was the Bush admisistration done that you have highly didagreed with?

Discussion in 'Old Hippies' started by unionpacificrailroad, Oct 14, 2004.

  1. unionpacificrailroad

    unionpacificrailroad Member

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    Peace,

    hmm. i think that there is many good thoughts here. i like John Denver. he is just about the only country singer i like because his tone and feelings are different. he was a good man. i also would like John Lennon as president and Denver as Vice Presendent! man the world would be a very safewr place then! so whos all goin to the poll?


    later

    the tired flwoer child
     
  2. MattInVegas

    MattInVegas John Denver Mega-Fan

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    My decisions have been made. I recieved my sample ballot, I'm ready to voice MY opinion.
     
  3. soulrebel51

    soulrebel51 i's a folkie.

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    I would have to say the killing of 3000 innocent people. And I can't see why anyone else would say something different as their number one thing. Right behind that would be the Patriot Act and this war. I do have to say I am grateful that Bush was president while I am so young; never before I had realized how muchI love my civil liberties and it was George W Bush who helped me realize what I want to do for my life. Also, his refusal of ratifying the Kyoto Protocol pisses me off.....there is much much more, but I've gotta go do some shit now.
     
  4. MattInVegas

    MattInVegas John Denver Mega-Fan

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    Don't blame the Soldiers. They are only fighting for YOUR right to bitch about Bush.
    I Bitch about Bush TOO. But, I'm Registered, and WILL vote next month.
     
  5. soulrebel51

    soulrebel51 i's a folkie.

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    Don't vote Bush! Anybody but Bush! Even Badnarik! :p

    but you knew that :)
     
  6. ~Sam~

    ~Sam~ Cosmic Traveler

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    Well, for starters Freight Train...

    His first duty in office was to rape EPA of most of its laws to clean up, and keep clean, this country.

    He took a balanced budget and put us trillions of dollars in the hole.

    He wanted to go back and finish what his Daddy started in Iraq. And he did it in such an honest way it makes my skin crawl.

    He took a Repulican premise; to keep government small, and made government agencies more top heavy than already were, gave them more power to fuck us up the ass, and increased the overall size of gov't agencies.

    He has no morals.

    He is a Total Fucking Moron.

    His cronies either created 9/11, or were thrilled out of their panties that it happened so that they could institute measures to take away our civil liberites. And don't kid yourself, they're just getting started with making Big Brother a harmless relic of a kinder, gentler time.

    His war on terrorism is a sham. We have the technology and the weaponry to have gotten to Osama at the onset of "terrorism in the USA." Why isn't he "Got" yet?

    His numb-nuts tax cut that steals from the poor and middle class to fatten the bilionaire's pocket book.

    His... his cronies plan for world domination, for domestic socialism and to keep Republican control of this country for a long, long time to come.

    Need I go on?

    Sam

    "Everything You Know Is Wrong"



     
  7. MattInVegas

    MattInVegas John Denver Mega-Fan

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    Here is THIS Weeks Fuck-Up!

    This is from a newspaper in Rural Minnesota.


    By Don Davis
    Capitol Reporter
    ddavis@bemidjipioneer.com


    ST. PAUL - Vice President Dick Cheney will defy a presidential campaign trend if he talks much about rural issues during his Monday Moorhead stop.




    “They don’t know what the issues are,” political science Professor Larry Jacobs said. “This campaign has confirmed once again that rural America is not on the radar screen.”



    Jacobs

    a University of Minnesota professor closely following the campaign in Minnesota, South Dakota, Wisconsin and Iowa

    said he hopes Cheney talks about the area’s loss of farmers and other rural residents.



    “We have an emergency on our hands,” Jacobs said. “We have a hurricane in Florida, but we have a slow disaster in the Upper Midwest.”



    Cheney is scheduled to attend a Republican National Committee town hall meeting in Moorhead Monday; the time and location have not been announced, although the Minnesota State University-Moorhead field house is reported to be the favored location. He campaigned in East Grand Forks on Aug. 6.



    The vice president’s visit is to follow one today by former U.S. Sen. Max Cleland, co-chairman of the national Kerry-Edwards campaign. Cleland is to speak at 10 a.m. in MSU-Moorhead’s Center for the Arts.



    Cheney is the only presidential or vice presidential candidate to stop in northwestern Minnesota this year. Others have spent plenty of time elsewhere in the state

    Republican President Bush and Democratic Sen. John Kerry seven times each this year.



    Minnesota is considered a battleground state in the presidential race, and rural voters are being courted. They are so important that the chief Bush-Cheney strategist said rural issues will become more discussed as the Nov. 2 election nears.



    “Over the course of the next 10 days, you probably will be hearing more specifics,” said Matthew Dowd.



    If so, that would be a turnaround from what has happened so far.



    Bush and Kerry and their running mates were in Minnesota this week, but they said little about agriculture or how to preserve shrinking, rural communities.



    Bush brought a farmer onto stage with him and promoted his plan to eliminate estate taxes during a Rochester rally. Sen. John Edwards, Kerry’s running mate, spent a few moments talking about rural issues, including promoting the right to use snowmobiles, during his Hibbing stop.



    Rural issues generally have been a few sentences edited into the candidates’ standard stump speeches. In Mankato, Minn., for instance, Bush delivered a speech of nearly 300 sentences; eight were specifically about rural matters.



    “We have seen more rural locations, but we’ve only seen slight increment movement on these rural issues,” said Dee Davis, president of the Center for Rural Strategies, a non-partisan group that promotes rural issues.



    Niel Ritchie, president of the Minnesota-based League of Rural Voters, said he is happy rural voters are seeing the candidates first hand.



    “It is the fact that the candidates themselves are finding their way to the (rural) communities and attempting to have a conversation with voters,” Ritchie said. “This is a start. Traditionally, candidates have flown over and not dropped down.”



    Ritchie, who has donated to Democratic legislative candidates even though the league he heads is non-partisan, said a Wisconsin Kerry television commercial about the dairy industry is the only rural advertisement he knows about in the campaign.


    This administration doesn't give a shit about the American people.
    Josh, Look up Bemidji Minn. It isn't that far from you.
     
  8. unionpacificrailroad

    unionpacificrailroad Member

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    Peace Matt,

    what exactly do you mean not far form me? this guy is like a Bush supervisor or something?

    later

    the tired flwor child

    p.s. i was up till 3 am working on my car. i found out there was a block in the fuel line was wrong its the gas tank. there is rust in the gas tank. besides taht tahts all i know for now. ille keep you updated ;)




    Josh, Look up Bemidji Minn. It isn't that far from you.
    [/QUOTE]
     

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