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A Day in the Life of President Bush (photos): 6.16.05
whitehouse.gov; yahoo.com ^ | Thursday June 16, 2005 | Snugs

Posted on 06/16/2005 2:54:10 PM PDT by snugs

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To: snugs
"Please, Dr. Frist, you got some good pills in that doctor bag?"


61 posted on 06/16/2005 4:38:00 PM PDT by GretchenM ("I dote on his very absence." - William Shakespeare (Did he know Bill Clinton?)
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To: LUV W; GOP-Pat

You know, I would like it if the dems and the Republicans could work together more, but the dems are so concerned with being anti-Bush, being the party of obstruction and the party of "NO", that they act like such idiots, most recent example, Sen. Durbin's comments about Gitmo.


62 posted on 06/16/2005 4:40:31 PM PDT by Theresawithanh (As long as Dean's the head of the D-N-C, it just looks better for the G-O-P!!)
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To: Theresawithanh
I remember seeing a report about it on Yahoo last night and a few weeks ago just before the trial. If I remember correctly he parked his van near the building where the VP was due to speak at and some explosives or a gun or something was discovered in the van. Others may remember better.
63 posted on 06/16/2005 4:41:42 PM PDT by snugs (An English Cheney Chick - BIG TIME)
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To: Theresawithanh

My hope and fervent prayer is that the dems will get scooped in the '06 election -- right into a super minority in the Senate.


64 posted on 06/16/2005 4:43:57 PM PDT by GretchenM ("I dote on his very absence." - William Shakespeare (Did he know Bill Clinton?)
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To: LUV W

I bought through Amazon it is produced by a software company called Nova. Just Amy has just bought it as well It was recomended to us by Billie


65 posted on 06/16/2005 4:44:04 PM PDT by snugs (An English Cheney Chick - BIG TIME)
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To: GretchenM

Maybe she did not care to be so close to the Majority Leader


66 posted on 06/16/2005 4:45:41 PM PDT by snugs (An English Cheney Chick - BIG TIME)
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To: Theresawithanh; LUV W

I'd like to see them work together also, but it just fries me for the dems to keep up a drum beat of personal destruction against the President and other Reps and then the Reps turn around and help them out at every corner, as if it will endure them to the dems. They should know by now that the dems are doing NOTHING but using them to make them look good, while filibustering everything the Reps want to do. In my opinion, I think they should make the dems put up their own agenda and the Reps do the same and then vote them up or down. IT makes it appear that the Reps don't have any ideas of their own either and MUST get a dem's name on everything. I don't mind that so much but they need to watch WHICH dem they join forces with.


67 posted on 06/16/2005 4:46:47 PM PDT by GOP-Pat
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To: gopwinsin04

Condi's got better legs.


68 posted on 06/16/2005 4:47:03 PM PDT by My2Cents
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To: Theresawithanh

I wish they could work together too. But I really wish that the R's would just get a backbone and stand firm whether or not the D's agree with them. I am tired of the people who are supposed to represent me playing nicey-nice with folks who only want their power back, any way they can get it! Grrrrr!........*deep breath*...now, I'm okay! LOL!


69 posted on 06/16/2005 4:47:56 PM PDT by luvie (GOD BLESS OUR TROOPS AND GOD BLESS THE USA!)
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To: GOP-Pat

I totally agree with you! Get a backbone, R's!!!!


70 posted on 06/16/2005 4:49:02 PM PDT by luvie (GOD BLESS OUR TROOPS AND GOD BLESS THE USA!)
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To: Theresawithanh

I agree. Under normal circumstances, I can go with bipartisanship, but the Dimwads are not normal. Besides, we have a majority! -- we should be able to ignore the Democrats' rants and wailings.


71 posted on 06/16/2005 4:49:41 PM PDT by My2Cents
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To: snugs

THANKS, Snugs.....THAT is the pic on laptop!!!


72 posted on 06/16/2005 4:49:55 PM PDT by goodnesswins (Our military......the world's HEROES!)
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To: snugs; All

The Man Behind the Attack on Guantanamo
By Rocco DiPippo
FrontPageMagazine.com | June 16, 2005


The general leading the force to free the captive enemy from the U.S. detention center in Guantanamo Bay, and inflict a humiliating defeat on the United States is so-called “civil rights” and “Constitutional” attorney Michael Ratner. It was Ratner who led the way in recruiting elite lawyers to defend the enemy combatants being interrogated at Gitmo. But Ratner is a long-time leader of two pro-Communist and anti-American organizations who have for decades have lent aid and comfort to America's enemies in the Cold War and beyond.

Michael Ratner is a lawyer who began his legal career in the late 1960s at the National Lawyers Guild, a Soviet created front group which still embraces its Communist heritage. He worked his way up through the NLG’s radical ranks to become its president, then moved on to hold the same position at the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), which share's the NLG's anti-American radicalism and was founded by pro-Castro lawyers Arthur Kinoy and William Kunstler. Among its many outrages, the CCR has defended domestic and international terrorists, and has honored Ratner's NLG colleague and convicted terrorist enabler Lynne Stewart, a modern Legal Left idol. Since 9/11, Ratner and his comrades have attempted to extend undeserved “civil rights” on Islamist murderers with notable success. On this front, Ratner and the Legal Left have dealt America its few setbacks in the War on Terror.

