Our Senator, John
McCain
wants to Bomb, Bomb and Bomb other nations and entangle
our Armed forces for another 100 years. He bases
that on false information, just as he did with the
Iraq invasion. Yet there is no apologies.
Our lies and our presence in Iraq has caused this
much horror;
-
Number of Iraqis Slaughtered In U.S. War on Iraq
1,168,058
-
Number of U.S. Military Personnel Sacrificed in
U.S. War and Occupation 3,926
-
Cost
of U.S. War and Occupation of Iraq
$486,769,250,980
-
2
Million Iraqis have been chased out to seek a safe
heaven
-
Half
a Million Women are out on the streets with no
jobs and no one to support and they may resort to
flesh trade bringing immorality and carrying
viruses.
John
McCain has repeatedly said this for the last two
weeks. “I’ll get Osama bin
Laden. I’ll get him even if I have to follow him to
the gates of hell” and he has been repeating this
from the New Hampshire Primaries, all the way to
Nevada and now South Carolina.
Senator McCain, did you not betray America?
Senator, then why did you not get Osama?
Why do you have to wait to be elected to do that?
Isn’t that a betrayal to your party and to your
President?
Isn’t that a betrayal to our nation?
Senator, what you and your Neocon buddies do not
understand is the simple formula of peace: We cannot
have peace when we chaos surrounds us. Your
irresponsible statements cause much resentment and
hatred around the globe. I guess you don't give a
damn, if that hatred you sow, becomes the reason to
mistreat our soldiers, like the tragic mis-treatment
you suffered. I hope you learn a lesson to nurture
Geneva conventions. You do not have the courtesy to
apologize your bombing statements, even after you
found out it was another manufacture of our
administration to create Chaos.
Do we need you to be another Bush-Lite?
Rewarding this rhetoric is robbing America with
another Trillion dollars; while 45 Million of
Americans go without health care costing billions of
dollars in loss of productivity, while those who
have served in wars come home depressed and not live
a full life besides killing another million of other
humans and thousands of our own.
John McCain is good for defense industry investors
and oil companies and he is no good for America.
Think about the candidates who want to save lives,
save the nation from deficit and spend their energy
and put our name for peace making. It is cheaper and
more productive to work for peace than Bomb, Bomb and
Bomb.
Say no to any candidate who wants to ruin our
country with recklessness.
COMMENTS:
In a message dated 1/19/2008 10:09:21 A.M.
justicequestxxxx@yahoo.com
writes:
McCain
and his admiral Father helped to cover-up the
treacherous Israeli attack on the USS Liberty as
well:
http://www.dissidentvoice.org/July2004/Hughes0712.htm
http://nomorewarforisrael.blogspot.com/
###
The Hundred-Year War / McCain wants us in Iraq permanently
http://www.itszone.co.uk/zone0/viewtopic.php?p=412312#412312
###
WARRIORxxxx@msn.com
writes:
McCain as a veteran of the Viet Nam War should
indeed know better - God's curse and vengeance will
be on America IF McCain - or Hillary or Rudy - is
elected President.
Kristol - being the Zionist Jew supporter of Israel
and TRAITOR to the US - does indeed see the
destruction of Iraq as 'victory' for Israel - and it
is!
A war fought against a country's population can NOT
be won.
We did NOT 'win' the Viet Nam War - and - we lost
our soul in the process.
As a veteran of the Viet Nam War myself - I served
aboard the USS Oriskany in 1966, the year before
McCain was shot down flying off the Mighty O - I
agree with Lee and Sherman:
"War is all HELL" - Sherman
"It is good that war is so terrible less we grow too
fond of it" - Lee
McCain indeed should know better!
###
So This Is Victory, Mr. Kristol?
By Joe Conason
This article appears in the January 21, 2008,
edition of The New York Observer.
As America marks the first anniversary of the troop
escalation in Iraq, at least one thing has become
clear. Although the “surge” is failing as policy, it
seems to be succeeding as propaganda. Even as George
W. Bush continues to bump and scrape along the
bottom of public approval, significantly more people
now believe that we are “winning” the war.
