Posted on 07/15/2005 5:46:12 AM PDT by Richard Poe
Hmm. I'd be interested to know which 20th-century presidents you would consider to have been superior to Bush.
And whom would you prefer in his stead, among the available choices in contemporary public life?
Would "none of the above" work?
Great work.
carenot replies: "Would `none of the above' work?"
Does it work? Well... let's say it's not the most practical plan I've heard proposed. ;-D
Ruddy was shouted down but not debunked. I thought it was pretty strange.
a) Nixon...
b) Gingrich..
Note**..
Actually I didn't like any 20th century presidents.. and Gingrich hasn't chance in hell at being Potus.. As Ann Coulter said of american voters.. 20% are conservative, 20% are liberal, and 60% are morons.. but I would add that 50% of the conservatives are RINOs.. which would make 90% of the american voting public MORONS.. 20%+10%+60%=90%..
I voted for Dubya twice and his Daddy three times Pr+Vice+Vice...
Obviously I'm ONE OF THE MORONS...
LoL...
Hmm. If they let me do a second edition of Hillary's Secret War, I should interview you. Would you mind sending me a Freepmail with your contact info?
Conflict of interest Ruddy notes that Starr shared some unlikely business partners with the Clintons. "During the time Starr was investigating the Clintons, Starr was working for a company wholly owned by China's Peoples Liberation Army and notorious arms dealer Wang Jun," writes Ruddy.Update... an automotive wheel-making Michigan-based subsidiary of CITIC was just raided by the FBI.Wang Jun was one of Starr's personal legal clients. While serving as independent counsel, Starr simultaneously argued a case before the National Labor Relations Board on behalf of one of Wang's companies, CitiSteel, a subsidiary of CITIC. Wang Jun serves as chairman of CITIC, but the company is wholly owned by the Peoples' Liberation Army of China. Starr won the case for his Chinese clients.
In addition to being a major arms dealer, Wang Jun is also a high-level Chinese military intelligence operative and one of the major players in the Chinagate scandal. In ordinary times, the mere fact that Ken Starr was on Wang Jun's payroll would have disqualified him from acting as independent counsel. But these were not ordinary times.
Hill told Ruddy that Starr's entire investigative team had been infiltrated by Clinton operatives. Even the FBI agents assigned to Starr "were not working for Ken Starr in his Whitewater probe but for Reno and the White House, giving the Clinton administration de facto control over the Starr investigations," writes Ruddy.
ping
CITIC is the parent company over the automotive wheel manufacturer that the FBI just raided in Michigan
Thanks—I knew I should ping you on that one!
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