hen you're not listening. Howard Dean and John Kerry have both said loudly and often that they plan to maintain defense spending if at all possible, and raise it if necessary.
It's not their fault that you lack verbal comprehension.
BTW, Sore Loserman tried to get a cheap shot on Dean last night, claiming he was an anti-Semite. The reason? Dean proposed to step back to an "honest broker" status as regards Israel and Palestine, which history shows is the only way the two step away from their "blades locked at each other's throat" stance.
Sure. A man whose wife and kids are Jewish is an anti-Semite. Right.
The average American is unaware of anything but the stereotype that Democrats are soft on defense; commitments to defense by any Democratic candidate would surprise many voters considering the vicious lampooning of the left as chronically weak and overly passive throughout the past year.
Lieberman was technically aiming more at exposing the fact that Dean would abandon long-time allies, although I agree the point of the jab was to provide an opening by which the Vermont politician could expose himself to the criticism of Jewish voters.
EDIT: Sorry, that's 60% of Americans don't want to re-elect George Bush; 47% of Americans would elect a Democratic candidate.
I have news for you: 60% of Americans will be disappointed because George W. Bush is the only Republican candidate that’s going to run. And 47% of Americans isn’t over half of the population either.
How are you going to "do something about it" (great plan, BTW), without infringing on Americans' rights? Like it or not, it is somebody's right to legal redress if they feel they have been wronged. You will find no argument from me against the idea that tort reform is needed, but how will you accomplish this?
However unpopular, an argument that those choosing private healthcare open themselves to risks of malpractice could be made. At that point, we’d set a series of wide-ranging “caps” on the potential handout of malfeasant physicians or HMOs.
George Bush's request for an additional $87 billion a year for the occupation, if redirected to the US, would be just about enough to implement Dr. Dean's health care plan.
Dean could never actually put his hands on that $87 billion unless he planned to pull the United States completely out of the War in Iraq, an action that could have potentially catastrophic consequences vis a vie public perception of American resolve in foreign policy. Assuming he planned to stay in under the guise of U.N. approval, much of that $87 billion would still go to troops in Iraq anyway: U.N. forces won’t arrive overnight.
All of which can be laid directly on the doorstep of George Walker Bush, with a flaming bag of dog poo.
I wasn’t aware that George Walker Bush planned to pull American troops out of Iraq and change the way other countries analyze the calculus of power.
Quit putting words into my mouth, asshole. Obviously, abandoning the troops - or Iraq - would be a very bad idea at this moment (BTW, the President is doing a great job of abandoning Afghanistan by himself). However, it is illustrative that if George W. Bush had not pursued his personal vendetta in Iraq, we would have that kind of money in the budget.
We abandoned Afghanistan from the viewpoint of reconstruction, not military action.
“Personal vendetta?” Opinion masquerading as fact. You’ve no actual proof to substantiate that Bush “went to war for daddy” – especially because the entire concept of war in Iraq was a non-issue until September 11th of last year. The younger Bush reopened the door to criticisms of his father’s actions in Iraq in he first place.