Posted on 03/01/2006 11:33:34 AM PST by Reagan Man
PING
Interesting article.
Have you read Andrew McCarthy's article that was posted on National Review Online? He covers a lot of the same territory - but it's still a good read.
Here's the link:
http://www.nationalreview.com/mccarthy/mccarthy200603010741.asp
My reservations about the Ports deal continue to grow and grow.
This deal on the ports, would allow the Country and its rulers, to operate port terminals in America. Not companies based overseas, but countries that are sovereign nations.
Agreed. Thanks for the link. I'll check it out.
ping
Right out of Buchanan's notebook of talking points.
more racism and bigotry from reagan man... /sarcasm
Like old Terry Jeffrey, old Reagan Man remains a staunch advocate for strict conservatism, over here and over there. Thank you kindly.
Irrstional irrelevanvies. A collossal out pouring of smoke.
No substantial rebuttal I see, just words from the talking points distributed by the pro side.
here's more information, don't know if you've seen this one yet:
UAE has the same ranking on political rights and civil liberties as Iran.
http://www.freedomhouse.org/template.cfm?page=22&year=2005&country=6856
Sad and disgusting bump
Most likely the Emir's subject would elect bin Laden's clone, if they could.
We should confront this fact sooner, rather than later. So we can get prepared correctly.
We may need a procurement order for WMDs sufficient to break previous records.
I've seen lots of articles from Human Events mocking Bush's attempts to spread democracy. However, if Bush works with a country that isn't a Democracy, he gets slammed for that as well.
People in the UAE have considerably more freedoms than they do in most other Arab countries. They are not a democracy. Their people are not free to express themselves by our standards. However, it's much better than other Arab countries.
So should we work with the UAE to improve on such issues? Should we work with the UAE to combat terrorism? Should we take our common goals and use them to encourage them to change over time? Or should we shun them and forgo any mutually beneficial cooperation that may help us and encourage them to change?
It's easy to criticize. It's hard to make real choices and do what's best.
None of this stuff matters to that crowd. I did have a fun time going back into peoples posts who are for the deal and finding things like "there is no moderate muslim", etc. The twisting people can do when they are given an order is mind-boggling.
Btw, you were right... so far anyway. ;^)
"any mutually beneficial cooperation" doesn't have to mean the port deal.
DOBBS: President Bush's family and members of the Bush administration have long-standing business connections with the United Arab Emirates, and those connections are raising new concerns and questions tonight in some quarters about why the president is defying his very own party leadership and his party in defending the Dubai port deal.
CHRISTINE ROMANS: The oil-rich United Arab Emirates is a major investor in The Carlyle Group, the private equity investment firm where President Bush's father once served as senior adviser and is a who's who of former high-level government officials. Just last year, Dubai International Capital, a government-backed buyout firm, invested in an $8 billion Carlyle fund.
Another family connection, the president's brother, Neil Bush, has reportedly received funding for his educational software company from the UAE investors. A call to his company was not returned.
Then there is the cabinet connection. Treasury Secretary John Snow was chairman of railroad company CSX/. After he left the company for the White House, CSX sold its international port operations to Dubai Ports World for more than a billion dollars.
In Connecticut today, Snow told reporters he had no knowledge of that CSX sale. "I learned of this transaction probably the same way members of the Senate did, by reading about it in the newspapers."
Another administration connection, President Bush chose a Dubai Ports World executive to head the U.S. Maritime Administration. David Sanborn, the former director of Dubai Ports' European and Latin American operations, he was tapped just last month to lead the agency that oversees U.S. port operations.
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