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Despite signs of strain, critics need more ammunition to bring Tom DeLay down
Houston Chronicle ^ | April 9, 2005 | GEBE MARTINEZ

Posted on 04/09/2005 1:20:49 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife

ANALYSIS

Administration has yet to target DeLay for ouster

Despite signs of strain, critics need more ammunition to bring him down

WASHINGTON - One way to judge whether House Majority Leader Tom DeLay can survive questions about his conduct in office is to watch for signals from the White House, which was instrumental in the ouster of another Republican leader in 2002.

Unlike former Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., who was pushed out of his leadership post by the White House in favor of Sen. Bill Frist, R-Tenn., DeLay has yet to feel any firm shoves from President Bush's operatives.

"Nobody around here is saying that DeLay is a problem the way Lott was," a senior administration official said Friday. At least, not yet.

Unless DeLay is hit with new, clear-cut evidence of wrongdoing or gets indicted by a Travis County grand jury that is investigating political corruption by his associates, the Sugar Land Republican remains protected by the conservatives in his party, despite persistent questions about his overseas travel and political fund raising and spending.

"I think there's a general feeling that (critics) are going to need more before he's in trouble. There's nothing that compares to the moment when we spoke out about Lott," the administration official said.

But there are signs of strain.

On board Air Force One as it headed back to Texas after the funeral of Pope John Paul II, Bush was asked to respond to DeLay's recent attacks against federal judges, particularly those who refused to order the reinsertion of a feeding tube for Terri Schiavo, a severely brain-damaged Florida woman who died last week.

"I believe in an independent judiciary. I believe in proper checks and balances" between branches of government, the president said, joining other high-profile Republicans, including Vice President Dick Cheney and Frist, who have distanced themselves from DeLay's strident critique of judges.

Just a month ago, Bush was calling DeLay a "close ally," adding, "I have confidence in Tom DeLay 's leadership, and I have confidence in Tom DeLay."

While House Republicans are keeping a stiff upper lip in public, some GOP lawmakers privately worry that DeLay's troubles are becoming a major distraction.

Congressional analysts also note the absence of a strong public statement of support by House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., DeLay's longtime ally.

Lawmaker's powerful role The "moment" the White House turned against Lott came when the president, in a high-profile speech, disavowed the senator's praise for the 1948 presidential campaign of pro-segregation Dixiecrat Strom Thurmond.

The firestorm around Lott's comments began as a slow burn, but the heat was turned up by civil rights leaders, as well as by conservative commentators who were unhappy with Lott's willingness to compromise with Democrats.

In the DeLay case, "the White House is going to have to operate with stealth because of DeLay's relationship with the right," which is the party's base, said Marshall Wittmann, a senior fellow at the Democratic Leadership Council who once worked for the Christian Coalition. "This is much dicier for the White House than Lott was."

DeLay's staying power so far has more to do with political pragmatism than with his relationship with Bush, which has been testy at times.

Republicans and even begrudging Democrats agree that DeLay is a masterful majority leader, managing to drive through Congress some of Bush's most challenging legislation.

Democrats face challenges DeLay is being increasingly compared to former House Speaker Jim Wright, D-Texas, who was forced to resign in 1989, but their circumstances differ. Wright, a moderate, "did not have the kind of emotional support in the Democratic base that DeLay has in the Republican base," Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., recalled recently.

Also, Wright resigned before receiving the official findings of an aggressive House ethics committee investigation.

Currently, the ethics committee is virtually nonexistent. Democrats are protesting the Republicans' re-writing of the rules that make it harder to investigate members.

DeLay also is helped by the complexity of the financing of his trips and political activities.

"The challenge (for Democrats) with the attacks on DeLay is that you cannot, in two sentences, explain what the charges are," said Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform.

But critical news reports could eventually change that.

Former House Appropriations Committee Chairman Bob Livingston, R-La., who was on the verge of becoming House speaker in 1998, listed Lott, Wright, former Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., and himself among those who were forced to step aside or leave office because of intense media scrutiny.

"We all faced that sort of thing and it's not comfortable at all," Livingston said. But DeLay "is a fighter and he's effective," and it will take more than what has emerged so far to force him out, Livingston predicted.

gebe.martinez@chron.com


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Front Page News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: delay; dirtytricks; mediabias; propagadawingofdnc; tomdelay; ushouse
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Give 'em he**, Tom!

bump!


