its where idiots like treetwista and sputter dwell
2/29/2008 11:46:05 AM
Well, I guess when you can't articulate thoughts and reason of the most basic level escapes you, then you have to resort to name calling.[Edited on February 29, 2008 at 11:48 AM. Reason : sadf]
2/29/2008 11:48:39 AM
2/29/2008 12:57:34 PM
Well for starters, his continual push with other Senators like Lindsey Graham to have "cruel, inhuman, and degrading" treatment made illegal. That loop hole is the one that the Bush Administration exploits to used enhanced interrogation techniques on foreign citizens.Not only that, but McCain's dedication to working with Democrats has earned him a hated spot among Republican senators:
2/29/2008 1:31:34 PM
2/29/2008 1:34:09 PM
http://www.pewclimate.org/policy_center/analyses/s_139_summary.cfmthat's one example of McCain working with Democrats. You are completely retarded. I don't have time to search the internet to refute every idiots baseless claims
2/29/2008 1:36:27 PM
God,McCain did not flip-flop. The bill he voted against earlier this week would not only ban waterboarding (which McCain recognizes as a form of torture) but any physical integrogation technique, such as sensory deprivation. He has acknowledged all along that additional techniques like these can and should be used.
2/29/2008 1:42:29 PM
2/29/2008 4:10:15 PM
^ I'm not sure what else you wanted McCain to do on torture while Bush was still in office. Write anoter bill? What would the second one say that the first one didn't? Would it pass both houses of congress and be signed into Law?What REALLY could he have done different?I want specifics, dammit. It's easy to play monday morning quarterback, but the fact is that McCain has done more on this issue than anyone else in the presidential field. If that doesn't impress you enough to give the man somefucking credit, then I don't know what to say. [Edited on February 29, 2008 at 4:32 PM. Reason : ``]
2/29/2008 4:29:06 PM
SUCK MY PRESIDENTIAL COCK, BITCH
2/29/2008 4:35:25 PM
[Edited on February 29, 2008 at 4:49 PM. Reason : ``]
2/29/2008 4:43:36 PM
honestly i dont know about yall but this is gonna be a touch choice for me....both candidates are going to be voteable[Edited on February 29, 2008 at 7:23 PM. Reason : .]
2/29/2008 7:16:39 PM
How's this for specifics?McCain could've simply continued to attach new anti-torture legislation to every defense spending bill that reached the Senate floor. That's when he was actually on the right side of this issue. Letting it go after the signing statement neutered the law in substance sent a clear message: while appearing valiant, McCain's effort was all for show.
2/29/2008 8:09:42 PM
^ Well, if McCain is all for show, then what does that leave Obama? He has done nothing at all but run for president.You people will complain about anything.John McCain tried to eliminate torture for years but when Feinstein attempted to cut off any and all enhanced interrogation techniques from CIA use he became a dirty evil man. WAAHHAHAHAH. Waaaaa. Cry me a fucking river.
2/29/2008 9:41:28 PM
^ GameCat, are you confused? The bill PASSED! What would subsequent bills say that the first one did not!???? You just skirted the question. ARRR. This makes me so angry. McCain was tortured to the point he can no longer lift his arms above his head. So he leads the fight on banning torture. Authors the fucking ammendment. The fucking ammendment passes. And by all accounts the act does its job (or at least brings us one step closer to the desired solution):
2/29/2008 9:57:22 PM
All I can say here, is that the biggest contradiction on the war lies with Obama. His chiding of Mccain over staying as long as it takes in Iraq/siding with the surge thereby Bush (even though his record shows the opposite) and at the same time making speeches like this. ->http://www.reuters.com/news/video?videoId=62500&newsChannel=domesticNewsPakistan being a known nuclear armed country right beside another nuclear armed country, India, who have been basically in a powder keg relationship is the new direction we should take this? ..Honestly, thats like begging for WWIII. Our offesive against Al Queda has long since been undermined.
2/29/2008 10:05:00 PM
Not the slightest bit confused, Socks``. And given the substance/KB ratio of Sputter's reply, I'm pretty much finished with the point.I know the bill passed. I'll remind you and our audience that the law makes no difference when the manner in which it passed neutered it in substance, as I said previously. This is why McCain should've kept pushing for new legislation. Torture is not something an American statesman accepts defeat on.Quit saying I refuse to give him credit.Your desperate mischaracterization of my position seems almost Clintonish.I've repeatedly given credit to McCain where and when due; your problem is that I extend it no further, and find him doubly revolting for the flagrant hypocrisy evident in his inaction after the signing statement. Until he capitulated after Bush's signing statement, I was quite impressed by McCain's resolve on the issue. In fact, it was this Mr. Smith routine that has me so pissed off about how he let it go.Why should people vote for him? He bitched out. On torture.Bush deserved the kitchen sink for that signing statement. As the impassioned champion of that legislation, McCain should've seen it through and made every goddamned effort to make it viable. Failing to do so was a betrayal to the original philosophy of his position: torture is wrong and America must not legally do it.
