Joel Brinkley is a former Pulitzer Prize-winning foreign correspondent for The New York Times and now a professor of journalism at Stanford University.
1 posted on
05/27/2008 8:00:16 AM PDT by
SmithL
To: SmithL
You mean no more hugs and kisses from the UN???
To: SmithL
Was D’Escoto the former cleric whom Pope John Paul II told to get out of politics?
To: SmithL
Actually, I would be in favor of the next General Secretary of the UN being either Hugo Chavez or the propaganda minister of Kim Jong Il, or even a leader of Hizbollah.
Why? For obvious reasons.
To tell the US in a loud, clear, voice that they want us to be destroyed, our people enslaved or murdered, for nuclear weapons to be given to every kook on the planet, and that they fully support the Democrat party in accomplishing these goals.
To: SmithL
I’m curious. Was this election certified by Jimmy Carter?
6 posted on
05/27/2008 8:38:42 AM PDT by
printhead
To: SmithL
U.N.; short for Useless Nations.
Another Freeper’s tagline but I like it.
7 posted on
05/27/2008 8:58:08 AM PDT by
NaughtiusMaximus
(Bible toting, bitter and armed with slashing sarcasm.)
To: SmithL
In other UN news:
Charity: Aid workers raping, abusing children (CNN - May 27, 2008 By Stephanie Busari)
Humanitarian aid workers and United Nation peacekeepers are sexually abusing small children in several war-ravaged and food-poor countries, a leading European charity has said.
8 posted on
05/27/2008 9:51:25 AM PDT by
weegee
(We cant keep our homes on 72 at all times & just expect that other countries are going to say OK -BO)
To: SmithL
"He will hold office through the new American president's first eight months in office, when Washington will be trying to repair its relations with the United Nations..."
What's to repair, and why? A large portion of our problems has come from kowtowing to the UN. Bush I's biggest mistake in office was to go to the UN hat-in-hand for "permission" to make good on our treaty obligations and defend our ally Kuwait. That set a very regrettable precedent, ceding sovereignty to the posturing pooh-bahs and strutting tin-horns of the UN. Later, over-respect for the UN, in large part, led Bush I to leave Saddam in office. (A notion of counter-balancing an ambitious Iran was another reason, of course.) Bush II's biggest mistake was in telegraphing our intentions for months during his courtship of the UN. This allowed Saddam to spirit his WMDs to Syria and his Ba'athist friends to set up a post-Saddam insurgency.
The UN is the problem, not the solution. The best possible news would be that our relationship with the UN is irreparable and hopeless, not the opposite.
9 posted on
05/27/2008 7:00:23 PM PDT by
RightOnTheLeftCoast
([Fred Thompson/Clarence Thomas 2008!])
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