21 posted on 04/09/2005 5:14:02 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP (There is only one GOOD 'RAT: one that has been voted OUT of POWER !! Straight ticket GOP!)
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To: sergeantdave; SkyPilot

The Bonds of Freedom - Delivered by Congressman Tom DeLay on April 3, 2002

President Lamkin, Mayor Craghead, Reverend Shepard, Mrs. Ward, Mr. Travis, members of the faculty, students of the college, ladies and gentlemen, it is a high privilege to receive this degree and I offer all of you my deep and profound gratitude for the honor.

Thank you very much for inviting me to Fulton today and for allowing me to stand before you tonight as the newest member of the Westminster family. I am gratified by the distinction and I will always carry my association with Westminster proudly as a son of the college.

I have always cherished and fought for the most valuable possession any people can obtain. That possession is freedom. And within the freest nation on Earth, Westminster College occupies a special place as a champion of liberty.

Through the Green Lecture series, Westminster offers the free world a gathering place to discuss the events that shape our future and the initiatives that can advance our national life. Your commitment has done our nation and our principles a great service. And I commend you.

When Churchill came to Westminster, he termed our shared values and democratic principles the "title deeds of freedom." The Iron Curtain he warned about has been buried beneath the sands of history. But the essence of his warning has not been diminished. New threats to freedom will always emerge. There will always be people who try to enslave others with the chains of evil and all-controlling ideologies. And tyrants and terrorists will always target America because we are the leading guardian of freedom.

Today, no one can ignore the horrible aggression in the Middle East. A democratic government is fending off an orchestrated onslaught of death. The State of Israel has been targeted by groups committed to her complete elimination.

And on the basis of our shared principles and democratic values, America has an undeniable obligation to stand squarely with our democratic ally against those attempting to end the State of Israel.

Early in life, I saw the consequences of tyranny firsthand. When I was a boy, my family moved to South America. My father took a job as the general manager for an Oklahoma company's oil field operations in Venezuela during the 1950s.

We lived in a small town near the center of the country. It was an incredible place to grow up. The countryside was beautiful. It was flowing ranchland separated by stretches of jungle.

There were very few people living in our little town. It was basically the families of the oil field workers and the caballeros--the cowboys of Venezuela.

My brothers and I rode horses and we would ride off to camp with the caballeros and explore the jungle. It was wild and new and exotic. There were amazing plants, animals and insects to study. It was everything adventurous and curious young boys could have wanted.

Out at their ranches, the caballeros practically had zoos. They had pet monkeys, and parrots and just about every animal that lived in the jungle. And they were friendly to us.

They showed us how to ride like real caballeros. And they taught us to crack whips and rope steers. Generally, they gave us the free run of their cattle ranches.

Venezuela's rural heartland offered adventures that would be the envy of Huck Finn and the DeLay brothers made the most of it. We rode and hiked and explored everything within miles around our little town. In the beginning, it was an innocent, idyllic childhood.

Unfortunately, Venezuela's political structure was unstable and chaotic. When I was only seven, I was exposed to my first revolution. The revolutionaries killed several local politicians and hung them in the town plaza. There were three revolutions in Venezuela during our years in South America.

The worst incident happened when I was eleven. At the time the revolution broke out, I was out visiting a ranch with a friend. My mother was frantic. She looked everywhere and couldn't find me.

When we finally made it home, we saw revolutionaries ransacking houses and rampaging through town. They destroyed my friend's house. Our own house was spared. But we had no idea how close to death we actually came.

Later, we learned that revolutionaries had arrived at the ranch just fifteen minutes after we left. They destroyed the ranch house. They killed all the people and every animal at the ranch. It was total chaos and complete destruction.

It was my introduction to the horrendous acts human beings are capable of committing when they operate with no regard for life. And it was the source of my passion for freedom and my hostility to unaccountable power.

I carried two great lessons home with me from Venezuela and they have stayed with me ever since. In many ways, they are the lessons of the Twentieth Century.

First, every human life is sacred and precious. Second, power unconstrained by principle and unchecked by accountability is an awful and evil force.

Ronald Reagan reminded us of the power of Churchill's warning. He said: "His Fulton speech was a fire bell in the night; a Paul Revere warning that tyranny was once again on the march."

Churchill told us that threats to freedom could not be avoided and they must not be accommodated.

