Maz February 12, 2003
#65 Posted by nasah on February 14, 2003 10:33:20 pm
No WAR -- George Bush -- Bring back our Boys -- Iraq is NOT a threat to World Peace -- YOU ARE -- YOU ARE a THREAT to World PEACE.
You are about to commit -- a CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY -- THE WORLD IS WATCHING you commit a crime -- DESIST from WAR -- Remember Nuremberg -- and -- Remember Hague
LONDON (Feb. 15) - Thousands of Australians kicked off global protests on Saturday against a looming U.S.-led war on Iraq in the biggest mass peace demonstrations since the Vietnam conflict.
In the Australian city of Melbourne, 100,000 people demonstrated in a peace movement expected to spread to around 600 towns and cities around the world stretching from the far south to Iceland.
``This is a truly global movement. We are in contact with peace movements in the United States and across Europe,`` Stop The War UK leader Andrew Murray said.(Reuter)
where is that Aussie Zafar -- pretty good -- pretty good -- Zafar miaN -- mighty proud of ur mighty Melbourne -- eh
You are about to commit -- a CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY -- THE WORLD IS WATCHING you commit a crime -- DESIST from WAR -- Remember Nuremberg -- and -- Remember Hague
LONDON (Feb. 15) - Thousands of Australians kicked off global protests on Saturday against a looming U.S.-led war on Iraq in the biggest mass peace demonstrations since the Vietnam conflict.
In the Australian city of Melbourne, 100,000 people demonstrated in a peace movement expected to spread to around 600 towns and cities around the world stretching from the far south to Iceland.
``This is a truly global movement. We are in contact with peace movements in the United States and across Europe,`` Stop The War UK leader Andrew Murray said.(Reuter)
where is that Aussie Zafar -- pretty good -- pretty good -- Zafar miaN -- mighty proud of ur mighty Melbourne -- eh
#66 Posted by nasah on February 15, 2003 5:58:13 am
Viva La France
UNITED NATIONS, Feb. 14 -- The Bush administration faced broad opposition in the U.N. Security Council today to its quest for authorization for military action to remove Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and destroy any weapons of mass destruction.
After hearing a measured presentation of pluses and minuses in recent Iraqi behavior by chief U.N. weapons inspector Hans Blix, a solid majority of council members said the inspectors should be given more time to do their work before the world body considers the use of force.
The session dealt a severe blow to the administration`s carefully calibrated campaign to gain early approval for a U.S.-led invasion.
France, continuing to marshal opposition to an attack on Iraq, proposed that inspectors report again to the council on March 14, long after the White House had aimed to have Security Council support.
``We have to date found no evidence of ongoing prohibited nuclear or nuclear-related activities in Iraq,`` IAEA Director General Mohamed ElBaradei said.
One after another, foreign diplomats took the comments of Blix and ElBaradei as a reason to give inspections more time.
Indeed, Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov and French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin received applause -- rarely offered in the council -- for their remarks.
``There is one point of principle that we all must answer: Must the inspectors continue their work in Iraq in the interest of a political settlement?`` Ivanov asked.
``Russia answers yes to that question.``
De Villepin said U.N. pressure on Iraq is showing ``real progress`` and argued that a war poses great risks to Iraqis and regional stability alike. He warned against ``premature military action.``
``No one can assert today that the path of war will be shorter than that of the inspections,`` de Villepin said. ``No one can claim either that it might lead to a safer, more just and more stable world.``
De Villepin also challenged allegations made by Powell that Iraq has strong ties to the al Qaeda terrorist network.
``Nothing allows us to establish such links,`` he said, citing a French review of its own intelligence and the work of other agencies.
One sign of how badly things were going for the Bush administration was the declaration of Chile`s U.N. ambassador, Gabriel Valdes, whose government had been moving closer to Washington`s line on Iraq:
``I think that what the report has underlined is that the inspections are working and therefore inspections should continue.``
Only Britain, Spain and Bulgaria spoke in support of the U.S. position.