What
winning really means and whether that vague
impression can be sustained are questions that the
war’s proponents would prefer not to answer for the
moment. Their objective during this election year is
simply to reduce public pressure for withdrawal,
which is still the choice of an overwhelming
majority of voters.
So long
as the surge appears to be working, political space
is created for the Republican candidates who support
the war—especially Senator John McCain, the hawk’s
hawk, who said recently that he, might keep U.S.
soldiers in Iraq for “a hundred years.” Although
that remark was not well received in the Arab world,
they may have taken comfort in the fact that no
matter how determined the Arizona senator is to
carry out that threat, he is unlikely to do so since
he is already over 70 years old.
But the
revival of Mr. McCain’s moribund candidacy over the
past few weeks would have been impossible without
the media’s endorsement of “progress” in Iraq.
Indeed, war propaganda itself has surged lately on
the strength of casualty statistics from December
2007. Consider the work of William Kristol, the
indefatigable publicist who played an important role
in selling the war as editor of The Weekly Standard
and on the Fox News Channel. From his new perch on
The New York Times’ Op-Ed page—which proves that
being hideously wrong is no obstacle to scaling the
heights of American punditry—he proclaims that “we
have been able to turn around the situation in Iraq”
and achieved “real success.”
According to Mr. Kristol, who once mocked concerns
about religious strife in Iraq as “pop sociology,”
the drop in violence last month may have marked the
lowest overall number of deaths for both civilians
and military forces since the war began, in March
2003. Declining casualties for a month or two means
progress, which in turn means that the war must
continue, and that the president’s policy is
correct.
What
has fallen far more sharply than the casualty
statistics in Iraq is the standard for success
there, as defined by neoconservatives like Mr.
Kristol. In the original promotional literature
produced by them and their associates, and recited
by the president, this war was supposed to remake
the Middle East into a showcase for democracy, with
ruinous consequences for our terrorist enemies,
cheaper oil for us—and all for free because the
Iraqi petroleum industry would cover all the costs.
When
that happy future never arrived, to put it very
mildly, the war’s proponents scrambled to reduce
expectations. So when the president announced the
surge, he set forth a series of benchmarks for
progress in Iraq that were supposed to result from
our increased troop presence. The objective was not
a temporary reduction of sectarian killing but real
movement toward reconciliation of the contending
factions, including the passage of laws on sharing
oil revenues and political power among the Sunni,
Shia, Kurdish and other communities. President Bush
declared that the escalation would create space for
the Iraqis to act on behalf of their own country.
Even
those minimized objectives have yet to be met. The
oil-sharing statute is stalled in the Iraqi
parliament while Kurdish regional authorities make
their own separate deals with foreign oil companies.
The Sunni militia organizations that we have armed
to fight Al Qaeda have been rejected by the Shia
central government. The statute passed by the Iraqi
parliament last week to reduce sanctions against
former members of the Ba’ath Party, which was
supposed to mollify the Sunni leadership, appears
only to have alienated them further because they
consider it fraudulent.
Worst
of all, despite the undoubted courage and commitment
of our troops, the level of violence in Iraq has
increased since the New Year began. Killings of
civilians by car bombs and snipers averaged more
than 50 per day during the first two weeks of
January, and U.S. military deaths are averaging
slightly more than one per day, or nearly 50 percent
higher than last month.
At that level, if American troops stayed for another
10 years, let alone a century as Mr. McCain
suggests, our casualties would double. What would
winning mean then?
Joe
Conason is national correspondent for the New York
Observer, where he writes a weekly column
distributed by Creators Syndicate. He is also a
columnist for Salon.com, and the Director of the
Nation Institute Investigative Fund. His latest
book, It Can Happen Here: Authoritarian Peril in the
Age of Bush was released in February 2007. His
writing and reporting have appeared in many
publications, including Harpers, the Guardian, The
Nation, and The New Republic.
This article can be viewed online at:
http://www.observer.com/2008/so-victory-mr-kristol