Bush has his own questions to answer

Originally posted by Alice28
Fried Oreos??! no no no!!! It's an Oreo, with white chocolate mousse layered on top, and then the whole thing is covered in chocolate.

OMG my mouth is watering now.

That sounds awesome.

:o
 
Hey now, don't go dissing the exchange threads. I had great fun doing two of them!!

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disney4us2002 - luv your picture.
 
Well I'm sure not going to dis the reality show threads. . those people are crazy!! :eek:

;)

:hyper:
 

Originally posted by peachgirl
And I think it's about time we demand that he does...

I think you forgot the DUI. Wasn't that a one of the issues from the last election?:jester:
 
Ok, you have done it now. I want a fried oreo!! Whose going to WDW and get me one???

I WANT CHOCOLATE::yes::
 
Any chance those oreo bonbons are served elsewhere? I trying to eliminate restaurants from our Dec list, not add another!

I love chocolate covered oreos but the mousse makes it sound even better. There is a chain candy store in Ocean City, MD where we always get chocolate covered oreos. They are just delicious.

Oh, was this a political thread.....

here ya go....


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Originally posted by we3luvdisney
I think you forgot the DUI. Wasn't that a one of the issues from the last election?:jester:

No, actually I was more interested in what he shoved up his nose..

Wait, sorry, wrong thread..

No need to invesitigate the drinking issue, he admitted to the fact that he had a problem with substance abuse. Of course he never came clean on the cocaine issue but why investigate things that have an obvious answer?
 
Originally posted by peachgirl
No, actually I was more interested in what he shoved up his nose.

Was it an oreo bon bon?
 
An editorial/article, from the Washington Times. I agree with some of it, some I don't.


Paying the price for padding a resume

By Wesley Pruden

A distinguished politician down South recalls an incident from his past illustrating the risks of campaigning on your biography.

"It was my first statewide race, for state attorney general," he recalls, "and I thought everything was going pretty well. I was young and still had all my hair, and everywhere I went people smiled, eager to shake my hand, and promised to vote for me. Then my opponent accused me of having flunked the bar exam three times.

"It wasn't a lie, exactly, but it wasn't quite correct. I had failed the bar exam twice, which is not rare, as any lawyer will tell you. But all I could say to defend myself was, 'I didn't flunk it three times, I only failed it twice.' That was not very persuasive to the average voter, and I knew my goose was cooked."

John Kerry is learning the very same lesson, that once you're put on the defensive about something that you had rather not talk about it's difficult to change the subject: Not all of his Purple Hearts are suspect, only two of them are. Or maybe it's only one. Or was that the Silver Star? Voters, who don't always pay close attention to the nuances or even the details, are likely to remember only that questions were raised about his medals. (Were those the medals he threw away?)

A politician's reputation for telling the truth, particularly about how he won combat decorations, is a lot like a woman's reputation for virtue. Once veracity and virtue are subjects for public discussion, both pols in trouble and careless damsels can only suffer. Close only counts if you're pitching horseshoes.

Monsieur Kerry brought up the subject of his war heroics himself, and politicians of both parties can't imagine why. His bizarre salute and his goofy greeting ("I'm John Kerry, reporting for duty") at the Democratic National Convention was an invitation to the Swift Boat skeptics, and there are apparently a lot of them among the men he served with in Vietnam.

Bringing up the subject was risky enough, but by taking on the skeptical veterans — the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth — the Kerry campaign surely knew it would transform a story with limited exposure to the kind of press feeding frenzy that, once begun, is impossible to contain. "They've turned this into a raging national press story," William Carrick, a sometime Democratic strategist, told the New York Times. "It's certainly keeping Kerry from discussing his own issues and agenda and getting on the offensive." Another Democrat "close to the campaign," otherwise unidentified, sees it in an even grimmer light: "When you're basically running on your biography and there are ongoing attacks that are undermining the credibility of your biography, you have a really big problem."

Monsieur Kerry and his wise men (and women) may figure that once challenged they had no choice but to engage the argument, risks and all. Their internal polling is showing them that the veterans' skepticism of Monsieur Kerry's Purple Hearts, which seemed to fall on him like stars on Alabama, is sowing growing public doubts.

The demand that George W. Bush denounce the veterans' television commercials and "make" them cut it out (it's not at all clear how this could be done, short of calling in an air strike), will inevitably shift the focus to the $60 million worth of smear commercials, a lot of them paid for by the billionaire George Soros, aimed at the president over the past month.

John Kerry treated the podium in Boston as if it were a movie set, surrounding himself with friendly Vietnam veterans and devoting nearly a quarter of his acceptance speech to his service in Vietnam, for which President Bush has been generous with his praise, repeated yesterday.

Presidential candidates who run as war heroes have to be very careful that their heroics were actually and unquestionably heroic. Otherwise, like Monsieur Kerry, unwary candidates invite unwelcome scrutiny. Authentic heroes never indulge in braggadocio and rarely even want to talk about their medals and how they won them. Harry Truman was a veteran of the brutal trench warfare of World War I but never boasted of it. John F. Kennedy, whose heroics as skipper of PT-109 were definitely the right stuff, mocked the idea that he was a hero: "I'm a hero only if you think getting your boat shot out from under you is heroic."

Monsieur Kerry figured that his tales from South Vietnam would insulate himself from all questions. He figured wrong. Feeding frenzies can devour the unlikeliest people. A late education is always the most expensive kind.
 
Okay Pugdog, Diet Coke is now all over my monitor. Spitting DC out your nose is really not pretty!!!!!!


ROFL

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Originally posted by peachgirl
No, actually I was more interested in what he shoved up his nose..

Wait, sorry, wrong thread..

No need to invesitigate the drinking issue, he admitted to the fact that he had a problem with substance abuse. Of course he never came clean on the cocaine issue but why investigate things that have an obvious answer?

Depending on where you live, DUI means "driving under the influence." Which means alcohol and/or drugs. I would think that this is a greater issue than anyones enlistment record, don't you agree? I want someone in office that's not under the influence.
 
Originally posted by Pugdog007
Was it an oreo bon bon?

I don't think so pug, I believe he was a cocaine user actually.


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Still waiting for an answer.:confused:
No one knows?
 
Originally posted by peachgirl
What has being the incumbent got to do with it?

But if you say so, then perhaps you know the answers to these questions and could fill us all in.


1)Why did Bush stop flying fighter jets in the spring of 1972 and fail to take an annual physical exam required of all pilots?

2)What explains the apparent gap in the president's Guard service in 1972-73, a period when commanders in Texas and Alabama say they never saw him report for duty and records show no pay to Bush when he was supposed to be on duty in Alabama? ?

3)Did Bush receive preferential treatment in getting into the Guard and securing a coveted pilot slot despite poor qualifying scores and arrests, but no convictions, for stealing a Christmas wreath and rowdiness at a football game during his college years?

4)Why won't he release his records?



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Why bothering about his failures of 30 years ago, when he botched up his present job so clearly visible for everyone:confused: ;)
 
Originally posted by we3luvdisney
Depending on where you live, DUI means "driving under the influence." Which means alcohol and/or drugs. I would think that this is a greater issue than anyones enlistment record, don't you agree? I want someone in office that's not under the influence.

What influence are you speaking of: Drugs or Halliburton?
 
Originally posted by Viking
Why bothering about his failures of 30 years ago, when he botched up his present job so clearly visible for everyone:confused: ;)


Just to show continuity! :sunny:
 












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