Unfortunately, September 11 reminded us once again of the spirit of Churchill's warning. We saw in tragic detail that evil is far more than an abstract concept. Our borders and our lives are not beyond its grasp. Tyranny is the enemy. Tyranny is on the move. And Tyranny must always be confronted.

In the wake of September 11, we are reminded of two historic truisms. The first is that those who crave power simply for its own sake will always try to crush freedom under the boots of despotism. The second is that freedom cannot be contained indefinitely. Once people taste freedom, they demand it. Despots know this and will do anything to deny freedom to their people.

The history of modern man has been framed largely by the struggle between these incompatible forces: Freedom and tyranny, good and evil. Unfortunately, man’s long pathway towards expanded freedom is littered with tragic reminders that this lesson has gone unlearned.


During the last century alone, millions of lives were lost. They fell at the hands of tyrants of fascism, Nazism and Communism. They died before the forces of freedom recognized their unavoidable duty to confront the threat.

When evil gathers force, it is easy to ignore what we know to be true – tyranny's appetite for destruction recedes only after every challenge to its power is eliminated. It is always easier to evade the truth and appease an aggressor than to shoulder the hard obligations of confronting evil.

We must begin by acknowledging that tyranny is inherently evil. There can be no moral equivalence between those seeking to protect freedom and those seeking to deny freedom.

But even after the terror of September 11 many people continue to insist that these distinctions simply cannot be drawn. They maintain we must accept that differences in perspective can dictate different truths to different observers.

Some question whether America's role in the world may have invited the terrorist attacks. They ponder what we did wrong. But democracies don't wage wars by deliberately blowing up innocent civilians.

Free countries don't turn weapons of mass destruction on their own people. Democracies don't systematically deny rights to enforce twisted and brutal ideologies. And free nations don't pay bounties-for-blood by rewarding the families of suicide bombers.

President Reagan challenged us to acknowledge what we knew to be true. He defined the Soviet Union as an evil empire. And by stating the struggle with clarity and conviction he denied everyone the timid confusion of moral equivalence in the struggle between right and wrong.

When we speak the truth boldly, the echoes shape destiny.

Reagan said that we must begin by calling it like it is. He warned that we could not place ourselves above the struggle by naively equating democracy and tyranny as two different, but morally equal systems.

And I urge you, as President Reagan challenged all of us, to draw the moral distinction between two distinct worldviews. We must not let our foreign policy be crippled by the false fear that speaking explicitly about our commitment to freedom and democratic ideals will complicate rather than clarify the conflict.

As creatures of God, we were born with certain universal and inalienable rights. And America's genius was to perfect a governing structure that protects those rights.

The strength and opportunity of American society are a testament to the freedom guaranteed by the protections of our Constitution.
We trust Americans to pursue their varied interests under a document that defines and upholds their essential freedoms. It has been our unique contribution to the world.

Our founders understood the sanctity of life and they knew well the need for checks and balances on the state. They had seen the consequences of religious intolerance and oppression. And their wisdom accounts for the strength of our system.

The foundation of American society rests on a set of enduring, defining values. They are the charter concepts of freedom: Faith in God, the sanctity of human life, the existence of right and wrong, and the certain knowledge that we are all, ultimately, accountable for our actions.

These principles are universal and extend to every man and woman regardless of the land of their birth or the faith of their parents.

And so, from America's commitment to these timeless truths flow the concepts that we define as democratic values: A free press. Free speech. Free elections. The right to petition the government. Freedom of worship. The rule of law. And an ability to change the government through peaceful means.

These values are the bulwarks of liberty. Some nations share them. Some do not. But between these two conditions looms a wide disparity.

Countries that honor basic rights flourish. While repressive regimes that deny them, frequently struggle to meet the bare needs of their citizens.

It is precisely because democracy accommodates our core values that it delivers opportunity, security, and fulfillment. The freedom of self-government develops excellence.

People living under democratic principles lead fuller lives. They share inherent advantages over those trapped within dictatorships and despotic regimes.

We believe that every human being deserves to live under a political system that honors basic rights and respects the dignity of the individual.

For that reason, America has a binding duty to stand with nations that share our universal values and commitment to democracy. We must continuously export freedom to the world.

President Bush led boldly when he declared war against the forces of international terrorism. He put the world on notice that America would not stand idle while groups and rogue regimes threatened our security.

He clearly defined our enemies and our objective: Rooting out and destroying the cancer of international terrorist networks wherever they are found.

