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Political Threads This section is for Political Threads - Enter at your own risk. If you say you don't want to see what someone posts - don't read it :hihi: |
11-02-2010, 02:50 PM
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#1
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There's so little in common between Newt and Petreus I'm not sure how you can even utter them in the same sentence.
Newt is a smart guy but a slimeball with no shame. He doesn't have a chance in a Presidential election.
The General might just do it, but I'd wager he'd run as a Democrat.
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device
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11-02-2010, 03:15 PM
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#2
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Certifiable Intertidal Anguiologist
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Quote:
Originally Posted by spence
The General might just do it, but I'd wager he'd run as a Democrat.
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device
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I think he would be pretty moderate but he has got to be sick to his stomach regarding the national level democratic party's handling of Iraq and AFG being far more concerned with Policitcs than the guys on the ground. The few things the Obama Admin has done pro fighting this war have only happened AFTER they were prodded by massive debate started by leaked disgruntlement by the military leadership. It will be even worse with POLITICIAN Donilon replacing Jim Jones for National Security Advisor
They (the Obama Admin) would rather lose the war than lose an election.
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~Fix the Bait~ ~Pogies Forever~
Striped Bass Fishing - All Stripers
Kobayashi Maru Election - there is no way to win.
Apocalypse is Coming:
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11-03-2010, 03:53 PM
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#3
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnR
I think he would be pretty moderate but he has got to be sick to his stomach regarding the national level democratic party's handling of Iraq and AFG being far more concerned with Policitcs than the guys on the ground.
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And Bush didn't???
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The few things the Obama Admin has done pro fighting this war have only happened AFTER they were prodded by massive debate started by leaked disgruntlement by the military leadership. It will be even worse with POLITICIAN Donilon replacing Jim Jones for National Security Advisor
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I don't agree at all. Obama has actually given the military a lot of leeway on how they've engaged in AFG. That's not to say there hasn't been meddling by some, but he hasn't held anyone's hands behind their backs.
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They (the Obama Admin) would rather lose the war than lose an election.
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If that was the case he'd have left AFG upon taking office.
-spence
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11-03-2010, 05:28 PM
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#4
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Quote:
Originally Posted by spence
And Bush didn't???
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Bush absolutely effed up. As did Rummy, Cheney, and Bremmer (tool).
Whether or not we should have been there (we shouldn't have but as Powell said, once you break the china you own it), once we were in and once he realized - very late - that we could win or lose he put his chips on win, rather than doing what the politically easiest thing to do was. While everyone else was crying run and not winnable (Reid, Biden, Pelosi, Hillary, and pretty much the entire Dem party - sans Lieberman) he doubled down on Petraeus, our military, strategy, LUCK, and sticking it out.
The surge worked, no doubt helped out by things that changed on the ground, but it worked. No timetable.
Obama campaigned on making AFG the good and necessary fight but he stumbling over ways to get out. If different sources like Woodward's book is to be believed, the entire administration is a mess in its bickering approach to how to handle AFG other than that they want to get out ASAP and put a foolish timetable on it.
Timetable.
Quote:
Originally Posted by spence
I don't agree at all. Obama has actually given the military a lot of leeway on how they've engaged in AFG. That's not to say there hasn't been meddling by some, but he hasn't held anyone's hands behind their backs.
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Military thwarted president seeking choice in Afghanistan
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~Fix the Bait~ ~Pogies Forever~
Striped Bass Fishing - All Stripers
Kobayashi Maru Election - there is no way to win.
Apocalypse is Coming:
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11-03-2010, 10:04 PM
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#5
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnR
Bush absolutely effed up. As did Rummy, Cheney, and Bremmer (tool).
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I've read several books on Iraq and they all seem to agree that Bremmer was a tool (never having met the man that's all I have to go by). Bush made the bed in which he slept. Rummy and Cheney had simply eaten so much of their own shyte they thought it was ice cream.
Quote:
Whether or not we should have been there (we shouldn't have but as Powell said, once you break the china you own it), once we were in and once he realized - very late - that we could win or lose he put his chips on win, rather than doing what the politically easiest thing to do was. While everyone else was crying run and not winnable (Reid, Biden, Pelosi, Hillary, and pretty much the entire Dem party - sans Lieberman) he doubled down on Petraeus, our military, strategy, LUCK, and sticking it out.