One year ago the U.S. suffered its first major loss in this war, a strategic and propaganda defeat, related to America’s abilities to imprison and interrogate enemies that it captures. Abu Ghraib was a huge propaganda victory, both for Islamists, who used it to “justify” their violent attacks, and for fifth column leftists, who made use of the media’s saturation coverage to portray the U.S. as the world’s biggest oppressor, the Bush administration as a cabal of Nazi thugs, and the Iraq as an immoral undertaking. The gross overplay of that prison scandal in concert with other overblown and sometimes fabricated stories – like Newsweek’s “Koran in the toilet” canard – emboldened Islamic terrorists, eroded U.S. public support for the War on Terror, and damaged America’s credibility around the world.



Now, as our memories of 9/11 continue to fade into the past, Michael Ratner has opened another battle against the War on Terror – at Guantanamo Bay. Never mind that almost all of the prisoners at Guantanamo were picked up by U.S. forces doing battle for the Taliban and al-Qaeda in Afghanistan, or that many of them are, in Defense Secretary Rumsfeld words, “the worst of the worst.” Never mind that al-Qaeda members and close associates of Osama bin Laden fill their ranks, or that they’re trained to fabricate tales of abuse to erode their enemy’s morale. Although most of them are violent religious fanatics, and although they’ve been treated better than any captured combatants in world history, Michael Ratner and his lawyers want to provide them the chance to trumpet their “grievances” to a sympathetic press, exploit legal loopholes, and ultimately return to the battlefield.



The fight to liberate Guantanamo prison



As the wreckage of the Twin Towers was still smoldering, Michael Ratner began planning his attack on America’s post-9/11 defense strategy. Realizing that it would take major legal clout to seriously subvert the War on Terror, Ratner began taking steps to attract major U.S law firms to his cause. First, he adopted a high public profile against the Bush administration’s reaction to 9/11 by savaging every facet of its plan to protect the U.S. from future attack. Working the “civil liberties” angle for all its worth, Ratner raged at the Patriot Act, railed against profiling techniques designed to ferret out Islamic terrorists in our midst, and opposed invading Afghanistan to hunt down and capture Osama bin Laden and his Taliban henchmen.



The mainstream press assisted Ratner by promoting him as a champion of civil rights while carefully hiding his lifelong radicalims from the American public (see below). When the Islamists’ battleground changed, Ratner took a prominent role in antiwar movement by opposing Operation Iraqi Freedom. Ratner became a staple of antiwar, anti-Bush events. More importantly, he filed a series of high-profile nuisance suits against the Bush administration, one of which attempted to have Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld arrested and tried for “war crimes” by German courts.



In April 2002, Ratner led the Center for Constitutional Rights in filing a class action suit, Turkmen v. Ashcroft, on behalf of Muslim illegal aliens and non-citizens who were picked up for questioning shortly after the 9/11 attacks. The suit alleges “that the INS arrested this group on the pretext of minor immigration violations and secretly detained them for the weeks and months the FBI took to clear them of terrorism, in violation of the U.S. Constitution and international human rights law.” Filed against former Attorney General John Ashcroft, FBI Director Robert Mueller, former INS Commissioner James Ziglar, and officials of the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, the Turkmen case catapulted Ratner into the legal spotlight and – according to him – gained him valuable legal help from other firms once too nervous to touch cases involving 9/11 suspects. He set out to recruit pro bono help, and sympathetic leftist counselors now had fewer inhibitions to joining him.



After suffering a series of legal setbacks in his pro-terrorist legal crusade, Ratner won a major victory in Rasul v. Bush, a suit he brought seeking to grant Islamist terror suspects access to U.S. courts. That victory cleared the way for him to gain direct access to Guantanamo’s prisoners. With this, the trickle of queries from other law firms soon became a steady stream of volunteers to his cause.



Now it’s a torrent, and major U.S. firms including Clifford Chance; Dorsey & Whitney; Allen & Overy; Covington & Burling; and Wilmer, Cutler, Pickering, Hale & Dorr – the last of which also does business with companies involved in the U.S. defense, national security, and government contracts sectors – have teamed up with Michael Ratner and CCR to provide legal services to terrorists and terrorist suspects. (Does the firm know Ratner’s background? If so, does the government know about its connection to Ratner?) Today, teams of lawyers fly to Guantanamo Bay to help people who, if given the chance, would kill all of them and make the Koran their only basis of law.



Obviously, there are many ethical lawyers and law firms that represent violent criminals and defend those with whom they may have deep moral and ideological disagreements – but Ratner is not one of them. “I don't usually take cases where I disagree with the politics of the people involved,” he said in a 2002 interview, clarifying where he stands on anti-American terrorism.