And the President gave the world a clear choice: "You are with us, or you are with the terrorists." America responded to his clear, direct, and forceful leadership. And we need to assess other threats with the same moral clarity.

In Asia, the world’s most populous nation holds its people hostage beneath a brutal blanket of oppression.

The potential free exchange of ideas, honest elections, and the recognition of basic human rights so frightens the unelected rulers in Beijing, that they quash it at every turn.

They are attempting to suffocate dissent, freedom and choice. Through intimidation, force, and fear, they demand obedience and order to their repressive ideology.

But just across the Taiwan Straits, stands a harbor of freedom. In Beijing, the Communist apparatchiks are angered and confused by the blinding light of freedom that beckons beyond the Straits.

There, on a tiny island, 23 million Taiwanese bravely resist a constant barrage of threats from Communist China. They stand firm against a repressive regime that shackles and silences over a billion people on mainland China.

Through sheer will, and courage, Taiwan has developed into a thriving democracy and a strong ally of the United States.

Within our own hemisphere, just 90 miles off our coast, the Cuban people are enslaved by a brutal tyrant. Fidel Castro has dragged his people through hardships, despair and servitude to satisfy his own depraved interests.

He robs Cubans of the fruits of their labor while enriching himself and his cronies. He imprisons or kills anyone questioning his government.

And Castro denies anyone seeking the promise of a better life the right to flee his island prison. Despite the risks, countless Cubans risk death to escape his tyrannical regime. And untold thousands have been murdered as they fled. Castro is a man lacking any respect for life. When Castro's agents caught a boatload of Cuban women and children floating at sea, his orders redefined evil. These refugees were simply seeking the free shores of America.

Castro didn't want them back. He wanted them dead. And on Castro's command, his agents used fire hoses to force women and tiny children off their boat and into the ocean to drown. Their only offense had been a passion for freedom.

In each of these countries, our choice is clear. We must support those who stand for freedom. We need to remind the world, at every opportunity, that these regimes are not morally equivalent and America sides with liberty. Our clarity speaks volumes to both friends and adversaries.

The strongest collision between liberty and terror is occurring in the Middle East. On the eastern edge of the Mediterranean sits an oasis of freedom and democracy surrounded by mobilized hostility.

The State of Israel has fought five major wars to defend its right to exist since 1948.

A quick comparison tells us that Israel and the United States differ greatly in size, population, and natural resources. But in the things that truly matter, our countries are strikingly similar.

The fundamental measures that test our spirit, ideals, and aspirations show that Israel and America are kindred nations.

The founders of both countries were profoundly influenced by faith. Both countries drafted governments that practice religious tolerance. Both countries are filled with immigrants summoned by dreams. For people fleeing the storms of persecution, both countries have been safe harbors.

We respect freedom and honor the rights of the individual. We tolerate a vigorous public debate through unfettered speech and a free press. We welcome the conflict of contested elections.

We are committed to thoroughly educating our citizens. We live under the rule of law. And the United States and Israel share a concern for human rights.

We both support free markets and will trade with any responsible partner. We seek peace and good relations with any country that also seeks the same goals.

America has found that freedom, as it is provided by our democratic system, improves life in all its spheres. Self-government allows every citizen greater opportunity, responsibility, and accountability.

These translate into individual excellence, economic strength, and the broadest chance to realize potential and achievement.

That being the case, the benefits of freedom should show themselves in objective measures of a country's economic performance and the fabric of its society.

To prove the point, another comparison would also be useful. How does Israel measure up to neighboring countries? The differences are stark.

Throughout the Middle East the climate is arid and, with the exception of oil, resources are scarce. Economic progress is a challenge for any country.

But given these common limitations, there exists within the Middle East, a vast difference between those living in freedom and those living in undemocratic regimes. Israel exceeds its neighbors by wide margins in every significant way that we measure quality of life and standards of living.

Since its Independence in 1948, Israel has absorbed millions of immigrants, including almost one million from the former Soviet Union. It began without the infrastructure needed to support a modern society.

Israel had to spend large sums constructing the roads, utilities, ports, schools, and hospitals that support modern life. At the same time it was building this infrastructure, Israel fought five major wars.

Israel built a pluralistic society that is predominantly Jewish, but also has Muslims, Druze, and Christians living together and serving together in its military.

Israel is unique in that it serves as the permanent homeland for Jews everywhere, but it is also a home for people of other religions. Women and people of all faiths vote and hold office.

A simple measurement of Middle East economies shows that the benefits of self-government are obvious.

