Posted on 09/10/2003 4:05:02 PM PDT by BigWaveBetty
















Did I get my dates wrong? Is bill's book out next Oct. or this Oct.? If it's this Oct. then right after "they save" Davis, then they disappear.
Each time there's bad news for the 'toons they seem to disappear, even the media forget about them.
I can't shake this feeling that when the WMD report comes out there'll be documentation in there that will smack the 'toons. Not sure exactly how but it will.
One of the many ways to try to deflect the great job GWB is doing in Iraq, they must discredit him as much as possible, "He lied to get us into this war, he's a miserable failure, GWB lied about air quality putting NYer's lives in danger, etc..." So now the seeds are sown, GWB is worthless and when the bad news for them comes out they do their groundhog act. To save their sorry butts for not doing anything sans kicking the can down the road.
Just a little gut feeling.
Atta can go to hell with all his little instructions. Oh wait, he's already there. Good.
 Darryl Worely
 Written by Darryl Worley and Wynn Varble
 I hear people saying we don't need this war
 I say there's some things worth fighting for
 What about our freedom and this piece of ground?
 We didn't get to keep 'em by backing down
 They say we don't realize the mess we're getting in
 Before you start preaching
 Let me ask you this my friend
 CHORUS 1
 Have you forgotten how it felt that day
 To see your homeland under fire
 And her people blown away?
 Have you forgotten when those towers fell?
 We had neighbors still inside
 Going through a living hell
 And you say we shouldn't worry 'bout Bin Laden
 Have you forgotten?
 They took all the footage off my T.V.
 Said it's too disturbing for you and me
 It'll just breed anger that's what the experts say
 If it was up to me I'd show it every day
 Some say this country's just out looking for a fight
 After 9/11 man I'd have to say that's right
 CHORUS 1
 Have you forgotten how it felt that day
 To see your homeland under fire
 And her people blown away?
 Have you forgotten when those towers fell?
 We had neighbors still inside
 Going through a living hell
 And we vowed to get the ones behind Bin Laden
 Have you forgotten?
 I've been there with the soldiers
 Who've gone away to war
 And you can bet that they remember
 Just what they're fighting for
 CHORUS 2
 Have you forgotten all the people killed? Yes, some went down like heroes in that Pennsylvania field Have you forgotten about our Pentagon? All the loved ones that we lost And those left to carry on Don't you tell me not to worry 'bout Bin Laden Have you forgotten?
 Have you forgotten?
 Have you forgotten?

 Twin beams of light form the 'Tribute in Light' at the World Trade Center site on the second anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks Thursday, Sept. 11, 2003 in New York. The photograph was made from the Empire State Building. (AP Photo/Ed Bailey)
THE Jayson Blair book. Seems everyone's itchy to see this manuscript, except maybe the menopausal Gray Lady's ex-lover Howell Raines, who doesn't even want to see this human being. But seems everyone else does. The final deal, after a fortnight talking it over, was finally only officially concluded Monday. Tuesday Michael Viner, the publisher of New Millennium, who lives on the West Coast, and Jayson Blair, the pariah who lives on the East Coast, met face-to-face for the first time. They clinked bagels for luck at a power breakfast at the Regency. And everybody - Bob Tisch, Larry King, Neil Simon, Walter Cronkite - came by the table. Says Viner: "I didn't realize I was that popular."
And what did they all have to say? All - including Cronkite, the most trusted man in America - wished Mr. Liar-Liar-Pants-on-Fire well. First draft of this tough gritty book, "Burning Down My Masters' House," starts with Blair's early days and goes on to dot every i and blacken every other eye at the Times. Cindy Adams.
Yikes, what a day - Johnny Cash and John Ritter have died, according to the  Daily News

A hearty breafast for everyone.

I saw it, he did a great job!
More people need to see speeches like that, FOX needs to run those on the weekend.
It seems that Jayson Blair is going to do in a very short time for affirmative action what Ward Conerly has been trying to do for decades.
In addition, I think Cronkite is senile at this point.

President Bush (news - web sites) shakes hands with Staff Sgt. Ethan Craig of Chester, Mass., after awarding him The Purple Heart at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington Thursday, Sept. 11, 2003. Visiting with patients who were injured while serving in Operation Iraqi Freedom, President Bush awarded 11 Purple Hearts. (AP Photo/The White House, Paul Morse)

President Bush (news - web sites) waves after offering his tribute to the soldiers of the Army's 3rd Infantry Division during a visit to Ft. Stewart, Ga., Friday, Sept. 12, 2003. The 3rd Infantry Division suffered more casualties than any other American military division in the Iraq (news - web sites) invasion and Bush awarded them the Presidential Unit Citation for exceptional valor. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

Johnny Cash), country music's 'Man in Black,' died September 12, 2003, silencing a dark and brooding voice that for nearly 50 years sang plaintive tales of coal miners and sharecroppers, convicts and cowboys. He was 71. His death, at Baptist Hospital in Nashville, cast a late summer pall over Tennessee's Music City where he was easily the industry's most iconic performer. It came four months after the death of his wife June Carter Cash, a member of one of the country's most famous music families. She succumbed to complications from heart surgery at the age of 73. File photo of Cash with wife June at the end of a tribute in Johnny Cash's honor, April 6, 1999 in New York. REUTERS/Jeff Christensen-Files
 Actor John Ritter, center, along with co-star Katey Sagal, right, accepts the award for 'Best Comedy' from his son Jason Ritter at the 2003 Family Television Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif., Thursday, Aug. 14, 2003. Ritter, whose portrayal of the bumbling but lovable Jack Tripper helped make the madcap comedy series Threes Company a smash hit in the 1970s, died Thursday Sept. 11, 2003 of a heart problem after falling ill on the set of his new television sit-com. He was 54. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles)
Actor John Ritter, center, along with co-star Katey Sagal, right, accepts the award for 'Best Comedy' from his son Jason Ritter at the 2003 Family Television Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif., Thursday, Aug. 14, 2003. Ritter, whose portrayal of the bumbling but lovable Jack Tripper helped make the madcap comedy series Threes Company a smash hit in the 1970s, died Thursday Sept. 11, 2003 of a heart problem after falling ill on the set of his new television sit-com. He was 54. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles)
 
 
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