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-   -   Concept for all you lefties out there (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/272626-concept-all-you-lefties-out-there.html)

snowman 03-20-2006 04:04 PM

Concept for all you lefties out there
 
Heres a thought for all you lefties to chew on. Pretend that we got government run universal health care for all americans 10 years ago. Fast forward to today. Bush is now in charge of all of your health care. What a concept.

So do you still want gov run universal health care?

DaveE 03-20-2006 04:20 PM

Having Bush in charge of ANYTHING has been scary.

Mulhollanddose 03-20-2006 04:56 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by DaveE
Having Bush in charge of ANYTHING has been scary.
If I believed the democrat activists in charge of the nation's most effective propaganda machines, I would agree. Fortunately my obsessive bull***** detector disables my intellectual deficiencies.

You know the economy is doing good, under a republican administration, when the democrat media ignores it.

You can trust the activist democrat media to spin exceptionally low unemployment as a negative--squeezing lemonade into lemons--what do they say?..."they aren't good jobs"?

The nerve. They lie about the economy, they lied about katrina, they lied about the connections between Saddam and Al qaeda, and they take no credit for brainwashing the American public (which is a lie by omission).

Does anybody doubt that they pat eachother on the back for their concerted efforts to damage republicans and promote democrats?

Moneyguy1 03-20-2006 05:45 PM

Lies are not the sole purview of any political group.
There are character assasins and spinmeisters for every ism.

DaveE 03-20-2006 05:55 PM

The Fed has said that real income is down for most Americans, but I guess that's just leftist propaganda.

stevepaa 03-20-2006 05:59 PM

If it was put in place ten years ago, the current President has nothing to do with it.

What's the point of this question?

snowman 03-20-2006 07:10 PM

The point of the question is that BUSH would be in charge of YOUR health coverage. Think about what you think of BUSH and think about HIM being in CONTROL of YOUR health decisions. Come again on how universal government controlled health coverage is a good thing. You all say Bush is an idiot, and you would want an idiot to be in charge of your health care? With gov controlled universal health care its inevitable.

In fact, if I were Bush, I would insure that all Republicans received Better health care than Democrats, just because, you know some people know how to vote and some do not.

widebody911 03-20-2006 07:17 PM

Mixing a little JD in the kool-aid tonight, Jack?

stevepaa 03-20-2006 09:30 PM

He must be. An in place government program is un-affected by current president. It would take congress to make changes.

"you know some people know how to vote and some do not"
I agree that Republicans should need more health care as those with a mental defect would need more assistance.

Mr_Wizard 03-21-2006 04:32 AM

Wow, I was off reading that heading, I though it was gonna be about left handed sissors or some other useful device for us left handed people.

kach22i 03-21-2006 04:37 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by snowman
The point of the question is that BUSH would be in charge of YOUR health coverage.
Then he would be cutting the insurance benifits or medical program that I would be qualifing for.

Just look at the VA's budget cuts and cases of vets expected to pay for medical bills as a result of action in Iraq.

I would expect to be treated even worse - but I'd have some coverage, right?.

Rodeo 03-21-2006 05:03 AM

Now that it's morning, Snowman, perhaps you've sobered up enough to realize what a load of bullcrap this thread represents. Plenty of other avenues to spew your deranged vision of America, where torture is the norm, we offer the same quality of justice as did Saddam, the president spies on Americans at will, and "leftist traitors" (read, admin critics) are thrown in jail without charges or trial.

Or maybe you'll now concentrate on getting yourself those two Carrera GTs. Right.

RoninLB 03-21-2006 06:31 AM

I searched and couldn't find any incidents of Bush spying on Americans. I need help on this one.

kach22i 03-21-2006 06:39 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by RoninLB
I searched and couldn't find any incidents of Bush spying on Americans. I need help on this one.
I caught him at my bedroom window last night - the guy gives me the creeps.;)

Rodeo 03-21-2006 06:44 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by RoninLB
I searched and couldn't find any incidents of Bush spying on Americans. I need help on this one.
Your search skills must be a little rusty. You may have a future in George Bush's CIA.

RoninLB 03-21-2006 06:51 AM

great.. you have the info. I feel better now.

Rodeo 03-21-2006 06:53 AM

It's a "slam dunk"

RoninLB 03-21-2006 06:54 AM

well un slam the info.

Rodeo 03-21-2006 06:56 AM

Type in "warrantless wiretaps," do some reading, come back tomorrow and we'll discuss.

RoninLB 03-21-2006 07:14 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by Rodeo
Type in "warrantless wiretaps," do some reading, come back tomorrow and we'll discuss.
I goggled your info and all I could find was political posturing about the program. I'm not as smart as I look so maybe you could have more patience with me and give me another lead.

"I searched and couldn't find any incidents of Bush spying on Americans. I need help on this one."

Rodeo 03-21-2006 07:28 AM

Oh ... you're playing with words ... kinda like your hero Bill Clinton? Ok, it's not actually the president sitting there with headphones on, listening in on our conversations. It's the people that work for him, and the computer programs that "sweep" our phone calls and emails.

Every person participating is acting under authority of a secret executive order, signed by the president (interesting sidenote -- some of the Justice Dept lawyers involved in the program actually went out and hired personal lawyers, fearful that they would be subjected to criminal penalties for participating in an illegal program).

But you are absolutely right, it's not actually Bush preforming the spying. Dude, you are one sharp cookie!

RoninLB 03-21-2006 07:32 AM

thx for the mumbo jumbo answer to my inquiry.

