know he means timeline). The youthful, dynamic Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama is ahead in the polls; his Republican opponent, the awkward, elderly and decrepit John McCain, has not been able to spark any excitement on the campaign trail. McCain is a stalwart supporter of war, any war it seems, and foresees the U.S. occupation in Iraq lasting for generations. Perhaps it has finally dawned on Bush that this is not what the American people want; perhaps someone has finally gotten through to him; perhaps someone has penetrated his inner circle of yes-men and women, and has made him realize that a campaign platform of more of the same death, blood and destruction, is not selling too well even in middle America. [More]

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Republican candidate for U.S. President John McCain is a multi-millionaire with ten luxurious homes. He claims to support the working class yet empathizes with America's wealthy minority, not its money-strapped majority. . . read more

Did the Georgians think they could attack Ossetia, kill civilians and Russian peacekeepers, and get away with it? Unless President Saakashvili and the people around him are snorting something that turns reality upside down, they must have known that Georgia’s army was no match for Russia’s.

Could the Georgians have been working under the illusion they had the full backing of the U.S? What Condoleezza Rice told Saakashvili during her July 10 trip becomes critical. Did she really tell the Georgians in private not to attack as she claims? Or did Tbilisi take Rice’s public rhetoric supporting Georgia’s claim of sovereignty at face value? Shortly before Georgia attacked, the Russians tried to get a resolution through the UN Security Council calling on Ossetia and Georgia to renounce the use of force. The U.S., Britain, and Saakashvili torpedoed it. Why? Might the U.S. have snookered the Georgians into making an attack Washington knew would end in disaster?

Political commentator Robert Scheer suggests the war was a neocon election ploy aimed at getting John McCain elected president... Is the Georgia War the “October surprise”? The Republicans need a crisis so they can argue that only McCain has the experience to handle it. The Iran bugaboo is wearing thin, and the polls show overwhelming opposition to a war with Teheran. China is playing nice, and, in any case, it is not a good idea to pick a fight with someone who can call in its loans and bankrupt you. But there is always the big, bad Russian bear. [More]

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Presidential candidate Barack Obama shows his compassion by tending to an old man in the twilight of his life. . . read more

We, the Jet Ski Veterans for Truth, aim to destroy McCain’s candidacy. We resurrect the evil but ingenious tactic of the Swift Boat Veterans in their 2004 character assassination of war hero John Kerry: transform the candidate’s greatest strengths into disgusting liabilities. As an organization, we have been careful to avoid honesty at every turn, including our origins. None of us are jet skiers or veterans. We may not even be an “organization.” We may not even be a “we,” but a lone crackpot with a laptop...

McCain’s greatest purported asset is a heroic narrative as an airman shot out of the sky over North Vietnam, then imprisoned in the “Hanoi Hilton”. This tale seems impervious to inquiry; we’re supposed to salute his courage and endurance and go all misty-eyed...Part of the Hanoi story is how McCain refused an offer of release so he could stay with his fellow detainees. Yet that’s exactly where the Jet Ski Veterans for Truth work their greatest magic: McCain’s decision wasn’t valor. Some dare call it dereliction of duty...What the hell was McCain doing, refusing release from those enemy hands in the midst of a war he so strongly supported?... His fellow warriors were risking their lives down in the mucky, booby-trapped jungles and deltas, yet McCain chose to hang out in his cell with a few other PoWs. Why didn’t he jump back in the cockpit and do his job? You might say McCain refused to report for duty...

McCain pushes his “experience” as his most vaunted asset, but it’s the most easily demolished. For McCain could only acquire all that experience by growing so aged and feeble. The talk-show joke on McCain casts him as the mean old man chasing kids off his lawn. Yet this disease-riddled grouch probably can’t hobble that far - he’d have to dispatch his bodyguards to torment the kiddies. Though “only” in his early 70s, the pile-on of decades has been cruel. [More]

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U.S. Vice Presidential hopefuls give Republican presidential candidate John McCain a call.