The surge worked, no doubt helped out by things that changed on the ground, but it worked. No timetable.
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But you can't deny that there was a legitimate argument against the Surge given past events. Certainly a lot of the opposition was political or just people simply tired with war...but opposition alone wasn't necessarily demonstrating a lack of will.
Personally I think many just weren't close enough to the situation on the ground to sense the opportunity as the General was. The results from the Surge appear to have been the result of timing, effort and luck. Had the situation changed slightly (i.e. Sunni resistance) I'd think it could have easily failed. I'm thankful that we had all three.
Quote:
Obama campaigned on making AFG the good and necessary fight but he stumbling over ways to get out. If different sources like Woodward's book is to be believed, the entire administration is a mess in its bickering approach to how to handle AFG other than that they want to get out ASAP and put a foolish timetable on it.
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Why wouldn't any President desperately seek a way out of the longest war in our countries history?
What the article seems to show is that after all the drama, Obama chose to do what the military was advocating rather than what would appease the democratic (and younger voters) base.
The "timetable" issue is a red herring though. One one hand it gives the edge to the enemy and on the other it motivates local forces to take up the slack. I call it a wash...
-spence
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11-04-2010, 06:41 AM
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#6
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 12,632
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Quote:
Originally Posted by spence
I've read several books on Iraq and they all seem to agree that Bremmer was a tool (never having met the man that's all I have to go by). Bush made the bed in which he slept. Rummy and Cheney had simply eaten so much of their own shyte they thought it was ice cream.
But you can't deny that there was a legitimate argument against the Surge given past events. Certainly a lot of the opposition was political or just people simply tired with war...but opposition alone wasn't necessarily demonstrating a lack of will.
Personally I think many just weren't close enough to the situation on the ground to sense the opportunity as the General was. The results from the Surge appear to have been the result of timing, effort and luck. Had the situation changed slightly (i.e. Sunni resistance) I'd think it could have easily failed. I'm thankful that we had all three.
Why wouldn't any President desperately seek a way out of the longest war in our countries history?
What the article seems to show is that after all the drama, Obama chose to do what the military was advocating rather than what would appease the democratic (and younger voters) base.
The "timetable" issue is a red herring though. One one hand it gives the edge to the enemy and on the other it motivates local forces to take up the slack. I call it a wash...
-spence
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I've figured out where Spence goes when he's gone for a while
REVISIONIST HISTORY CONFERENCES
Education
Professor Exposes Federally Funded ‘Revisionist’ History
Conference
Posted on November 1, 2010
at 4:28pm by Meredith Jessup
Pearl Harbor, 1941
In July, the National Endowment for the Humanities sponsored a workshop on “History and Commemoration: The Legacies of the Pacific War in WWII” for college professors in Hawaii. Professor Penelope Blake, a veteran professor of Humanities at Rock Valley College in Rockford, Ill., was one of 25 American scholars chosen to attend the workshop, but was reportedly disheartened to find the conference “driven by an overt political bias and a blatant anti-American agenda.”
Professor Blake is now reportedly calling on Congress to implement better oversight over the NEH. In a letter addressed directly to her Illinois congressman, Rep. Don Manzullo, Blake documents conference details and asks him to vote against NEH funding for future events. According to PowerLine, copies of the letter have also been delivered to members of the NEH council and NEH chair Jim Leach.
Full letter follows (emphases hers):
Dear Congressman Manzullo:
As one of twenty-five American scholars chosen to participate in the recent National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Workshop, “History and Commemoration: Legacies of the Pacific War in WWII,” at the University of Hawaii, East-West Center, I am writing to ask you to vote against approval of 2011 funding for future workshops until the NEH can account for the violation of its stated objective to foster “a mutual respect for the diverse beliefs and values of all persons and groups” (NEH Budget Request, 2011).
In my thirty years as a professor in upper education, I have never witnessed nor participated in a more extremist, agenda-driven, revisionist conference,
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11-04-2010, 07:14 AM
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#7
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Quote:
Originally Posted by spence
But you can't deny that there was a legitimate argument against the Surge given past events. Certainly a lot of the opposition was political or just people simply tired with war...but opposition alone wasn't necessarily demonstrating a lack of will.
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Where were you in the mid 2000s, Spence? There was SIGNIFICANT opposition from every corner, most often from the Democratic Party. This explicitly shows those we are engaged against a lack of political will. This also shows the people we try to bring on board with us as partners that we are not a worthy ally, and could not be trusted to stick it through.