3/1/2008 12:39:48 AM
^ Acctually your only recomendation for what McCain could have done differently is a very odd contradiction. "Law banning torture was passed. Bush says he can ignore the law. Therefore, more laws should be passed." I guess it all made sense from the sidelines. If Bush's signing statements mean anything at all, then passing more laws shouldn't do anything. If they don't, then you're whining for no reason. Personally, I think you put too much weight on signing statements. McCain's bill has already achieved much of what it was intended too. As I pointed out earlier, The CIA has already prohibted things like waterboarding in its interrogations. Your concern is "What if the CIA breaks the law and we don't know it yet?". A legitimate concern, but it's not clear how passing more laws would remedy the situation. Couldn't the CIA just break those too?What we really need for change is to have someone in office that knows what torture is like and that has fought against its use. McCain realizes that and that's why he's running for President. And I think that's one of the best arguments for electing John McCain and nothing you have said even escapes the realm of side-line wishy washy bitching. So I think I'm done until you can add some substance to your claim that McCain "could have done more".[Edited on March 1, 2008 at 1:10 AM. Reason : ``]
3/1/2008 12:58:26 AM
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23415028/he is not even a natural born US citizen...... wonder who will sue if he gets elected?
3/1/2008 1:01:08 AM
3/1/2008 11:20:23 AM
::yawn::One vote? Can you even use the Internet?---Socks``: If Bush was willing to subvert the law with his signing statement, McCain should've approached overturning it. Regardless of the vetos.
3/1/2008 11:39:49 AM
Gamecat1) What? Are you sure you even know what signing statements are? They are not like a veto that congress can over turn. In this case, the statement an articulation of how Bush views the law and its implementation. The issue of how the law should actually be interpruted will in reality be settled by the judicial branch. That means someone will have to break the law (say someone in CIA inhumanely treating a "prisioner"), they will have to be taken court, and the case will have to reach the Supreme Court for the matter to be settled. Here's Richard Epstein, Law Professor at the University of Chicago on why signing statements are important.
3/1/2008 1:11:48 PM
3/1/2008 1:53:36 PM
ATTN: John McCainReading from a teleprompter is boring. You sound like you're reading a story to your grandkids. Obama will whip your ass in debates if you can't talk like you mean it.
3/4/2008 9:55:37 PM
^ i think a lot of that is his age showing.
3/4/2008 10:00:15 PM
In New Hampshire he strolled along with a microphone in his hands and spoke his mind. It sounded good.Since then he's done this teleprompter shit which sounds so rehearsed and fake, lacking in passion...
3/4/2008 10:02:32 PM
^ Yah. We need a candidate that holds our attn when he's speaking. I mean, I'd personally follow a man anywhere if he sounded like he "meant" what he saying.A candidate with out a doubt must be entertaining, optimistic, and an all around nice guy. You know, someone you'd like to have a beer with.[Edited on March 4, 2008 at 10:14 PM. Reason : ug.]
3/4/2008 10:13:28 PM
^ such candidates usually win.It's largely why Kerry lost, and partially for Gore too.[Edited on March 4, 2008 at 10:17 PM. Reason : ]
3/4/2008 10:17:39 PM
Shawn Tully of Fortune magazine agrees that John McCain has the best Health Care proposal.http://www.johnmccain.com/Informing/News/NewsReleases/22fdcd36-3e8e-40ab-8d7a-ee78f71cc50f.htmI think his argument is similar to mine, but he doesn't make it very well. He makes it sound like encouraging some people to spend less on health insurance is the real benefit of McCain's plan, but he doesn't explain why that is a good thing (at least not clearly). It's a good thing because the people that will spend less on health insurance are the young, healthy, and well-off. These are the folks that will move toward the high deductable plans where they are responcible for more of their own health care spending. This means they essentially purchase less insurance and since they are paying a higher cost for medical care, they will likely consume less of it (go to the doctor less often etc) This will do a lot to LOWER HEALTH CARE COSTS (rich people spend less on health care so prices of those resources fall) and help IMPROVE THE DISTRIBUTION OF HEALTH CARE (falling prices allow poor to spend more on health care). Of course, there is a question how big this impact will be. I mean, if they are already young and healthy, they probably don't go the doctor that much to begin with. So their health care expenditures will surely decrease, but who knows by how much? If they don't decrease by much, then prices won't fall very much and distribution of health care will not be affected very much. That being said, McCain's plan is still better than the alternatives being proposed. Neither Obama's or Hillary's plans sufficiently address the question of how to reduce health care costs. If anything they will make health care more expensive.PS*Tully does make a good point on how eliminating the tax break companies recieve for providing health care benefits will help move us in this direction, though.[Edited on March 24, 2008 at 1:00 PM. Reason : ``]
3/24/2008 12:48:17 PM
There's no stopping McCain now:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MaP9eiWuX3s
3/24/2008 2:59:42 PM
shit just got real
3/24/2008 3:01:23 PM
^^lol at the old lady with the green screen showing up over her clothes
3/24/2008 5:09:31 PM
^^^ [/election]
3/24/2008 5:24:10 PM
Well, Anatol Lieven, writing in the Financial Times has made it clear. The ONLY evidence that McCain would invade Iran is that there is youtube video of him making a bad joke at campaign ralley.