Taking the year 2000 as an example, Israel's Gross Domestic Product was $17,700 per person. In Lebanon it was $5,000, in Syria $1,000, in Jordan $1,500, in Egypt $1,420, and in the West Bank controlled by Palestinian Authority Chairman Arafat, it was $1,500.

Within Israel, people are educated longer and more successfully. Israel has produced almost universal literacy. With the exception of Jordan, only between half and three-quarters of the people in neighboring countries can read.

The health of people in the region also reflects democracy's strength. Infant mortality rates in Israel are between five and eight times lower than in neighboring countries. People in Israel also tend to live at least ten years longer than those living in the undemocratic regimes that surround it.

Clearly, life under democratic principles empowers men and women to achieve tremendous progress. And just as obviously, the absence of freedom consigns people living in undemocratic regimes to difficult lives.

Another important factor is the vitality of Israel's democracy compared to the dictatorships and non-democratic regimes that surround it.

Since 1970, the voters of Israel have changed their elected leader ten times. Control of government has swung between different parties and philosophical approaches. Democracy is alive, robust, and thriving in Jerusalem.

But for people living in neighboring countries over the same three decades, self-government has been unknown.

Regime changes among Israel's neighbors are an accident of fate. The people within these countries don't shape their own destinies.

Their voices aren't heard by their rulers. They are simply swept along by the decisions and policies of autocratic regimes.

And there is no question that the absence of accountability between Middle Eastern regimes and their citizens is fueling the climate of violence.

We know that peace and democracy are linked. Democratic rulers are accountable to their citizens and for that reason they avoid unjustified conflicts.

And governments that answer to their citizens don't inflict heinous crimes against their own people without serious consequences. We have learned that dictators and tyrants are not bound by the same moderating accountability.

Freedom is alive in Israel today. We can't allow the lone light of democracy to be extinguished by a wave of hatred. On September 11, we saw the visible hand of evil. In Israel, they are seeing it almost every day.

The so-called "martyrdom operations" that Palestinian suicide bombers carry out against Israel's buses, markets, and restaurants differ from the attacks against America only in scale--the underlying evil that motivates them wells up from the same awful source.

Suicide attacks against innocent civilians violate every principle America upholds. By the way, these are not suicides--they are murder.

For that reason, a strategy that delivers indiscriminate death to coerce political concessions from a free society will always offend our democratic values.

Yet, somehow the media questions Israel's right to self-defense. They criticize the steps taken by a democratically-elected government to block Arafat's evil campaign of death against Israeli civilians.

The identity of the terrorist organizations carrying out violence in Israel is far from a secret. They accept responsibility for their crimes. Hamas, Hezbollah, Palestinian Islamic Jihad and at least a faction of Palestinian dictator Yasser Arafat's Fatah group are at war with Israel.

What must happen? First, Arab states must accept Israel's fundamental right to exist. The terrorism against Israel must stop.

And the parties must negotiate a comprehensive settlement acknowledging Israel's right to exist, the need for permanent, secure, and internationally-recognized borders, and the guarantee that people of all faiths will have access to Jerusalem's holy places.

We should begin by rejecting the idea that the United States should somehow be a disinterested party mediating between two good-natured nations earnestly striving for peace.

The time has come to drop the empty pretense that we can serve the region as a mere broker. Israel is resisting a campaign of death.

The defense of freedom demands more from us than a value-neutral brokerage. It is time for us to stand squarely against the terrorist organizations which systematically attack Israel.

I commend the President for his principled and determined leadership. Specifically, he is guiding us firmly in two important ways. He is standing solidly with Israel. And he is resisting the constant calls to force Israel back to the negotiating table where they will be pressured to grant concessions to terrorists.

No one should expect the people of Israel to negotiate with groups pursuing the fundamental goal of destroying them. During four decades of terrorism, Yasser Arafat has proven his total contempt for human life. He is completely untrustworthy.

So, we should support Israel as they dismantle the Palestinian leadership that foments violence and fosters hate. Arafat and his Authority have been an impediment to peace and a threat to the emergence of moderate Palestinian voices.

When suicide bombers target families praying over Passover Seder, their objective cannot be peace. Their evil goal is to eliminate anyone who doesn't believe as they do.

We must be absolutely clear: Suicide bombings and other forms of terrorism will never be tolerated by democratic countries. Any group using these evil tactics denies any legitimacy to its underlying cause or grievance.