Going into Iraq was stupidly wrong. It was planned wrong, it was managed wrong. Easy to see in hindsight. Like 85% of the rest I believed in the WMD too. But that ship had sailed and all of those options sailed with it over the horizon.
Quote:
Originally Posted by spence
Personally I think many just weren't close enough to the situation on the ground to sense the opportunity as the General was. The results from the Surge appear to have been the result of timing, effort and luck. Had the situation changed slightly (i.e. Sunni resistance) I'd think it could have easily failed. I'm thankful that we had all three.
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There were significant missed opportunities from all but again, the opposition from the left did more to make it look like were were bailing.
Quote:
Originally Posted by spence
Why wouldn't any President desperately seek a way out of the longest war in our countries history?
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Because an active anti-west/US AFG will present significant security dilemmas for our nation, our kids, and our grandkids is why. When we are gone from there - and it looks a lot more like when these days than if - we will be fighting elements from AFG/PAK for decades. Probably on our own soil. Political Correctness will probably invite them to our shores for a group hug first  .
Quote:
Originally Posted by spence
What the article seems to show is that after all the drama, Obama chose to do what the military was advocating rather than what would appease the democratic (and younger voters) base. -spence
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 - come on Spence, you've read more than that page already, right? Obama, Biden, that next mistake political hack for NSA Donilon? Yeh, we're so screwed.
Quote:
Originally Posted by spence
The "timetable" issue is a red herring though. One one hand it gives the edge to the enemy and on the other it motivates local forces to take up the slack. I call it a wash...
-spence
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Bullsheize
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~Fix the Bait~ ~Pogies Forever~
Striped Bass Fishing - All Stripers
Kobayashi Maru Election - there is no way to win.
Apocalypse is Coming:
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11-04-2010, 07:25 AM
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#8
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 12,632
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnR
Going into Iraq was stupidly wrong. It was planned wrong, it was managed wrong. Easy to see in hindsight. Like 85% of the rest I believed in the WMD too. But that ship had sailed and all of those options sailed with it over the horizon.
Bullsheize
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I think this a difficult statement to make because you need to take into account the question of where we'd be today concerning Iraq if we'd not gone in...the only alternative that the opponents offer is that we should have stuck with sanctions, the type that are working so well with Iran...what would the Middle East look like today and more importantly...in the future.... if we'd not gone in? I don't have an answer but I think it's hard to definitively say it should or should not have occured at this point and arguing the point proves nothing. Where would we be if we'd shown more resolve and not had the effort undermined at every opportunity by the opponents?....I'll just never forget "General Betrayus" and the comments from the likes of Hillary "suspending disbelief" Clinton and others as well as the comments of the opponents in the years leading up to the invasion regarding the Hussein regime(that's the Saddam Hussein regime...not the Barak Hussein regime  )
Last edited by scottw; 11-04-2010 at 08:07 AM..
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11-02-2010, 04:02 PM
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#9
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 20,441
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Spence -
"There's so little in common between Newt and Petreus I'm not sure how you can even utter them in the same sentence. "
They are both admitted conservatives who believe that (1) Islamic facism is a grave threat, and (2) the way to defeat that threat isn't to give them a hug and apologize for all our faults, but rather, to bring them to their knees with levels of force that produce "shock and awe".
"Newt is a smart guy "
Agreed. IMHO, he is brilliant, and the most qualified person on the planet for the job. But he's got baggage.
"but a slimeball with no shame. He doesn't have a chance in a Presidential election. "
Bill Clinton was more of a slimeball, but IMHO, a great president who understood that you can't spend more than you've got. Newt is also now a devout Catholic, but I agree, probably not electable.
"The General might just do it, but I'd wager he'd run as a Democrat."
He's an admitted conservative and a registered Republkican. so I'll take that bet. I remember when he gave his plan (what came to be known as "the surge") to Congress. Hilary said to him "General, to believe your plan requires the willful suspension of disbelief". In other words, she called him a liar, and he turned out to be 100% right. Did she apologize? Nope, she became SecState. So again, lack of ethics certainly doesn't preclude one from rising in the ranks of the Democraic party, does it?