Ratner’s odd view of “justice” stems from his decades in service to the radical cause. Ratner’s pro-Communist, pro-terrorist views are perhaps best illustrated by his affinity for Cuba’s totalitarian regime and by his love of the man who set up Castro’s KGB-inspired prison system, Ché Guevara. Guevara – who was known for taping his victims’ mouths shut to avoid hearing their screams as he tortured and murdered his way through Cuba – is, despite his real life incompetence, a hero of mythical proportions to the Left. Ratner chose to sing Che’s praises in a1997 book:



…for many of us seeking to change our society, Cuba was a desirable model. And it was Ché Guevara, more than any other figure, who embodied both that revolution and solidarity with peoples fighting to be free from U.S. hegemony…Ché has remained my hero ever since. (Emphasis added.)



In the same book, Ratner recounts a hiking trip he once took to retrace the path of Guevara:



Tears streamed down my cheeks, my energy was renewed and I completed the hike. To be like Ché: To be selfless, to make a family of one’s comrades, to give up comfort and material gain for the revolution, to risk and probably give one’s life to free humanity.



Though he fights to keep violent convicted criminals who flee to Cuba safe from extradition back to America, “civil rights champion” Ratner has never spoken up for the civil rights of non-violent Cuban dissidents – including the journalists, artists, and activists who have been tossed into Castro’s horrific prisons after mock trials. Ironically, some of those hellholes are a short distance from the U.S. run camp at Guantanamo Bay.



The Soros Connection


Ratner’s CCR has almost always received modest funding, most of it from far-Left organizations and leftist-run foundations. But funding of CCR increased by leaps and bounds after Ratner adopted his post-9/11 high profile.



The George Soros-funded Open Society Institute, the Tides Foundation, and other leftist support groups began heavily funding Ratner and CCR’s anti-Bush, antiwar, anti-American agendas.



Thanks to these forces, the proper relationship between prisoner and guard, deemed vital for successful interrogation, has now been damaged and the Department of Defense (DOD) faces a dilemma. Ratner’s suit has already somewhat undermined its effectiveness at Guantanamo Bay. If the DOD closes Gitmo, the prisoners are set free or are moved to the U.S. where it will be nearly impossible to deny them access to U.S. courts. If the department moves the prisoners to another location outside of U.S. jurisdiction, Ratner and his fifth column legal army will simply begin another high-profile fight for the prisoners’ “rights,” and the propaganda battle begins anew with continued erosion of popular and political support for the War on Terror.



Though the battle for Guantanamo’s prisoners is not yet over, but from the time the first plane-load of lawyers touched down in Cuba, two things became abundantly clear: Islamist psychopaths had won a major victory against America’s resolve to fight them.



And Michael Ratner, George Soros, and a host of prestigious American law firms helped them.



Rocco DiPippo, a free-lance political writer, publishes The Autonomist blog and is a contributor to David Horowitz’s Moonbat Central group blog.


73 posted on 06/16/2005 4:50:38 PM PDT by SoCalPol (Hey Chirac, Call Germany Next Time. They Know The Way To Paris)
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To: gopwinsin04

Thanks for finding this pic, gopwinsin04.

Please notice that our Sec of State has much, much better looking legs than Angelina Jolie!


74 posted on 06/16/2005 4:52:10 PM PDT by jtill
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To: My2Cents
Condi and Angelina meet the guy from the film 'Hotel Rwanda' who saved his citizens from genocide.


75 posted on 06/16/2005 4:52:59 PM PDT by gopwinsin04
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To: LUV W; All
Wow I seem to have started something with the photos of Hilliary I wondered what the reaction would be. In a way I feel a bit sorry for Bill Frist because I believe he is a good kind man and he probably sees joining forces with Hilliary as a way to implement something that he really believes in because he know that health care is a real pet subject of hers.

I am certain that many will not agree that it is the correct way to go about it but IMHO Bill Frist is doing this from a non political point of view and from a humanitarian view point who know what view point Hilliary is doing it from but maybe Frist thinks that this is so important to get through that he is able to blot out why she is supporting it. Thats my take from across the water and obviously not knowing all the nuances from both sides.
76 posted on 06/16/2005 4:54:09 PM PDT by snugs (An English Cheney Chick - BIG TIME)
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To: gopwinsin04

Jolie looks like she's on something. What's with the dopey grin?


77 posted on 06/16/2005 4:54:23 PM PDT by My2Cents
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To: goodnesswins

My pleasure


78 posted on 06/16/2005 4:54:56 PM PDT by snugs (An English Cheney Chick - BIG TIME)
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To: jtill
Angelina also visits with the Chair of the Foreign Relations Committee Sen. Lugar of Indiana.


79 posted on 06/16/2005 4:56:29 PM PDT by gopwinsin04
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To: gopwinsin04

Who is Angelina?


80 posted on 06/16/2005 4:58:00 PM PDT by snugs (An English Cheney Chick - BIG TIME)
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