The free world must never negotiate with terrorists. Suicide bombings specifically, and terrorism generally, are not a form of resistance -- they are cold blooded murder.

This hellish strategy of destruction menaces far more than the State of Israel. It is a threat to the entire civilized world.

If suicide bombers succeeded in intimidating Israel, every free society would eventually face the same evil tactic.

All free men and women must defend Israel by denouncing this vile culture of death. Suicide bombers are consumed by an evil impulse and this message needs to be repeated by every democratic government.

America has a clear duty to stand beside a democratic ally that is besieged by terrorists. I believe that most Americans feel the pull of kinship with the men and women of Israel.

We can't allow the flame of democracy to be extinguished by a wave of aggression. The terrorists attempting to destroy the State of Israel should know that America will never allow that to happen.

Since our founding, the United States has been the world's greatest force for good. And today, our commitment to liberty has never been more vital to the world.

Because when we stand by democracies in peril, we signal to our friends that we mean what we say. We rededicate ourselves to the eternal truth that all men are created equal and are by nature free.

We demonstrate to our children that our values are enduring and unchanging.

And we give comfort, hope, and direction to people fighting for those same rights everywhere in the world.

Our actions reveal that our principles are not flexible. They are not written in sand to be washed away by time and circumstance. Instead, they are etched on our souls by the hand of God.

We are a land and a people acclimated to difficulty and attuned to grand purpose.

If we summon the will to stand firmly for freedom and strive boldly to spread our democratic principles, we can, once again, liberate millions of men and women from the grip of tyranny.

Doing so will mean security and freedom not only for us and our children, but for all those with a God-given yearning for the precious rights they are denied today.

And so, with all humility I ask, God bless America.

http://www.westminster-mo.edu/cm/green_lecture/green_lecture_speech/delay.asp


22 posted on 04/09/2005 5:15:34 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: MeekOneGOP; Piquaboy; libstripper

Ping to post #22.


23 posted on 04/09/2005 5:16:35 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: CobaltBlue
"It remains to be seen whether paying his wife and his daughter a generous salary is a crime or just politics as usual."

An average of $50K per year is hardly generous. And if its a crime, the first to to jail should be Al Gore and John Kerry. Their daughters were both hired by their campaigns for what I believe was a far more generous salary.

24 posted on 04/09/2005 5:21:46 AM PDT by norwaypinesavage
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

I realize this article to be about the Hammer,so why is

Harry Reid engaged in damage control?


25 posted on 04/09/2005 5:25:39 AM PDT by jos65
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

AMEN


26 posted on 04/09/2005 5:26:49 AM PDT by bornacatholic
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
What a post. Thanks. :)


From post #21:

President Bush led boldly when he declared war against the forces of international terrorism. He put the world on notice that America would not stand idle while groups and rogue regimes threatened our security.

He clearly defined our enemies and our objective: Rooting out and destroying the cancer of international terrorist networks wherever they are found.

And the President gave the world a clear choice: "You are with us, or you are with the terrorists." America responded to his clear, direct, and forceful leadership. And we need to assess other threats with the same moral clarity.


bump! bump! bump!


27 posted on 04/09/2005 5:27:53 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP (There is only one GOOD 'RAT: one that has been voted OUT of POWER !! Straight ticket GOP!)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Whoops!

I mean: From post #22


28 posted on 04/09/2005 5:29:38 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP (There is only one GOOD 'RAT: one that has been voted OUT of POWER !! Straight ticket GOP!)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

Translation: Despite a coordinated MSM/DNC offensive, political opponents are going to need more than gossip, lies and innuendo to bring Tom Delay down.


29 posted on 04/09/2005 5:34:40 AM PDT by Soul Seeker
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
[In the DeLay case, "the White House is going to have to operate with stealth because of DeLay's relationship with the right," which is the party's base, said Marshall Wittmann, a senior fellow at the Democratic Leadership Council who once worked for the Christian Coalition. "This is much dicier for the White House than Lott was."]

If the repubs let this great fighter go down, will it not prove to the base vote that the pubs are cowardly fools who fear media bias and liberal intimidation? I for one, being a Christian conservative, have lost my confidence in the pubs as they seem to have as many libs who don't stand up for justice as the libs do. It's like watching those shows that lose their challenges and vote off the strongest first and allow the weakest to continue and eventually get weaker for their foolishness.
The pubs are cowards and fools and the vicious left wing neo nazi politicians are relentless and will eat their cake, near as I can tell.
30 posted on 04/09/2005 6:01:15 AM PDT by ohhhh ("He who reaps the wind shall sow the whirlwind")
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
[It was my introduction to the horrendous acts human beings are capable of committing when they operate with no regard for life. And it was the source of my passion for freedom and my hostility to unaccountable power.]