(Washington Post)
NO WAR -- George Bush -- NO WAR
UNITED NATIONS, Feb. 14 -- The Bush administration faced broad opposition in the U.N. Security Council today to its quest for authorization for military action to remove Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and destroy any weapons of mass destruction.
After hearing a measured presentation of pluses and minuses in recent Iraqi behavior by chief U.N. weapons inspector Hans Blix, a solid majority of council members said the inspectors should be given more time to do their work before the world body considers the use of force.
The session dealt a severe blow to the administration`s carefully calibrated campaign to gain early approval for a U.S.-led invasion.
France, continuing to marshal opposition to an attack on Iraq, proposed that inspectors report again to the council on March 14, long after the White House had aimed to have Security Council support.
``We have to date found no evidence of ongoing prohibited nuclear or nuclear-related activities in Iraq,`` IAEA Director General Mohamed ElBaradei said.
One after another, foreign diplomats took the comments of Blix and ElBaradei as a reason to give inspections more time.
Indeed, Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov and French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin received applause -- rarely offered in the council -- for their remarks.
``There is one point of principle that we all must answer: Must the inspectors continue their work in Iraq in the interest of a political settlement?`` Ivanov asked.
``Russia answers yes to that question.``
De Villepin said U.N. pressure on Iraq is showing ``real progress`` and argued that a war poses great risks to Iraqis and regional stability alike. He warned against ``premature military action.``
``No one can assert today that the path of war will be shorter than that of the inspections,`` de Villepin said. ``No one can claim either that it might lead to a safer, more just and more stable world.``
De Villepin also challenged allegations made by Powell that Iraq has strong ties to the al Qaeda terrorist network.
``Nothing allows us to establish such links,`` he said, citing a French review of its own intelligence and the work of other agencies.
One sign of how badly things were going for the Bush administration was the declaration of Chile`s U.N. ambassador, Gabriel Valdes, whose government had been moving closer to Washington`s line on Iraq:
``I think that what the report has underlined is that the inspections are working and therefore inspections should continue.``
Only Britain, Spain and Bulgaria spoke in support of the U.S. position.
(Washington Post)
NO WAR -- George Bush -- NO WAR
#67 Posted by pmishra2 on February 15, 2003 9:29:54 am
SO what is the alternative proposal? I guess there are no adult asnwers
or solutions here, only the adolescent pleasures of protest.
or solutions here, only the adolescent pleasures of protest.
#68 Posted by nasah on February 15, 2003 9:29:54 am
Thank you Chowk Staff --
for helping us burst this odious bubble of --``Pre Emptive Invasion`` -- of non combatant -- poor third world countries -- as an instrument of this new -- Imperial Foreign Policy -- by a gang of Texas War Lords --
who have -- temporarily -- HIJACKED MY BELOVED country.
THANK YOU -- THANK YOU -- for enhancing World Peace -- and actively promoting RULE OF LAW -- in International Affairs.
No country -- NOT even the Mightiest Country of the World -- the United States of America -- is or will be -- ABOVE THE LAW.
Might is NOT Right -- and NEVER will be -- for the World of 2002 --
we are NOT -- a bunch of SAVAGES.
for helping us burst this odious bubble of --``Pre Emptive Invasion`` -- of non combatant -- poor third world countries -- as an instrument of this new -- Imperial Foreign Policy -- by a gang of Texas War Lords --
who have -- temporarily -- HIJACKED MY BELOVED country.
THANK YOU -- THANK YOU -- for enhancing World Peace -- and actively promoting RULE OF LAW -- in International Affairs.
No country -- NOT even the Mightiest Country of the World -- the United States of America -- is or will be -- ABOVE THE LAW.
Might is NOT Right -- and NEVER will be -- for the World of 2002 --
we are NOT -- a bunch of SAVAGES.
#69 Posted by S.P.Wakil on February 15, 2003 10:42:25 am
Is ``maz`` a person or a corporation? Please, Chowk Admin., let me know.
I have enjoyed nasah`s literary wiriting well. pmishra is the Chowk editors` ``plant`` [the kind upgrade auction houses use to raise the bid]. Enjoyed his #55; a real bang!
