Fact, Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton, John Edwards, all voted for the war, heck, even Lieberman voted for it.http://www.senate.gov/legislative/LIS/roll_call_lists/roll_call_vote_cfm.cfm?congress=107&vote=00237&session=2#positionSo to hold your high-and-mighty position that you questioned it, Obama. There were 76 others that voted in favor of it as well, other than McCain, including your running mate. But you keep trying to pin it on him anyways. Best of luck with that.
8/29/2008 3:31:54 PM
Obama didn't vote for the war...or against it...since he wasn't there to vote
8/29/2008 3:32:33 PM
Every goddamned one of them was wrong.Why do so many still actively support it?
8/29/2008 3:34:27 PM
Palin didn't vote for the war
8/29/2008 3:35:28 PM
Obama publicly opposed an overwhelmingly popular war. That's not second guessing, it's first guessing. Biden acknowledged his mistake. Lieberman is no dove, and is a McCain supporter. What is your point?
8/29/2008 3:39:18 PM
8/29/2008 3:41:45 PM
This is about the zillionth time someone has insinuated anyone has "forgotten" that many democrats voted for the war. Nobody's forgotten, they've just forgiven. Many people still hold it against them - like me.
8/29/2008 3:42:14 PM
8/29/2008 3:45:55 PM
Is October 2002 early enough for you?
8/29/2008 3:58:21 PM
He addressed an anti-war crowd in overwhelmingly Democratic district. If you want to give him credit for opposing the war from the start, I'll happily give you that, and I respect him for that. If you want to give him credit for taking a principled stand against the tide of public opinion? Ehhh, not so much.
8/29/2008 4:04:52 PM
Obama opposed the war because he believed it was wrong, not because it was unpopular (it was quite popular nationally and in Illinois, if not in his district).McCain supported the war because he believed it was right, not because it was popular.McCain gets criticized for his position because he still says it was the right thing to do. It is used as an example (along with bomb, bomb, bomb Iran, opposition to shift troops to Afghanistan, opposition to a growing consensus that it is time for a timetable in Iraq) to make the case that his positions are not right for the country. I don't think there is anything high and mighty about that. I think your are confused. High and mighty would be, for example, questioning your opponent's patriotism, or would lose a war to win an election.
8/29/2008 4:24:10 PM
here's my point, 77 out of 100 thought it was "the right thing to do" at the time, including Biden/Clinton, etc..where they stand now is a different issue and a much more complex issue than just saying 'we need a timetable'
8/29/2008 5:10:35 PM
here's what YOU forgetthe congress authorized a bill to allow the president to use ALL measures UP TO AND INCLUDING the use of military force.here's what YOU forgetthe entire time during these debates, the Bush, Rummy, Cheney... were ALL swearing up one side and down the other that they were committed to diplomatic solutions with Iraq through the auspices of the UN and the IAEA, and that the military authorization was merely a formality so the US would have a credible option of military force visible on the table in order to effectively negotiate diplomatic solutions with Hussein's government.here's what YOU forgetthe US people via their congressmen and senators TRUSTED the Bush Administration to negotiate in their best interests. Interests that are CLEARLY not served by this > $1,000,000,000,000 (Trillion) war over ghost WMDs and other assorted lies.here's what YOU forgetthe Bush Administration, once they got their bill authorized, shifted their tone almost IMMEDIATELY from one of negotiation to one of belligerent hostility.here's what YOU forgetit was a time in which the Administration so almost completely cowed the media into blindly repeating their own press releases without criticisim, that there was hardly a person in media, government, or other position in the public eye who could dare criticise BushCo without being branded a traitor and blacklisted as a terror-loving-nutjob.
8/30/2008 1:54:37 PM
here's what YOU forget. Congress abdicated its responsibility ENTIRELY for declaring war. I don't care what Bush said, Congress should have never given Bush the ability to declare war. End. Of. Thread.
8/30/2008 5:04:16 PM
my brother was happy to serve 2 tours in iraq. he says the place a shit hole the first time and now it's a wonderful country he expects to visit one day in peace.as a liberal supporter of the war, what's all you guyz hatred towards the freedom of millions of people left in the dark for centuries?so what if we didn't find nuclear warheads on missile tips? isn't it good to take out murderers that would eventually crack us some other way anywho if given the chance.. aka (twin towers, pentagon, uss cole, embassies in africa, hijacked planes, etc etc..)if you guys enjoy a world like that, then go move over there and have a damn ball. btw: obama has served 140 some odd days in the senate, now i know why he's shutting the fuck up when asked about palin, b/c she's outserved him.sad but true guys. obama is too young to represent our party.
8/30/2008 5:10:50 PM
1) Iraq had nothing to do w/ 9/11. Al-Qaeda had a funcking bounty on Saddam's head. Doesn't seem like Saddam would be working with someone who wanted him dead.2) Saddam was impotent. He had no power to harm us3) We put Saddam in power. Twice.4) Why aren't we doing something about Saudi Arabia or China, two countries who have far worse human rights records? Or Sudan. Or Rwanda.
8/30/2008 5:14:10 PM
^^ oh look. Socks`` bought an alias. apparently he thinks he'll have more credibility as he continues to shill for Insane McCain.
8/30/2008 9:20:35 PM
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8/30/2008 10:59:41 PM