After years of putting up with T.W.A.T. (the war against terrorism)
It finally becomes clear to me why...
Bush fabricated this entire war not only to oust Saddam Hussein
from power for the control of oil, (like dear old daddies war in tha 80's) But also as a controlled ploy to convince you that electing Hillary Clinton as the first female president would be the best option. Along with the facts that her opponents are some guy named John Edwards, (make ya think about the tv psychic???) or the other one, Barack Obama. Honestly a good man if not for his name sounding too much like Osama Bin-Laden. She has taken a stance against the war, demanding to see the end of it before her term or she will bring it to an end herself.
Review the few passages below, taken from a few news sites and think about it for a little bit. If you believe this conspiracy theory to be the truth, repost this as Paul's Conspiracy Theory.
If you have any comments feel free to send them my way, I'm always open for a retort.
Paul.
November 13, 2006
TOP STORY
BUSH OPENS HIS MIND TO DEMS
by Jean Salt
After only 12 hours of sulking in his bedroom, President Bush promised to keep an open mind when the bipartisan commission studying the war in Iraq submits its recommendations. The President said all suggestions were welcome, as long as they recommended staying in Iraq til the job was done.
"I don't care if they come from Republicans or Democrats" said the President, "or if they involve the Iraqis or the Saudis or the...whatever they call those people from Yemen. If the idea is solid, that is staying in Iraq until the job is done, I'm all for it."
Asked to define the job that needed to be done, the President said "The job is victory in Iraq, and victory in Iraq is our job."
When a reporter asked for a definition of victory, he was surrounded by four White House security guards, told there was a problem with his credentials, and escorted out.
The President said he was feeling good about the latest bipartisanship he is pretending to feel. "And everyone is welcome at the table" he said. "Although everyone may not get get served, heh heh a-heh."
BUSH Quote: The strategy is to help the Iraqi people achieve the objectives and dreams which is a democratic society. That’s the strategy. The tactics — now — either you say yes it’s important we stay there and get it done or we leave. We’re not leaving so long as I’m the president. That would be a huge mistake. It would send an unbelievably you know terrible signal to reformers across the region. It would say we’ve abandoned our desire to change the conditions that create terror.
A memo of a two-hour meeting between the two leaders at the White House on January 31 2003 - nearly two months before the invasion - reveals that Mr Bush made it clear the US intended to invade whether or not there was a second resolution and even if UN inspectors found no evidence of a banned Iraqi weapons programme.
Richard Clarke, former White House counterterrorism director: “Rumsfeld was saying that we needed to bomb Iraq. And we all said … no, no. Al-Qaeda is in Afghanistan. … The president dragged me into a room with a couple of other people, shut the door, and said, ‘I want you to find whether Iraq did this.’ Now he never said, ‘Make it up.’ But the entire conversation left me in absolutely no doubt that George Bush wanted me to come back with a report that said Iraq did this. [CBS 60 Minutes, 3/21/04]
I'LL END WAR
ANGRY PLEDGE: MAKE ME PREZ AND IT'S DONE!
By IAN BISHOP, Post Correspondent
February 3, 2007 -- WASHINGTON - Pumping her fists and shouting to the rooftops, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton vowed yesterday to bring an immediate end to the war in Iraq if she's elected president.
"If we in Congress don't end this war before January 2009, as president, I will," Clinton pledged in a speech to the Democratic faithful as she staked out a new position on the conflict.
While she has been escalating her criticism of the war for months, yesterday was the first time Clinton spoke about what she would do about it if she wins the White House in 2008.
The former first lady's pledge to pull the plug on Iraq and bring the troops home came during the Democratic National Committee's annual winter meeting. She and her top-tier White House rivals, Sen. Barack Obama and former Sen. John Edwards, took tough stands against the war.
Clinton, raising her voice at one point to be heard above a few anti-war hecklers, also suggested that calls from Edwards and others to cut off funding for President Bush's troop increase are unlikely to win approval in a narrowly divided Senate.
"Believe me, I understand the frustration and the outrage," said Clinton, who is backing a Senate resolution that expresses disapproval of the troop surge but would not cut off funding.
"That will be the first time that we will have said 'no' to President Bush and begin to reverse his policies," she added.
Clinton was heckled by a handful of anti-war activists, including one man who dressed in desert camouflage that read "Iraq Veterans Against the War," and barked, "Bring them home."
But the war critics were outnumbered by Clinton backers who waved her signature blue campaign placards at high points in her 20-minute speech.
"If I had been president in October of 2002, I would not have started this war," she said.
Clinton launched her biting attack on Bush last weekend while she campaigned in Iowa - a move aimed at putting her on the offense rather than defending her 2002 vote for the war.
"The president has said this is going to be left to his successor," she told supporters in Iowa. "I think it's the height of irresponsibility, and I really resent it."
Obama (Ill.) yesterday kicked off his remarks with a joke about how the campaign feels like the "American Idol" reality show and reminded the party's rank-and-file that he was against the Iraq invasion from the start.
"But whether you were for it or against it then, we all have a responsibility now to put forth a plan that offers the best chance of ending the bloodshed and bringing the troops home," Obama said, drawing a standing ovation.
"We don't have time to be cynical."
Edwards, a former North Carolina senator, issued a veiled shot at Clinton and Obama when he called on congressional Democrats to stand up to Bush and reject the recent troop surge into Baghdad.
"Silence is betrayal," he said.
Meanwhile, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, a GOP presidential hopeful, blasted away at Clinton's calls to talk with Iran's rogue regime.
"We don't need a listening tour with Iran," Romney told a forum of conservative lawmakers, adding, "Someone who wants to engage Iran displays a troubling timidity towards a terrible threat."