However, re.#68, pmishra2, there is an adult answer: in the adult section of the video rental stores!!
I have enjoyed nasah`s literary wiriting well. pmishra is the Chowk editors` ``plant`` [the kind upgrade auction houses use to raise the bid]. Enjoyed his #55; a real bang!
However, re.#68, pmishra2, there is an adult answer: in the adult section of the video rental stores!!
#70 Posted by sadna on February 15, 2003 11:40:50 am
pmishra2 #68
The issue is `solution` to what ? Its not clear what is the problem whose only advocated solution- war, justifies the certain death of thousands of Iraqis and the destruction of war?
If the problem is the condition of Iraqi society and the suffering of its children, war is not the solution. The damage to Iraq from war will make things worse not better from a humanitarian angle. Pro-war leaders donot bring up this issue at all, moreover. For instance, I don`t see Bush or Blair threatening Saddam, `use oil-for-supplies earnings to feed your children or we will attack`. These people donot even admit that international sanctions have hurt Iraqi children and are choking Iraqi society and culture, via Saddam.
If the problem is that Saddam is a cruel dictator and Iraqis are crying out for his removal and for political change, again war is not the solution. War can easily lead to fragmentation of the country and civil war between ethnic factions grabbing territory in resulting chaos. The pro-war lobby has not put out any concret roadmap for avoiding chaos or bringing meaningful change in the political system without the country imploding. There is not even a simple pronouncement from pro-war leaders to the effect that going into this war, US/UK govt. are committed to the territorial integrity of Iraq.
If the problem is that Saddam is a threat to the region and the US due to being a cruel and crazed megalomaniac, well, there has been no evidence of any imminent threat to any other country from Saddam for many years. If anything Iraq`s neighbouring countries will be adversely affected by a US-Iraq war.
If the problem is the deadly weapons Saddam is harboring with intent to use them, well where are they? Let them provide better evidence for waging war than the phone conversations they have provided so far(I heard only one).
Being anti-war simply means weighing the substantial certainty of deaths of the destruction of war against the uncertain vague unsubstantiated threat of `evil`.
Even the full force of a uniquely American self-righteous outrage which they display when they grandly prounounce something or someone `evil` is inadequate to provide substance to the case for war.
The issue is `solution` to what ? Its not clear what is the problem whose only advocated solution- war, justifies the certain death of thousands of Iraqis and the destruction of war?
If the problem is the condition of Iraqi society and the suffering of its children, war is not the solution. The damage to Iraq from war will make things worse not better from a humanitarian angle. Pro-war leaders donot bring up this issue at all, moreover. For instance, I don`t see Bush or Blair threatening Saddam, `use oil-for-supplies earnings to feed your children or we will attack`. These people donot even admit that international sanctions have hurt Iraqi children and are choking Iraqi society and culture, via Saddam.
If the problem is that Saddam is a cruel dictator and Iraqis are crying out for his removal and for political change, again war is not the solution. War can easily lead to fragmentation of the country and civil war between ethnic factions grabbing territory in resulting chaos. The pro-war lobby has not put out any concret roadmap for avoiding chaos or bringing meaningful change in the political system without the country imploding. There is not even a simple pronouncement from pro-war leaders to the effect that going into this war, US/UK govt. are committed to the territorial integrity of Iraq.
If the problem is that Saddam is a threat to the region and the US due to being a cruel and crazed megalomaniac, well, there has been no evidence of any imminent threat to any other country from Saddam for many years. If anything Iraq`s neighbouring countries will be adversely affected by a US-Iraq war.
If the problem is the deadly weapons Saddam is harboring with intent to use them, well where are they? Let them provide better evidence for waging war than the phone conversations they have provided so far(I heard only one).
Being anti-war simply means weighing the substantial certainty of deaths of the destruction of war against the uncertain vague unsubstantiated threat of `evil`.
Even the full force of a uniquely American self-righteous outrage which they display when they grandly prounounce something or someone `evil` is inadequate to provide substance to the case for war.