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Britney Spears responds to Paris Hilton's response to John McCain's anti Barack Obama campaign ad. Well, National Lampoon's Britney does anyway. . . read more
The U.S. presidential race reached a turning point last week when Republican candidate John McCain opted for a campaign of denigration. Meanwhile, the mainstream media ignores McCain's more obvious shortcomings.  . . read more
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It's said that Russia's response to Georgia's attack on South Ossetia is disproportionate: we hear of "Western leaders anxiously watching for a withdrawal and puzzling over how to punish Moscow for what they called a disproportionate reaction to the Georgian offensive". No one has asked whether a disproportionate reaction or response is always wrong.

War, or an armed attack, can itself be a disproportionate response to some offense. If Britain, for example, declared war on Sweden for producing Abba, that would be disproportionate. It would also be wrong, because Abba isn't cause enough for initiating violence. Britain could at least ask for a large indemnity first. The Nuremberg tribunals placed aggression, a "crime against peace", ahead of war crimes. Perhaps this was meant to remind us that wars usher in far worse than war-fevered cheerleaders suppose, and are virtually always an immoral and disproportionate response to offences...

There is also a relationship between war as an immorally disproportionate response, or starting war for the wrong reasons, and all its consequences. When you start a war for the wrong reasons, you are responsible for all that follows, even the other side's atrocities. Though the other side is to blame for its crimes, so are you. You don't even have the right to kill in self-defense. If you are wrong to start a war, you don't suddenly fall into the right just because, contrary to your expectations, it's you, not the other guy, who has to defend himself.

War is not like self-defense in civilian life, when the response must be proportionate to the threat... The unacceptably disproportionate response was Georgia's in starting the war, not Russia's in finishing it. [More]

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10 aug

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Re: Take Your God and Shove Him

Thank you Pat Condell, you are a secular saint. My son does not attend the religion lesson at school and was told by one of the volunteers who come in to warp the kids' minds that she was "praying for him". I want to play her, and all those other interfering busybodies, this video. In fact it's so good I think I will transcribe it and pass the text around. My faveourite bit is the end: I'm not interested, I've heard it all before and I think it's all lies - insulting, degrading nonsense that contaminates everything it touches. Whenever I'm exposed to religion I feel dirty, I feel contaminated by the mealy-mouthed platitudes that pass as wisdom, the naked money-grubbing, the controlling rhetoric devoid of any humanity or compassion, the supercilious hectoring tone, the constant intrusive demands for privilege and the absolutely unforgivable violation of the minds of young children. Amen - Michelle

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Re: Experts Agree: Legalize Drugs - From Julian Critchley

Amen Julian Critchley. Legalize all drugs. People should have access to any molecule or compound they want. Gate Keepers for Big Pharma are costing end users a fortune. Retiring Police seniors inevitably say Legalization is the only way to take the money out of the criminal economy. Safe access through guaranteed qaulity control reduces street overdose/HIV infection. People have to have access to safe drugs on demand.

Personally I think the Olympics should be used for drug testing. The money sqaundered on the "games" and all the infrastructure around them would be better utilised in research and development. The bullshit about winners by one hundredth of a second is past a joke. Crowd control and propaganda for political posers and Patriotism "the last refuge of scoundrels". It's a farce - the athletes who do not want be used as lab rats should have drug free games which would be like the Para Olympics where the entrants display raw courage and drive with next to no support from the Public purse... Like Euthanasia, a doctor of your choice should be able to give you a legal release and advise you the best they know how about what drugs/course you wish to take. We are destroying doctors who really want to help individuals run their own lives with legal bullying by moralistic parasites who are terrified of the idea that they and all of us are responsible for our own lives - Anthony Innes

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Re: Is Australian General Jim Molan a War Criminal?

Thanks Gerry, I did click on the link you recommended to "find the dogs" and then I threw up. Jim Molan a war crim? Generals can't help themselves. Molan bombed hospitals, Georgia bombed hospitals in Osettia. The U.S. military hasn't even faced up to its criminal obliteration of Nagasaki. War crimes are what the baddies do - it's never us - Sherbert

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Re: Washington Comes to Mr Smith

Condi, is yet another of those on my list to post a poop to, with a note attached stating, "Take a look at yourself!" Cranky soul that I am - Dean

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Re: Scary Mary

Love it. I have always found Julie Andrews quite frightening - Sue

9 jul
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