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Mustang Bobby. Steve Benen examines the foolish inconsistency of the right-wing outrage over the plans to put terrorists on trial in civilian courts. Full Article at The Reaction
I was just remembering the media blitz aimed at George Bush, how he was an idiot, uninformed, no gravitas and other such criticisms. Full Article at TheNewsTribune.com
Frances Townsend, former Assistant to US President George W. Bush for Homeland Security and Counter Terrorism testifies before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, full committee hearing on 'The Fort Hood Attack: A Preliminar... View Photo »
India has arrived as a strong democratic country in the world. It is a tolerant, peaceful and multi-religious democracy
I have learned over the past decade if I want to know what's really going on in the United States, I have to cruise through the foreign media to see what's creating a furor or causing a stink. Full Article at Political Cortex: Brain Food for the Body Politic
New Delhi: Moving beyond the transformational nuclear deal, India and the US are set to unveil a new template for deepening strategic partnership on key global challenges, ranging from counter-terrorism to non-proliferation and climate change, when... Full Article at Zee News
Rep. Todd Tiahrt, R-Goddard, has introduced a bill in Congress to halt further spending to bail out financial institutions and automakers. Full Article at Kansas.com
Frances Townsend, former Assistant to US President George W. Bush for Homeland Security and Counter Terrorism, and US Army General John Keane, former Vice Chief of Staff, testify before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, fu... View Photo »
It's not so much Khalid Shaikh Mohammed who's on trial, but the Bush administration.
In August Barack Obama sought to reassure his supporters as they contemplated a plunge in the opinion polls, a possible defeat on health care reform and the nagging worry that Obama, master of the poetry of campaigning, was getting stuck governing in... Full Article at The New York Times
WASHINGTON – U.S. assistance to help Mexico fight drug traffickers will probably continue beyond the allotted three years of the Mérida Initiative, with expanding cooperation but not joint law enforcement or military operations "on Mexican soil any... Full Article at Dallas Morning News
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Frances Townsend, former Assistant to US President George W. Bush for Homeland Security and Counter Terrorism testifies before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, full committee hearing on 'The Fort Hood Attack: A Preliminary Assessment' on November 19, 2009...
View Photo »Frances Townsend, former Assistant to US President George W. Bush for Homeland Security and Counter Terrorism, and US Army General John Keane, former Vice Chief of Staff, testify before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, full committee hearing on 'The Fort...
View Photo »William Safire receives the Presidential Medal of Freedom from U.S. President George W. Bush (R) in the East Room of the White House in Washington, December 15, 2006.
View Photo »Former President George W. Bush, right, and wife, Laura Bush, stand during the playing of the National Anthem, before the announcement of a community service project called Service Learning Adventures in North Texas, or "SLANT 45," at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas, Monday, Sept. 2...
View Photo »Muntazer al-Zaidi (C), the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, wears a new pair of leather shoes as he arrives to give a press conference following his release at the al-Baghdadia offices in the capital Baghdad on September 15,...
View Photo »Muntazer al-Zaidi, the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, gives a press conference at the al-Baghdadia offices in the capital Baghdad on September 15, 2009. Zaidi was released after a nine-month stint in prison.
View Photo »The Iraqi flag is seen in the background as Muntazer al-Zaidi (L), the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, arrives to give a press conference following his release at the al-Baghdadia offices in the capital Baghdad on September...
View Photo »Muntazer al-Zaidi (C), the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, wears a new pair of leather shoes as he arrives to give a press conference following his release at the al-Baghdadia offices in the capital Baghdad on September 15,...
View Photo »Muntazer al-Zaidi, the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, gives a press conference at the al-Baghdadia offices in the capital Baghdad on September 15, 2009. Zaidi was released after a nine-month stint in prison.
View Photo »Muntazer al-Zaidi, the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, arrives at a press conference following his release at the al-Baghdadia offices in the capital Baghdad on September 15, 2009.
View Photo »The aunt of Muntazer al-Zaidi, the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, ululates as she celebrates his arrival at a press conference following his release at the al-Baghdadia offices in the capital Baghdad on September 15, 2009.
View Photo »Muntazer al-Zaidi (C), the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, wears a new pair of leather shoes as he arrives to give a press conference following his release at the al-Baghdadia offices in the capital Baghdad on September 15,...
View Photo »Muntazer al-Zaidi, the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, gives a press conference at the al-Baghdadia offices in the capital Baghdad on September 15, 2009. Zaidi was released after a nine-month stint in prison.
View Photo »Muntazer al-Zaidi, the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, gives a press conference at the al-Baghdadia offices in Baghdad on September 15, 2009. Zaidi was released after a nine-month stint in prison.
View Photo »Muntazer al-Zaidi, the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, gives a press conference at the al-Baghdadia offices in the capital Baghdad on September 15, 2009. Zaidi was released after a nine-month stint in prison.
View Photo »Female family members ululate upon hearing the news of the release of Muntazer al-Zaidi (banner), the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, at his home in Baghdad on September 15, 2009.
View Photo »Muntazer al-Zaidi, the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, hugs his sister following his release on September 15, 2009, at the Iraqi Al-Baghdadia studios in Baghdad. Zaidi was released after a nine-month stint in prison.