#71 Posted by nasah on February 15, 2003 11:40:50 am
````SO what is the alternative proposal? I guess there are no adult answers or solutions here, only the adolescent pleasures of protest. ```` (pmishra)
pmishra jee -- being an Indian -- of all the people -- u don`t know the obvious answers? -- the whole world knows it --
the ADULT answers are -- what the 12 out of 15 Security Council nations said -- yesterday -- Inspection and deweaponization of Iraq by the UN -- NOT by One country US taking LAW in its own hands –
a regime change – by Iraqis themselves – NOT by George -- the OIL MAN
NOT by WAR – but by Ispections and civilized NEGOTIATIONS --
now what`s so difficult for an Indian to understand – that?
yesterday in the Security Council -- WAR was the LONELY pleasure of that -- `ADULT` General -- acting like an ADOLESCENT rep -- of a bunch of Texas Juvenile Delinquents -- HELL BENT on a GANG WAR in Iraq.
so please revise your definitions -- PEACE is ADULT -- WAR is ADOLESCENT/JUVENILE -- DELINQUENCY.
pmishra jee -- being an Indian -- of all the people -- u don`t know the obvious answers? -- the whole world knows it --
the ADULT answers are -- what the 12 out of 15 Security Council nations said -- yesterday -- Inspection and deweaponization of Iraq by the UN -- NOT by One country US taking LAW in its own hands –
a regime change – by Iraqis themselves – NOT by George -- the OIL MAN
NOT by WAR – but by Ispections and civilized NEGOTIATIONS --
now what`s so difficult for an Indian to understand – that?
yesterday in the Security Council -- WAR was the LONELY pleasure of that -- `ADULT` General -- acting like an ADOLESCENT rep -- of a bunch of Texas Juvenile Delinquents -- HELL BENT on a GANG WAR in Iraq.
so please revise your definitions -- PEACE is ADULT -- WAR is ADOLESCENT/JUVENILE -- DELINQUENCY.
#73 Posted by arjun_m on February 15, 2003 6:28:06 pm
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#74 Posted by arjun_m on February 15, 2003 8:12:26 pm
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#75 Posted by nasah on February 15, 2003 11:04:45 pm
Millions join global protests against Iraq war
By Ellen Wulfhorst and Paul Majendie
NEW YORK/LONDON, Feb 15 (Reuters) - More than six million protesters took to the streets around the globe on Saturday to send a passionate message to U.S. President George W. Bush not to invade Iraq and to give peace a chance.
In a huge wave of demonstrations not seen since the Vietnam War era, anti-war marchers in more than 600 towns and cities from Canberra to Cape Town to Chicago called on Bush to back off his hawkish stance toward Iraq, which his administration accuses of hiding weapons of mass destruction that pose a global threat.
``This war is solely about oil. George Bush has never given a damn about human rights,`` said Mayor Ken Livingstone in London, where at least half a million people marched in the biggest peace demonstration in British history creating a major headache for Prime Minister Tony Blair, Bush`s closest ally.
In New York, South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu told demonstrators outside the United Nations that the United States should allow U.N. inspectors to finish their task of searching Iraq for illicit weapons.
``The just war says you have exhausted all possible and peaceful means, and the world says, `No, we haven`t,``` the Nobel Prize laureate said.
___________________________________________________
The largest outcries against war in Europe were in countries where leaders have vocally supported Bush`s position.
___________________________________________________
Bush and Blair suffered a setback Friday to their efforts to win international backing for early military action to rid Iraq of suspected weapons of mass destruction in a dramatic showdown at the United Nations.
France, Russia, China, Germany and other nations said U.N. weapons inspections should continue in statements that seemed set to slow the introduction of a resolution the United States and Britain want to authorize the use of force.
French Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin boasted of a triumph in France`s efforts to brake Washington`s push for war after the French foreign minister won applause for his call for at least another month of inspections.
`GIVING PEACE A CHANCE`
``France is giving peace a chance. France is giving hope to the world and all over the world people are looking to France ...,`` Raffarin told parliament.
Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Tareq Aziz hailed the worldwide protests.
``They show the conscience of mankind against crime and against aggression,`` Aziz, Iraq`s most prominent Christian, told Reuters television in Italy, where he prayed for peace.
