wvrevy
Daddy to da' princess, which I guess makes me da'
- Joined
- Nov 7, 1999
- Messages
- 8,130
Mugg Man - It's "he" not "she"
Other than that, I can't see where you've posted anything that was factually incorrect. I just happened to have read that Olbermann story and thought it would bolster your argument a bit, since it included a lot of the actual dates and events that you were referring to.
As for a "response" from the right: don't hold your breath. I've found that they don't do well when confronted with facts that go against their illusions of a president that actually knows what he is doing and is acting in anyone's best interests but his own. You'll get a lot of argument about things on the fringe (such as accusations of name-calling), but nothing on the real and verifiable events being discussed.
One other fact that you won't see them confront: Tom Ridge, since he has left DHS, has openly admitted that the "alert" was often raised against his advice as Director of Homeland Security, since he did not believe that any evidence was either credible or worthy of raising a public alert. Maybe he's actually read those stories of "The Boy Who Cried Wolf" and knows that you can only do that so many times before it becomes useless.
Other than that, I can't see where you've posted anything that was factually incorrect. I just happened to have read that Olbermann story and thought it would bolster your argument a bit, since it included a lot of the actual dates and events that you were referring to.As for a "response" from the right: don't hold your breath. I've found that they don't do well when confronted with facts that go against their illusions of a president that actually knows what he is doing and is acting in anyone's best interests but his own. You'll get a lot of argument about things on the fringe (such as accusations of name-calling), but nothing on the real and verifiable events being discussed.
One other fact that you won't see them confront: Tom Ridge, since he has left DHS, has openly admitted that the "alert" was often raised against his advice as Director of Homeland Security, since he did not believe that any evidence was either credible or worthy of raising a public alert. Maybe he's actually read those stories of "The Boy Who Cried Wolf" and knows that you can only do that so many times before it becomes useless.
As for why I cut out the rest of the article...See, I was posting FACTS, not Olberman's speculation. I also didn't include his introduction, in case anyone wants to make a point of that.
I realize that sometimes you guys think that commentary is the same as a fact, but I hate to tell you, it isn't. You simply can not refute the facts, no matter how you try to slime the Dems or anyone else. Oh, and those airplanes were such a threat...that the president wasn't even interrupted on his afternoon bike ride to be told that it had happened. Nice spin, but it doesn't hold water.

