But Bush was merely an ego front for the neocons ... He spoke their 
speeches, signed their recommendations, and ordered their wars, go and 
listen to Benjamin Friedman's excellent video in his very passionate 
voice ...

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=3552214685532803163&q


====================================================
http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/492891p-415149c.html

Hil to W: Clean up your own mess
Leaving it to next Prez is irresponsible, she tells Iowa crowd

BY MICHAEL McAULIFF
DAILY NEWS WASHINGTON BUREAU

Hillary Clinton addresses crowd at town-hall style meeting yesterday 
in Davenport, Iowa. Her two-day swing through Iowa, where she hit hard 
on issues like Iraq war and health care, was first trip to state with 
earliest caucus since announcing presidential candidacy.
DAVENPORT, Iowa - President Bush should clean up the mess he made in 
Iraq and bring American troops home before he leaves the White House 
in 2009, Sen. Hillary Clinton said yesterday.

Clinton fired her rhetoric-raising broadside at Bush and the Iraq war 
on her first swing through Iowa as a presidential hopeful, painting 
herself as tough, warm and presidential all at the same time.

"The President has said this is going to be left to his successor," 
she said at a rally in Davenport. "I think it's the height of 
irresponsibility, and I really resent it.

"This was his decision to go to war; he went with an ill-conceived 
plan, an incompetently executed strategy, and we should expect him to 
extricate our country from this before he leaves office," the former 
First Lady said.

White House spokesman Rob Saliterman criticized Clinton (D-N.Y.) for 
"a partisan attack that sends the wrong message to our troops and the 
Iraqi people."

One questioner challenged Clinton to explain her vote in late 2002 to 
authorize the war. She said Congress was "misled" at the time by the 
President.

"He took the authority that I and others gave him, and he misused it," 
she said. "And I regret that deeply. And if we had known then what we 
know now, there never would have been a vote, and I never would have 
voted to give this President that authority."

Dawn Trettin, 33, and her son Ramon Briones, 18, who has joined the 
Army, said they liked what they heard from Clinton. Trettin, though, 
teared up when someone in the crowd told her son not to go to Iraq.

"I don't want to just pull out and leave it in chaos," she said, 
though she was waiting to make up her mind on whom to vote for next 
year.

Her son, who said he liked Clinton's depth, was ready to commit after 
hearing her pitch. "I liked her," he said. "I would vote for her."

Clinton is leading her Democratic rivals in national polls, but she is 
not the front-runner in Iowa. If Iowa's first-in-the-nation caucus was 
held now, she would lose to 2004 vice presidential nominee John 
Edwards. She also trails former Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack and Illinois 
Sen. Barack Obama in state polls.

She completed a two-day swing through the state last night in a bid to 
close the gap and tried to erase the perception among many Iowans that 
she can't win, talking to them in small groups in living rooms and by 
the thousands in large halls.

The reception was strong, and Camp Clinton liked what it saw.

"We are thrilled with the weekend," said Clinton spokesman Howard 
Wolfson.

Clinton also focused on middle-class issues like making college more 
affordable and obtaining universal health care coverage.

She promised to try to at least get universal coverage for kids during 
her next two years in the Senate.

Today, she's picking up the war theme theme again in Texas, attending 
the dedication of Brooke Army Medical Center's $50 million Center for 
the Intrepid. The 60,000-square-foot physical rehabilitation center is 
for veterans injured in the war.

Originally published on January 28, 2007

-- 
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Reply via email to