PS: "I searched and couldn't find any incidents of Bush spying on Americans. I need help on this one."

switch Bush for "anyone"

Rodeo 03-21-2006 07:36 AM

Anytime.

And thank you for not bringing up Sandy Berger again.

RoninLB 03-21-2006 07:37 AM

so does "anyone" instead of "Bush" offer any help.

Rodeo 03-21-2006 07:39 AM

Look Ronin, I already know that you are aware of the program and I already know you support it. After all, it's a Bush program, what's not to support?

So let's not waste any more of each other's time.

kach22i 03-21-2006 07:41 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by RoninLB
so does "anyone" instead of "Bush" offer any help.
This spying business has been covered and exhausted to death on this board. I'm sorry you missed the party, it was a good one.

RoninLB 03-21-2006 07:56 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by kach22i

This spying business has been covered and exhausted to death on this board. I'm sorry you missed the party, it was a good one.
Maybe.. maybe not. The program isolated by itself has in industrial age thinking. All imo.

kach22i 03-21-2006 08:02 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by RoninLB
Maybe.. maybe not. The program isolated by itself has in industrial age thinking. All imo.
Okay, so we can get to the truth one way, and put a "higher up" on the stand and under oath.

Are you then willing to support the Impeachment of Bush?

Because that's what it might take to get to the bottom of it.

Do you value the truth and accurate information over your parties politics?

Step up to the plate - the truth is out there.

speeder 03-21-2006 08:07 AM

I think ya lost him there.

RoninLB 03-21-2006 08:10 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by kach22i

Okay, so we can get to the truth one way,

Are you then willing to support the Impeachment of Bush?

Because that's what it might take to get to the bottom of it.

Do you value the truth and accurate information over your parties politics?


the truth about the program is common knowledge afaik.

Impeaching Bush is political bs. Political bs is where the $ is. The money is with the far left.

All politics is politics is bs. The only basic truth to civilization is war and economics. That's my truth. That truth determines the flow of civilization.

kach22i 03-21-2006 08:15 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by RoninLB
the truth about the program is common knowledge afaik.
There we go, a crack in the door way leading to the light of truth.

You are right about one thing; "follow the money" explains a lot, wars included.

Moneyguy1 03-21-2006 08:17 AM

Common knowledge is a very uncommon commodity.

And not to be trusted...


"Everyone knows (fill in the blank) is true"...

snowman 03-21-2006 06:13 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Rodeo
...
Or maybe you'll now concentrate on getting yourself those two Carrera GTs. Right.

I had an argument with the wife. She wants the silver one and so do I. Since there is only one silver one and one black one, and neither of us want the black one, we have agreed to disagree and go back to looking at Ferraris.

RoninLB 03-21-2006 08:54 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Moneyguy1

Common knowledge is a very uncommon commodity.
And not to be trusted...
"Everyone knows (fill in the blank) is true"...

always true when politics is involved.

Knowing where politics exists helps survival+

'ole Pres Andrew Jackson should be in charge of strategic security. He didn't give a shiit about politics afaik.

RoninLB 03-21-2006 08:57 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by kach22i

There we go, a crack in the door way leading to the light of truth.

sounds like banging a new girlfriend for the first time.

pwd72s 03-21-2006 10:22 PM

FWIW, the lead editorial from the 21 March 2006 Albany (OR) Democrat-Herald Editor's name Hasso Hering...

Last modified Tuesday, March 21, 2006 12:19 PM PST


Privacy? You’re kidding, right?





If you think your phone calls and e-mail messages are protected from prying ears or eyes, you are mistaken.

For a full account of the technical means of monitoring all electronic communications in and out of this country and around the world, check the current edition of the Atlantic Monthly.

In an article by James Bamford, the magazine explains the technology of communications surveillance. It reports that the National Security Agency “has the ability to eavesdrop on your communications — land lines, cell phones, e-mails, BlackBerry messages, Internet searches, and more — with ease.” And it asks: “What happens when the technology of espionage outstrips the law’s ability to protect ordinary citizens from it?”

In layman’s terms, the NSA has the ability to monitor millions of messages every hour, even every minute. Nobody can listen to all that stuff, so extremely advanced computers are employed to scan the traffic for certain phrases or other bits of information. For example, if some phone number is suspected of having served as a contact for a suspicious person overseas, the system listens for anything connected with that number.

The all-encompassing nature of this electronic sieve may explain why the government hasn’t tried to seek Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) warrants for each particular search. It might have had to file tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of warrants — impossible even for the Washington bureaucracy.

The author of the Atlantic article is an opponent of the surveillance and one of those who have sued to stop it.

Lawsuits arising from all this may answer a fundamental question in a new way. The question is: Does electronic communication through the ether come under the traditional privacy protections? Or is it the modern equivalent of standing on a corner yelling back and forth to someone across the street, so that anybody can hear what you say?

The way people act — using their cell phones in public and speaking loudly and freely about private matters — suggests that many Americans no longer think telephone calls should be private. And technology seems to say the same thing.

As for the rest of us: We should assume that anything we say on the phone network or through the Internet is open to someone else. So if you want to send secrets, pass them on in person or put them in the mail. (hh)

RoninLB 03-22-2006 03:37 AM

I read about NSA using key words to trigger a tap over 10yrs ago.

Rodeo 03-22-2006 04:33 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by snowman
I had an argument with the wife. She wants the silver one and so do I. Since there is only one silver one and one black one, and neither of us want the black one, we have agreed to disagree and go back to looking at Ferraris.
I think you overplayed you hand ... aren't you late for school?

snowman 03-22-2006 09:14 PM

Possibly


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