Bush & the L-Word Posted: Monday, March 29, 2004
Suicide bombings rock Uzbeckistan
Africa: Oil, al-Qaeda and the US military
America's Most Powerful Hate Group
Main course: cooked Rice You can always tell when a scandal is about to cause real damage to a president: The demand for human sacrifice begins. No, not by the other party. Not by the investigators on the case. Not even by the hungry media. It's the big guy himself, suddenly overcome with nervousness and self-protection, who casts wary eyes on his own unfortunate subordinates.
Who knew what before Sept. 11?
Bush Knew; and Now We Know He Knew The Bush Administration is in full spin mode trying to unload its heaviest artillery on the credibility on the unflappable Mr. Clarke.
AFL-CIO in Venezuela: Deja Vu All Over Again
Condoleezza Rice Threatens Jamaica Over Aristide I have learned from a White House source that Condoleezza Rice has pointedly threatened the Jamaican Government, telling it to expel President Aristide or face the consequences. The administration wants President Aristide out of the region.
Indictment urged for Sharon in bribery case
Iraqi defector behind America's WMD claims exposed as 'out-and-out fabricator'
Israel was entitled to kill Yassin ¥ How some Jews view an Assassination
Getting out of Iraq should be only a start
When the fog of war lifts, the truth hurts
Bush & the L-Word Over the past four years, one of the most powerful U.S. media taboos has been against calling George W. Bush’s pattern of false statements lies. Among Washington journalists, the l-word is casually applied to people who have gotten in the way of the Bush Dynasty – from Bill Clinton and Al Gore to more recently John Kerry and now Richard Clarke – but almost never to Bush.
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