He must be a Christian, only they understand how the human heart longs for truth and love and freedom for all men.

[ Within our own hemisphere, just 90 miles off our coast, the Cuban people are enslaved by a brutal tyrant. Fidel Castro has dragged his people through hardships, despair and servitude to satisfy his own depraved interests.
He robs Cubans of the fruits of their labor while enriching himself and his cronies. He imprisons or kills anyone questioning his government.]

This could just as well be written of the neo communist democrat party.Is it not interesting that the rat's love Castro, could it be that they would love to be part of a ruling proletariat with the power of life and death in their cruel hands? Castro and the rats are allies along with today's terrorist organizations worldwide.
31 posted on 04/09/2005 6:32:38 AM PDT by ohhhh ("He who reaps the wind shall sow the whirlwind")
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To: ohhhh

The local newspapers in DeLay's district need to hear from a WHOLE LOT of people about their opinions on the ongoing smear attacks on DeLay with old new and non-news.

The Houston Chronicle is equivalent the the NY Times and hates DeLay.

The SUN is a GOOD weekly in the district that is "fair and balanced."

Here is the contact info for both:


HOUSTON CHRONICLE (daily):

LETTERS POLICY: We welcome and encourage letters from readers. Letters can be mailed to Viewpoints, C/O Houston Chronicle, P.O. Box 4260, Houston, Texas 77210. Letters may also be sent by e-mail (sent as part of the text preferred) to viewpoints@chron.com or by fax to 713-362-3575. Letters (250 words or less to be considered for publication) must include the name, full home address and daytime and evening telephone numbers for verification purposes only. All letters are subject to editing.
NEW OUTLOOK ADDRESS: Readers interested in expressing their opinions and views in Outlook may now send essays to our new e-mail address outlook@chron.com. Op-ed pieces can still be submitted by fax at 713-362-3575 or by regular mail to the Houston Chronicle, P.O. Box 4260, 77210, attention Outlook Editor.


FORT BEND SOUTHWEST SUN
COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER (weekly)

fbeditor@hcnonline.com
PHONE: 281-242-1812
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32 posted on 04/09/2005 6:47:12 AM PDT by bgsugar
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
THAT is the actual headline?

How in the hell can these liberals say there is no leftist bias in the media?

33 posted on 04/09/2005 7:01:34 AM PDT by Houmatt (Terri Schindler Schiavo 1963-2005. Murdered by Michael Schiavo and Judge Greer.)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

i don't care if it is legal, that the democrats do it,

hiring your wife and daughter for $500,000 of salaries...

sux.

it's called nepotism.


34 posted on 04/09/2005 7:06:52 AM PDT by ken21 (if you didn't see it on tv, then it didn't happen. /s)
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To: Houmatt

This was the full headline:

ANALYSIS

Administration has yet to target DeLay for ouster

Despite signs of strain, critics need more ammunition to bring him down


35 posted on 04/09/2005 8:25:18 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: ohhhh

He's spoken out against Castro.

He spoke strongly against Elian's return.


36 posted on 04/09/2005 8:27:01 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: ken21

Paid out over how many years?

I'd like a trusted family member at my side in the backstabbing world of politics.


37 posted on 04/09/2005 8:28:35 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: ken21
Nonsense, hiring relative in political campaigns and offices is entirely normal.

NO one off the street can work those kind of hours, (24/7), literally, nor could a rep pay enough. Not to mention the trust factor.

You are thinking "nepotism" for a corp with shareholders.

Whereas even in a small family business most often has family members working non-stop, because most employee wouldn't even come close to working the kind of ours needed to run a small business, nor could the bus afford it.
38 posted on 04/09/2005 8:38:50 AM PDT by roses of sharon
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To: Cincinatus' Wife; roses of sharon

hooray for our side.


39 posted on 04/09/2005 10:09:26 AM PDT by ken21 (if you didn't see it on tv, then it didn't happen. /s)
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To: All

Tom DeLay for President 2008.


40 posted on 04/09/2005 11:27:28 AM PDT by rephope
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