3/25/2008 5:05:17 AM
Here's another youtube video entitled: "McCain: War with Iran is more reality than hypothetical"
3/25/2008 5:35:56 AM
^ If anything that video should put fears to rest. He explicitly says that the President should get approval from congress before making any strategic attack on Iran. And contrary to the video's title, he never says that war with Iran is more of a reality than a possibility. I hear him saying that the President and Congress having to consider a strategic attack might be a possibility that is close to reality. And given Bush's rhetoric at the time, I can't say I blame him for thinking that. I would also point out that this video was posted more than month before the National Intelligence Estimate was released declaring that Iran had halted it nuclear weapons program in 2003. And I don't know which debate this is from, but it may have taken place weeks before the video was posted. So it seems likely that McCain's opinion of the possibility of the President and Congress attacking Iran has changed in light of this new evidence.http://www.dni.gov/press_releases/20071203_release.pdfThe idea that McCain would take us to war with Iran is just looney. He's made his position very clear. He's not going to take military action off the table (and he shouldn't, I dare Obama to claim he would), but that doesn't mean we're going to start carpet bombing tomorrow.Fuck people.[Edited on March 25, 2008 at 5:55 AM. Reason : ``]
3/25/2008 5:52:34 AM
I'd attack Iran if I were misinformed enough to think they were supplying Al Qaeda in Iraq.
3/25/2008 8:24:13 AM
^ McCain misspoke. However, his error was not a great as Obama likes to make it sound. According to the Obama campaign and the DNC, the big deal is that McCain doesn't understand that a mostly Shiite country like Iran would never fund Sunnis in Iraq. Of course, that is absolutley not true. Just last year, in April 2007, the U.S. military accused Iran of arming SUNNI militants fighting in Iraq (though not al Qaeda).
3/25/2008 10:47:59 AM
Our military has proven their honesty of late.
3/25/2008 10:50:50 AM
^ So Obama didn't make a mistake because he hasn't read a newspaper in a year. Instead, the military lied and Obama's eyes can only see the truth? Excellent.[Edited on March 25, 2008 at 11:03 AM. Reason : ``]
3/25/2008 10:56:25 AM
I didn't say that.This administration has shown a propensity to fudge the facts in order to make the "facts" match the talking points. In fact, that has been a talking point (Iran arming Sunies) the administration had shied away from. Now they use the more nebulous term (Iraqi Extremists).
3/25/2008 11:03:47 AM
"Shied away from"? What does that mean? Does that mean retracted? Apparently not. [Edited on March 25, 2008 at 11:11 AM. Reason : ``]
3/25/2008 11:10:09 AM
It means they are no longer claiming Iran is arming Sunni Extremists and aren't going to come out and say directly, "Yeah, we were full of shit. Iran wasn't arming Sunni Extremists."It means they don't talk about it and hope it goes away.
3/25/2008 11:15:43 AM
Plz to point me to a reference?
3/25/2008 11:22:05 AM
Just do a google search for Iran arming Sunni Extremists. All the articles pointing to that are a year old. For claiming to be such a wonk you sure do miss the boat a lot.
3/25/2008 11:27:18 AM
So...a story drops of the news cycle and that means it's false? hmmm. Interesting reasoning.
3/25/2008 11:30:57 AM
^ Not necessarily. But you're obviously being purposefully ignorant here.
3/25/2008 11:33:42 AM
^^no, look at the wording now. There is no longer talk about Sunni Extremists. They say either, Shia extremists or Iraqi Extremists.
3/25/2008 11:34:52 AM
IMStoned, How so? I can't find a single story that retracts the notion that Iran arms Sunni militants in Iraq. PERIOD. So why should I disbelieve it? Because it saves face for Obama? Fuck me.[Edited on March 25, 2008 at 11:45 AM. Reason : ``]
3/25/2008 11:43:59 AM
You won't find it because it was media outlets parroting what the administration says. If the administration came out retracting statements they made about Iran arming Sunnis then you would find articles about it. But since it never happened, those articles don't exist.It happens all the time. Not everyone can catch what administration officials say Live as they say it at the press conference, so it gets written into articles for people to read later on. If a press conference to retract statements the administration has previously said never takes place, the articles will never be written. Of course the press conferences never took place because that would imply wrong-doing by the Bush administration and we all know that they are not guilty of wrong-doing. :hooksaw rolly eyes:
3/25/2008 11:54:31 AM