News Focus
News Focus
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goodluck

01/11/04 10:57 PM

#32519 RE: Zeev Hed #32518

Bush should be impeached for lying and misleading the congress to give him authorization to go into Iraq. We, Republicans and Libertarians should lead the impeachment process and not let the dems get this into a partisan issue.
Noble and wise sentiments, but, unhappily, "fat" chance. Aside from the fact that Republicans have majorities in both houses, they are looking forward to increasing those majorities in Nov, and will never rock the boat. Just last week we were reminded of DeLay's tactics to discipline "his" people in Congress when Texas Democratic Congressman Hall switched parties to Republican because, he said, he could not get funds for education in his district for the sole reason that he was a Democrat. Not that we needed much reminded after the cute Texas redistricting that DeLay engineered, and which was just affirmed in the courts.

O'Neill wasn't misquoted, but of course, the Republicans have their defenses ready, from calling him just another disgruntled fired employee and trotting out Clinton-Gore documents and statements on the necessity of overthrowing Saddam. They'll share a little of the "credit" for that with two guys who aren't running for office this year.

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titan3

01/11/04 11:21 PM

#32520 RE: Zeev Hed #32518

I think Bush and his Rove-ites will make O'Neill out to be the fool....but I hope it backfires. They may respond/protest too much.
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mainehiker

01/11/04 11:32 PM

#32521 RE: Zeev Hed #32518

hey, i said mccain should challenge bush months ago..glad you are on board! Agree on your other points, which again ive often said perhpas 6-8 months ago.."it is not out of the realm of possibility Bush gets impeached/resigns.

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mainehiker

01/11/04 11:36 PM

#32522 RE: Zeev Hed #32518

zeev, also, the dems frankly are responsible for derelection of duty on many issues the last 3 years....i even doubt they have the balls to even discuss impeachment if they had a million smoking guns..
spoken as an independent that voted for Bush, cant stand him since i did and am not thrilled with the dems by and large.
But Dean/Clark/Edwards would be fine..and id even think about McCain should he so choose
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Bullwinkle

01/11/04 11:57 PM

#32523 RE: Zeev Hed #32518

Bush and the markets run an interesting parallel... They are both built up on smoke and mirrors while the underlying truths and crosscurrents are swept under the carpet and perceived or blown off as irrelevant. With that said this will probably get swept under the rug, but it will all come out in the end. Unfortunately by then it may be too late.


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TheProphet

01/11/04 11:59 PM

#32524 RE: Zeev Hed #32518

Bush was very candid from day one of his presidency that he favored "regime change." What O'Neill is saying is nothing new. Yes, Bush ultimately "sold" the regime change too heavily based on a weapons of mass destruction angle (in my view, based on heavy pressure from his advisers), but that was only one angle.

Frankly, I think O'Neill is a disgrace and an opportunitst. If you are hired at the highest levels government, please show some class when you're fired, rather than selling a tell-all for-profit book about confidences with the commander in chief.





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ergo sum

01/12/04 12:43 AM

#32525 RE: Zeev Hed #32518

This is good??
Overnight, a Towering Divide Rises in Jerusalem
By JAMES BENNET

Published: January 12, 2004


ERUSALEM, Jan. 11 — With a towering concrete slab lowered almost tenderly into a ragged street, Israel began drawing a hard line around Jerusalem on Sunday, walling it off from Abu Dis, an Arab village joined to the city for generations.

The conflict between Israelis and Palestinians can look like the stalest of stalemates, a furious standoff that defies measurement and maybe even change. But in this crowded neighborhood of east Jerusalem, the city's Arab section, there was something monumental, even defining, about the 30-foot slab descending from the twilight, just after a muezzin called the sunset prayer over the crane's roar.

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Israel has begun work on other sections of the Jerusalem barrier, which it says is a necessary bulwark against suicide bombers. But it has not built in such a busy area or so close to Jerusalem's center and holy sites.

Bent with age, bundled in a shawl and white head scarf, Nadieh Shihabi, 90, picked her way past the growing barrier, crossing to her house on the Abu Dis side.

"I want to stay in my home," she said, wiping at tears.

Her daughter-in-law, Rada Shihabi, 53, replied, "You cannot." She would have to stay in Jerusalem with her family rather than risk separation, she said.