View Photo »Surrounded by security Muntazer al-Zaidi, the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, arrives at the al-Baghdadia television station following his release, on September 15, 2009, in Baghdad.
View Photo »Muntazer al-Zaidi, the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, hugs his sister following his release on September 15, 2009, at the Iraqi Al-Baghdadia studios in Baghdad. Zaidi was released after a nine-month stint in prison.
View Photo »Muntazer al-Zaidi, the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, is greeted upon arrival at the Iraqi Al-Baghdadia studios in Baghdad on September 15, 2009. Zaidi was released after a nine-month stint in prison.
View Photo »Muntazer al-Zaidi, the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, hugs his sister following his release on September 15, 2009, at the Iraqi Al-Baghdadia studios in Baghdad. Zaidi was released after a nine-month stint in prison.
View Photo »Muntazer al-Zaidi (L), the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, is kissed on the cheek by his uncle as he arrives at the Iraqi Al-Baghdadia studios in Baghdad on September 15, 2009, following his release.
View Photo »Muntadhar al-Zeidi, center, an Iraqi reporter who threw his shoes at former President George W. Bush, arrives at the offices of his employer Baghdadiyah TV after his release from a Baghdad prison Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2009.
View Photo »Muntazer al-Zaidi, the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, is surrounded by family and colleagues as he gives a press conference at the al-Baghdadia offices in the capital Baghdad on September 15, 2009.
View Photo »Muntazer al-Zaidi, the Iraqi television reporter jailed for throwing his shoes at former US president George W. Bush, is hugged by a colleague upon his arrival at the al-Baghdadia television station following his release, on September 15, 2009, in Baghdad.
View Photo »Frances Townsend, former Assistant to US President George W. Bush for Homeland Security and Counter Terrorism, and US Army General John Keane, former Vice Chief of Staff, testify before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, full committee hearing on 'The Fort...
View Photo »warning that Iraq is verging on civil war
It's not so much Khalid Shaikh Mohammed who's on trial, but the Bush administration.
I hope we don’t abandon the people of Afghanistan
This is a plan that originated in the Clinton Administration. It was reaffirmed in the Bush Administration and it remains the policy of the United States in the Obama Administration. I don’t want anyone in the region or elsewhere to have any doubt about our policy, which remains the same.
India will be part of the mix
Even before the data was made public, House Democrats charged the Bush administration was trying to hide bad economic news by releasing the numbers on a Friday when people are paying more attention to the upcoming weekend. In previous years, the estimates were released either on a Tuesday or Thursday.
India has arrived as a strong democratic country in the world. It is a tolerant, peaceful and multi-religious democracy
President Bush, trying to calm a political storm, released his Vietnam-era military records Friday to counter Democrats' suggestions that he shirked his duty in the Texas Air National Guard. But there was no new evidence that he was in Alabama during a period when Democrats have questioned whether he sh...
Life has changed, but some things haven't changed like my respect for India
When their side controlled the presidency, the House, the Senate, they jettisoned paying for things ... And what happened? We went from substantial surpluses under the Clinton administration, to substantial deficits under the Bush administration.
We must see the possibility of a seat for India in the United Nations Security Council
Conservative opponents of Barack Obama have applied the epithet ‘socialism’ to his ambitious plans to exert greater federal control over health care and energy policy, even though the Bush administration, the most conservative in modern history, itself orchestrated a $700 billion bailout of Wall Street
The Middle East too will one day become an ally
White House is starting to use the Senate in the same way that the Bush administration used China - as a scapegoat for doing too little. You don't get to blame the Senate if you haven't pushed the Senate as hard as you possibly can.
Regime change in Iraq was the official policy of the US much before I became the president
Rob Simmons and his mentors, George Bush and Karl Rove, have played politics with terrorism and this country’s national security since the moment 9/11 occurred. It’s disgusting and it doesn’t merit further response.
The world is much better off without Saddam Hussein. There is no question about that. Hussein was a threat to the US
India's [ Images ] status as President Obama's first state dinner special guests (and President George W Bush's [ Images ] last) is due to their strategic importance to the United States
The US and India should work together to win the war in Afghanistan
When George Bush senior visited Seoul as U.S. president 20 years ago, things were simple -- the U.S. was the undisputed main ally and trade partner. Astonishingly, there was only one weekly flight from South Korea to China, the communist foe.
If the Taliban, al Qaeda and extremists are allowed to take over Afghanistan, they would have a safe haven again.
Yesterday was the day that his past caught up with him. His alliance with George Bush in the prosecution of the Iraq war was deeply unpopular with most EU countries.
India sets a really good example for countries which wonder if a multi-religious society can be at peace
When Mr. Shannon was the former Assistant Secretary of State for President Bush, I expressed concerns then about the Administration’s ‘hands-off’ approach to Latin America ... Since President Obama took office in January, the administration has taken a different approach, agreeing to a path for Cuba’s a...
He would be very vocal about India’s interests ... At the same time, we would be explicit about our shared values.
- drilon_i
2 minutes ago
- poliwatcher
37 minutes ago
#whatdoyoudo if George W bush comes upto you like *Yo what's poppin ma nigguh*???
- HDiggT 42 minutes ago
@MatRenzler. Didn't George W Bush Jr's wife kill someone in a car accident also?
- sunshinejourney 4 hours ago
- TheStitchWitch
5 hours ago
