scott mcclellan

Discussion in 'Politics' started by blackhorseshoe, May 28, 2008.

  1. I think Scott's principal reason for writing the book is that he wants the truth to be known.

    He makes money on the book - and that is good for him. He deserves it IMO.

    To sad that the false premises of the illegal (by international law and treaties) war instigated by GWB now is contributing to the sky-rocketing number of attempted and successful suicides among US soldiers.

    I think that history will judge GWB, his cronies and the US electorate (no less electing this fool twice) very harshly. Just like the germans going for Hitler - I think it was a terrible mistake. I have no qualms comparing that mistake by these two different populations - and they elected leaders that did terrible wrong to the world and their countries' population.
     
    #21     May 29, 2008
  2. McClellan is a party to the Bush disaster. You can't have your office in the same building as the Oval Office and not know what's going on.
    4000 Americans dead, thousands coming home disabled, a country torn apart from end to end and millions of Iraqis killed or displaced.
    Waiting to get his 7 figure book deal is almost as bad as not having spoken up when it would have mattered.

    He's a coward and stinks just like the rest of the administration.
     
    #22     May 29, 2008
  3. achilles28

    achilles28

    At least he confirmed Bush lied us into war.
     
    #23     May 29, 2008
  4. It is confirmed!!!

    [​IMG]
     
    #24     May 29, 2008
  5. Yannis

    Yannis

    Now, who in his right mind would really believe anything that a mediocre staffer (who got fired for not cutting it) says about those who put up with him for a while and finally rejected him? When that lying traitor stands to make a million or three from betraying his boss' trust? But, of course, as Ann Coulter says, if Democrats had any brains, they'd be Republicans! :)
     
    #25     May 29, 2008
  6. It is possible to speak the truth AND make money.
     
    #26     May 29, 2008
  7. Yannis

    Yannis

    Agree totally - he should have tried that! :)
     
    #27     May 29, 2008
  8. Yannis

    Yannis

    And, she does have a way with words, facts and ideas, right?

    YOU CAN'T APPEASE EVERYBODY
    by Ann Coulter - May 28, 2008

    "After decades of comparing Nixon to Hitler, Reagan to Hitler and Bush to Hitler, liberals have finally decided it is wrong to make comparisons to Hitler. But the only leader to whom they have applied their newfound rule of thumb is: Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

    While Ahmadinejad has not done anything as starkly evil as cut the capital gains tax, he does deny the Holocaust, call for the destruction of Israel, deny the existence of gays in Iran and refuses to abandon his nuclear program despite protests from the United Nations. That's the only world leader we're not allowed to compare to Hitler.

    President Bush's speech at the Knesset two weeks ago was somewhat more nuanced than liberals' Hitler arguments. He did not simply jump up and down chanting: "Ahmadinejad is Hitler!" Instead, Bush condemned a policy of appeasement toward madmen, citing Neville Chamberlain's ill-fated talks with Adolf Hitler.

    Suspiciously, Bush's speech was interpreted as a direct hit on B. Hussein Obama's foreign policy -- and that's according to Obama's supporters.

    So to defend Obama, who -- according to his supporters -- favors appeasing madmen, liberals expanded the rule against ad Hitlerum arguments to cover any mention of the events leading to World War II. A ban on "You're like Hitler" arguments has become liberals' latest excuse to ignore history.

    Unless, of course, it is liberals using historical examples to support Obama's admitted policy of appeasing dangerous lunatics. It's a strange one-sided argument when they can cite Nixon going to China and Reagan meeting with Gorbachev, but we can't cite Chamberlain meeting with Hitler.

    There are reasons to meet with a tyrant, but none apply to Ahmadinejad. We're not looking for an imperfect ally against some other dictatorship, as Nixon was with China. And we aren't in a Mexican stand-off with a nuclear power, as Reagan was with the USSR. At least not yet.