"Come and see your house for the last time," Rada Shihabi said gently.

Nadieh Shihabi said she had lost another house, in what is now a Jewish section of Jerusalem, in the Arab-Israeli war of 1948.

There were no camera crews and no demonstrators to witness as the mostly Arab construction crew showed up and began its task, under heavy military guard. The Israeli plans were announced some time ago, but no date was set publicly. The Palestinian leadership appeared caught flat-footed as construction began.

The prime minister, Ahmed Qurei, who lives in Abu Dis a couple of blocks from the construction site, was in another West Bank village, Qalqiliya, which is enclosed by the West Bank barrier. There, he attacked the "racist separation wall."

Israel says the new barricade is not a permanent, political border but a reversible security measure.

"I know that people are talking about the fence," Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said Sunday. "You know who built the fence? Terror built the fence."

Speaking at a news conference in Jerusalem, he continued, "If not for the terror, maybe we wouldn't have done it."

Mr. Sharon was referring to the entire barrier of concrete, ditches, fencing and barbed wire that Israel is building against West Bank Palestinians. Just Sunday, Mr. Sharon said, a Palestinian suicide bomber blew himself up in the West Bank after he spotted an Israeli patrol. No one but the bomber was killed or hurt. Mr. Sharon said the man had been headed for central Israel.

The longer West Bank barrier is to be joined to the one being built around Jerusalem, a roughly 21-mile stretch that will consume some West Bank land along the city's eastern outskirts. Planners have said only some segments will be solid concrete.

They also say they will include gates, but Palestinians say they fear that those gates will seldom be open, or that they will not be able to get the permits they will need to pass.

On the slope of the Mount of Olives, Abu Dis sits partly within Jerusalem's municipal boundaries, and negotiators once saw it as the possible capital of a Palestinian state.

The idea was that Abu Dis could do politically what it had already done socially and commercially: smudge the line between Jerusalem and the West Bank.

But distinctions are getting sharper here, not blurrier. As he often does, Mr. Sharon referred to Jerusalem on Sunday as "the eternal, united, and undivided capital of the Jewish people."

The new wall will actually divide Abu Dis, keeping part of it on the Jerusalem side, separating neighbors and relatives who live just blocks or even a street apart.

Months ago, Israel built another wall against Abu Dis. But it is only six or eight feet high, and every day thousands of Palestinians climb over it or squeeze between its slabs. Taxis idle on either side, as children with backpacks, men wearing suits or carrying tool boxes, and elderly people make their way from Abu Dis, which has counted on Jerusalem for basic services like health care.

Bassam Zagari, 38, said that after the first wall was built, he stopped sending his son Ali from his home in Abu Dis to a special school in Jerusalem. Mr. Zagari was no longer getting enough business at his vegetable stand to afford the fees, he said, and because Ali, now 14, cannot hear or speak, Mr. Zagari was afraid he would not stop if he were called by an Israeli patrol.

Mr. Zagari's business has limped along thanks to commerce over the existing wall. "This will destroy us," he said of the new one. "Jerusalem gave life to the town."

With its base planted in a trench and its slabs slotted together, the wall going up on Sunday rose more than 25 feet above the ground and seemed certain to repel climbers.

"Look at the height of that thing," murmured one of the construction workers, a 42-year-old Israeli Arab, as the first slab went up. "What's the difference between a house here, and a house there?" he asked, indicating the facing sides of the street, the opposite sides of the barrier.

Much as Palestinian workers built many Israeli settlements in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Arab citizens of Israel were building this section of wall even as they opposed its construction.

The 42-year-old man, who asked not to be identified, said that if he did not do the job, someone else would. "What we are doing is wrong," he said. "It's breaking my heart. But what can we do?"

As the construction workers unloaded a crane, it bowed a telephone wire strung in the path of the new wall, between what was being defined as strictly Jerusalem and strictly West Bank.

The Arab man climbed on top of a bulldozer. With a small pair of clippers, he cut the line.


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Emptyhead

01/12/04 9:11 AM

#32543 RE: Zeev Hed #32518

I would vote for McCain! I believe their is sincere integrity within that man a trait no often displayed anymore...if ever.