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To: in hoc signo vinces
Nothing short of Bush building a 5000 mile, 1000 foot high, gun turreted, mined perimeter, electrified razor wire, rabid nutra rat protected, wall will do for some...

And cut the budget too.

18 posted on 05/16/2006 6:28:15 AM PDT by rhombus
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To: rhombus

Part the red sea...turn lead into gold...cure a ham, walk under water...etc..etc.

Bush should have done nothing on the economy (no tax cuts), nothing against jihadis, and should have just built a border wall...and borked an intern.


28 posted on 05/16/2006 6:37:06 AM PDT by in hoc signo vinces ("Houston, TX...a waiting quagmire for jihadis. American gals are worth fighting for!")
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To: rhombus
And cut the budget too.

But I did cut the budget in 2006. Well, only the part that included the authorized hiring of 10,000 new border agents.

Michael Hedges, Houston Chronicle

Wednesday, February 9, 2005

Washington -- The law signed by President Bush less than two months ago to add thousands of border patrol agents along the U.S.-Mexico border has crashed into the reality of Bush's austere federal budget proposal, officials said Tuesday. Officially approved by Bush on Dec. 17 after extensive bickering in Congress, the National Intelligence Reform Act included the requirement to add 10,000 border patrol agents in the five years beginning with 2006. Roughly 80 percent of the agents were to patrol the southern U.S. border from Texas to California, along which thousands of people cross into the United States illegally every year.

But Bush's proposed 2006 budget, revealed Monday, funds only 210 new border agents. The shrunken increase reflects the lack of money for an army of border guards and the capacity to train them, officials said. Retired Adm. James Loy, acting head of the Department of Homeland Security until nominee Michael Chertoff takes over, said funding only 210 new agents was a "recognition that we need to balance those things as we go on down the road with other priorities."

The White House referred questions about the border agents to the Homeland Security Department.

The law signed by Bush had a caveat that went virtually unreported at the time. A summary, published by the Senate Government Affairs Committee, required the government to increase the number of border patrol agents by at least 2,000 per year, "subject to available appropriations."
I think the real priorities are evident.
36 posted on 05/16/2006 6:45:36 AM PDT by George W. Bush
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