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11-02-2010, 04:09 PM
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#10
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Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 20,441
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By the way, Spence, I participated in the surge with the USMC. SWe all knew that Harry Reid, swell patriot that he is, said "the war in Iraq is lost", and if you don't think it demoralizes our guys, and emboldens our enemies, when the Senate majority leader says somehting like that, you're wrong.
I love the Democratic party. Let's look at the line of succession for president.
(1) Obama. Voted to support infanticide as a state senator in IL
(2) Biden. Admitted plagiarist
(3) Nancy Pelosi. "I was never at a meeting when the CIA mentione dwaterboarding". "No, I meant to say I was at the meeting, but I didn't hear that part". "No, I meant to say that I heard that part, but they weren't specific on who they would waterboard". "No, I meant to say..."
(4)until recently, Strom Thurmond (my personal favorite), president pro tempore of the Senate, and an admitted former Wizard of the Klan who regularly used the n word until his death.
(5) Hilary Clinton, who claimed that during a visit to Bosnia, she had to DIVE! into her limo because of sniper fire. Whhen video footage clearly showed that was a lie, her excuse? "I was overtired". Everyone who has ever raised a baby has been overtired, how many then falsely claim to have been shot at?
(6) Timothy Geithner, who doesn't pay his own taxes...
Yessir, that's some list!!!
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11-02-2010, 04:20 PM
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#11
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Certifiable Intertidal Anguiologist
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Jim - Thank you for your time in the Marines and your service.
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~Fix the Bait~ ~Pogies Forever~
Striped Bass Fishing - All Stripers
Kobayashi Maru Election - there is no way to win.
Apocalypse is Coming:
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11-02-2010, 04:31 PM
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#12
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........
Join Date: Apr 2002
Posts: 22,805
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hopefully it's Goodbye Harry
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11-02-2010, 06:08 PM
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#13
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Registered Grandpa
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: east coast
Posts: 8,592
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnR
Jim - Thank you for your time in the Marines and your service.
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A great sacrifice for sure. Thank you.
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" Choose Life "
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11-02-2010, 07:36 PM
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#14
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Old Guy
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Mansfield, MA
Posts: 8,760
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnR
Jim - Thank you for your time in the Marines and your service.
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I work and support the USMC everyday. I am down at Quantico at least once a month, the Corps is, IMO, the pride of the US Armed Forces.
Semper Fi! and you service is beyond thanks!!
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11-03-2010, 04:02 PM
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#15
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: RI
Posts: 21,469
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jim in CT
By the way, Spence, I participated in the surge with the USMC. SWe all knew that Harry Reid, swell patriot that he is, said "the war in Iraq is lost", and if you don't think it demoralizes our guys, and emboldens our enemies, when the Senate majority leader says somehting like that, you're wrong.
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Never been a fan of Harry Reid. While I can understand how some would have opposed the Surge at the time, his comments on the subject were pathetic.
To be quite honest, I was riding with a US Marine to a business meeting this morning and we agreed Reid was a douche. He also likes Newt, although didn't put up much of an argument when I trash talked him as a brilliant slime ball.
All that being said, I'd take Reid over Sharon Angle...she's a freak.
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I love the Democratic party. Let's look at the line of succession for president.
(1) Obama. Voted to support infanticide as a state senator in IL
(2) Biden. Admitted plagiarist
(3) Nancy Pelosi. "I was never at a meeting when the CIA mentione dwaterboarding". "No, I meant to say I was at the meeting, but I didn't hear that part". "No, I meant to say that I heard that part, but they weren't specific on who they would waterboard". "No, I meant to say..."
(4)until recently, Strom Thurmond (my personal favorite), president pro tempore of the Senate, and an admitted former Wizard of the Klan who regularly used the n word until his death.
(5) Hilary Clinton, who claimed that during a visit to Bosnia, she had to DIVE! into her limo because of sniper fire. Whhen video footage clearly showed that was a lie, her excuse? "I was overtired". Everyone who has ever raised a baby has been overtired, how many then falsely claim to have been shot at?
(6) Timothy Geithner, who doesn't pay his own taxes...
Yessir, that's some list!!!
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First, let's get your chain of command straight, Obama isn't in the line of succession to be POTUS
Second, Joe Biden wears nice suits and has great style.
Third, water boarding IS torture by nearly any measure. If we employ torture or not isn't the issue, let's just be honest about it.
Fourth, I think you meant Robert Byrd.
Fifth, she's been a pretty good Sec State.
Sixth, who really cares?
-spence
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