January 26, 2004
George W. Bush is a Socialist and a Liar
Socialist W. LiarGeorge W. Bush is a socialist and a liar. If this weren’t evident to everyone already, his January 20 State of the Union address should suffice. While in the address Bush proved he believes that any conflict a person can experience – career, marriage, children, electricity, whatever – is the domain of the federal government, his comments on medicine alone show his absolute conviction that the central government is life’s answer to everything for everyone, and that he is often directly dishonest with us.
Bush Cautious About Banning 'Gay' Unions
When President Bush threatened to back a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage in his State of the Union address last week, he sent a strong message to his conservative religious voter base. At the same time, analysts say, he carefully tailored it to avoid alienating the socially moderate swing voters he needs to win in November.
Bush's Sodomite White House
President Bush Expands Aids Policy Team
Evertz to Coordinate U.S. Role on Global Fund Board;
O'Neill Moving Into National Policy Office
Log Cabin Republicans -- GOP Sodomite Publication
WASHINGTON -- Following up on his commitment to a two-front war on the AIDS epidemic -- both at home and abroad -- President Bush is expected to appoint his director of national AIDS policy
to coordinate U.S. policy on the international Global Fund to fight AIDS and infectious diseases, and Dr. Joe O'Neill to head up the Office of National AIDS Policy. The move would add another openly gay Bush Administration appointee on the administration's AIDS policy team, and adds manpower in the fight against the epidemic at home and abroad. "President Bush continues to lead where others merely offered speeches and rhetoric," said Rich Tafel, executive director of Log Cabin Republicans. "With Scott Evertz and Joe O'Neill, we have two of the best qualified people in the nation on the President's team. (Jeremiah 5:9)
Timeline Of The Bush Administration On Gay Policy
Log Cabin Republicans -- GOP Sodomite Publication
Medical Consequences Of What Homosexuals Do
By Paul Cameron, Ph.D. Chairman / Family Research Institute
Throughout history, all civilized societies have condemned homosexuality. Until 1961 homosexual acts were illegal throughout America.
For Whom The Death Tolls
There is evidence of a concerted effort afoot to obfuscate the number of casualties in the US-led “war on terror.” May 1st was the day the president Bush landed on an aircraft carrier and declared the end to the war and the start of the occupation of Iraq. [1] Since then many casualty numbers have been publicized, most of them disingenuous fudges of the real death toll. There are many reasons why the casualty toll is understated, which we dissect in this brief essay. The Bush regime is doing its best to hide the human cost of its recent wars. Publicity of the soldiers’ deaths is bad during an election year, and would be bad for the continued justification for the American occupation of Iraq. If they are intent on hiding the casualty figures, then it behooves us to uncover and amplify them.
U.S. Helicopter Crashes in Iraq; Two Crew Missing
MOSUL, Iraq -- The U.S. military said it was hunting for the two-man crew of an armed reconnaissance helicopter that crashed Sunday in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul. A military spokesman in Baghdad said the Kiowa helicopter came down in the Tigris river in Mosul, about 390 km (240 miles) northwest of Baghdad, while on a search-and-rescue mission for a U.S. soldier who had been on a river patrol boat that went missing earlier.
U.S. Soldier Killed in Muslim Grenade Attack
TIKRIT, Iraq -- Insurgents fired a rocket propelled grenade at a Bradley fighting vehicle that was on patrol in central Iraq, killing a U.S. soldiers, a military spokeswoman said Sunday. The grenade, which was fired on Saturday in Baiji town, pierced the driver's compartment and critically wounded the soldier, said Maj. Josslyn Aberle, a spokeswoman for the 4th Infantry Division.
DC Anti War Activists Move
Ahead with Class Action Suit
In Washington D.C., the city government is trying to settle several lawsuits brought by over 400 people who were arrested there during anti-war protests in September 2002. The arrests were criticized by the press, legal experts, and the city council, and an internal police investigation found the actions to have violated police procedures. While the plaintiffs in one case have accepted the government's offer, three other cases, including a class action suit, are moving forward. Darby Hickey of the D.C. Radio Co-op has this report.
Cheney Defends Iraq War to Europeans
DAVOS, Switzerland - Free nations, working together, must not shy from using force if diplomacy cannot deter terrorism and check the spread of the world's most dangerous weapons, Vice President Dick Cheney told Europe on Saturday.
Cops Combat Flood of Firearms,
Feds program may help turn the tide?
Guns are flooding Cincinnati's streets, police say, showing up frequently in the hands of suspects ranging from children to the elderly. As a result, police are increasing efforts to use a federal prosecution program that gives harsher penalties to the city's most violent offenders.
States' Database a Trove of Personal Info
NEW YORK -- A federally funded crime database run by seven states is looking increasingly to privacy advocates like a potent substitute for the data-mining program the Pentagon scrapped after public rebuke.
Law enforcement officials and the private company that manages the database, known as Matrix, say it merely streamlines police access to information about suspects that authorities have long been able to get from disparate sources.
USAID Launches School Improvements Project
ISLAMABAD -- U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan Nancy Powell Thursday joined in the inauguration of the USAID-funded School Enhancement Program (SEP) at a government school in Azizabad, Nilore. Dr. Haroona Jatoi, Joint Education Advisor, represented the Ministry of Education. The School Enhancement Program at the Azizabad school is one part of the $100 million five-year USAID education initiative for Pakistan.
India Attacks US on Plan to Ban Outsourcing
India's technology industry has attacked proposed new US legislation that bans the outsourcing of federal work to low cost countries arguing it is a protectionist measure contrary to the spirit of free trade. The US bill, which was passed by the Senate of Friday but has still to be signed by President George W. Bush before it becomes law, is the most significant attempt to stop outsourcing, a fast-growing industry trend that has led to the loss of thousands of highly-paid technology jobs in the US and become a hot political issue in a US election year.
East Gets Pounded By Winter Storms
Mid-Atlantic region -- The mid-Atlantic states are getting hammered by what could be the season's largest snowstorm. Up to ten inches are forecast for some parts of Maryland and Delaware. Several inches are already on the ground in the Washington DC suburbs.
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