    Mutually Assured Destruction was bad enough with the Evil Empire, but something you definitely want to avoid with lunatics who are willing to commit suicide in order to destroy the enemies of Islam. As with the H-word, our sole objective with Ahmadinejad is to prevent him from becoming a military power.

    What possible reason is there to meet with Ahmadinejad? To win a $20 bar bet as to whether or not the man actually owns a necktie?

    We know his position and he knows ours. He wants nuclear arms, American troops out of the Middle East and the destruction of Israel. We don't want that. (This is assuming Mike Gravel doesn't pull off a major upset this November.) We don't need him as an ally against some other more dangerous dictator because ... well, there aren't any.

    Does Obama imagine he will make demands of Ahmadinejad? Using what stick as leverage, pray tell? A U.S. boycott of the next Holocaust-denial conference in Tehran? The U.N. has already demanded that Iran give up its nuclear program. Ahmadinejad has ignored the U.N. and that's the end of it.

    We always have the ability to "talk" to Ahmadinejad if we have something to say. Bush has a telephone. If Iranian crop dusters were headed toward one of our nuclear power plants, I am quite certain that Bush would be able to reach Ahmadinejad to tell him that Iran will be flattened unless the planes retreat. If his cell phone died, Bush could just post a quick warning on the Huffington Post.

    Liberals view talk as an end in itself. They never think through how these talks will proceed, which is why Chamberlain ended up giving away Czechoslovakia. He didn't leave for Munich planning to do that. It is simply the inevitable result of talking with madmen without a clear and obtainable goal. Without a stick, there's only a carrot.

    The only explanation for liberals' hysterical zealotry in favor of Obama's proposed open-ended talks with Ahmadinejad is that they seriously imagine crazy foreign dictators will be as charmed by Obama as cable TV hosts whose legs tingle when they listen to Obama (a condition that used to be known as "sciatica").

    Because, really, who better to face down a Holocaust denier with a messianic complex than the guy who is afraid of a debate moderated by Brit Hume?

    There is no possible result of such a meeting apart from appeasement and humiliation of the U.S. If we are prepared to talk, then we're looking for a deal. What kind of deal do you make with a madman until he is ready to surrender?

    Will President Obama listen respectfully as Ahmadinejad says he plans to build nuclear weapons? Will he say he'll get back to Ahmadinejad on removing all U.S. troops from the region? Will he nod his head as Ahmadinejad demands the removal of the Jewish population from the Middle East? Obama says he's prepared to have an open-ended chat with Ahmadinejad, so I guess everything is on the table.

    Perhaps in the spirit of compromise, Obama could agree to let Iran push only half of Israel into the sea. That would certainly constitute "change"! Obama could give one of those upbeat speeches of his, saying: As a result of my recent talks with President Ahmadinejad, some see the state of Israel as being half empty. I prefer to see it as half full. And then Obama can return and tell Americans he could no more repudiate Ahmadinejad than he could repudiate his own white grandmother. It will make Chris Matthews' leg tingle.

    There is a third reason to talk to dictators, in addition to seeking an ally or as part of a policy of Mutually Assured Destruction.

    Gen. Douglas C. MacArthur talked with Japanese imperial forces on Sept. 2, 1945. There was a long ceremony aboard the USS Missouri with full press coverage and a lot of talk. It was a regular international confab!

    It also took place after we had dropped two nukes on Japan and MacArthur was officially accepting Japan's surrender. If Obama plans to drop nukes on Ahmadinejad prior to their little chat-fest, I'm all for it. But I don't think that's what liberals have in mind."
     
    #28     May 29, 2008
  9. I think he did that...this is much like McNamara's mea culpa. McClellan was close. As the Presidents sole spokesman he had to be in on almost all restricted conversations.

    You sycophants can't spin this away.


     
    #29     May 29, 2008
  10. That is Soooo satirical and funny...that almost reminds me Voltaire.


     
    #30     May 29, 2008