Saturday`s protests kicked off in New Zealand and Australia, where tens of thousands of people poured on to the streets. The rallies then followed the dawning day to more than 600 towns and cities stretching to California.
In America, authorities first estimated the crowd in New York at 250,000 people, but police later put the number at 100,000. Nonetheless it was the largest U.S anti-war protests that called on Bush not to invade Iraq.
Tutu said he believed the peace marches could make a difference.
_____________________________________________________
``People marched and demonstrated and the Berlin Wall fell. People marched and demonstrated and apartheid ended,`` he said.
``And now people are marching and demonstrating because they are saying no to war,`` he said.
_____________________________________________________
Smaller U.S. protests of several thousand each were held in Chicago, Philadelphia and Santa Fe, New Mexico, while in California, thousands of protesters demonstrated in Los Angeles, San Diego, San Jose and Sacramento.
In Mexico City, around 30,000 people took to the streets brandishing placards and banners emblazoned with such messages as ``Bush is an assassin`` and ``Yankee imperialism, murderers of the world.``
``Let`s say no to war, because war has never brought positive proposals for people,`` said 1992 Nobel Peace Prize winner Rigoberta Menchu, a Guatemalan whose country`s 1960-1996 civil war saw 200,000 killings.
In Canada about 100,000 people demonstrated in frigid Montreal and on the west coast a long, winding march of 25,000 protesters clogged the streets of Vancouver.
In Buenos Aires, thousands rallied against the war in pouring rain downtown, where retired watchsmith Hector Rico said: ``We may be a long way from the action, but U.S. warmongering is putting all our lives on the line.``
`AMERICANS STRESSED`
At a protest in France, one of the staunchest opponents of war, one woman said: ``The Americans were stressed by September 11 and now they are going completely overboard.``
The French Interior Ministry estimated at least 300,000 people turned out to protest across the country. In Berlin, some 500,000 people attended a rally, the biggest protest in Germany since the end of World War Two, authorities said.
Some two million people turned out in Spain to rail against war, including nearly 1.3 million in Barcelona, making it the city`s biggest protest ever, and 600,000 in Madrid, bringing the city center to a standstill.
In Rome about a million people marched through the ancient streets under a sea of rainbow peace banners.
There were rallies in as far-flung cities as Ankara, Moscow, Glasgow and Jakarta.
The only reported incidents of violence flared in the Greek capital, Athens, where demonstrators burned a car and smashed several shop and bank windows in center of the city at the start of a protest march to the U.S. embassy by up to 50,000 people.
(Additional reporting from Reuters bureaux in Paris, Rome, Sofia, Moscow, Berlin, Johannesburg, London, Zagreb, Sydney, Tokyo, Islamabad, Stockholm, Helsinski, Barcelona, New York, Havana, Chicago, Tel Aviv and Damascus)
(Reuter)
#76 Posted by mbenzenglish on February 16, 2003 7:14:57 am
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#77 Posted by Studebaker on February 16, 2003 11:45:59 am
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#78 Posted by wadera on February 16, 2003 1:24:31 pm
Hari (Re # 42) : I`m not sure what you were trying to say in your post. If you mean the US presence will be for longer than 2 years, then I will give a qualified agreement ... They will have a presence there behind a compliant Iraqi government. More important is the ramifications of this for the rest of the region. Other rulers in the region are also taking note, as are the ordinary people of those countries (as evidenced by the rising dislike of the US not just here but across the world)
#79 Posted by arjun_m on February 16, 2003 2:09:50 pm
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#80 Posted by S.P.Wakil on February 19, 2003 12:28:25 am
Found it in a corner of my ``Drafts`` folder. Somebody must have sent it to me as a birthday present. I
thought it should be shared with friends. Dubya is a namoona, tohfa for the world. It is a low-fat, low
calorie, low IQ treat. Enjoy Dubya!
The Village Idiot:
Irrespective of whether we believe in Nostradamus or not, this is really
hilarious....
In 1555, Nostradamus wrote: ``Come the millennium, month 12, In the home of the greatest power, The
village idiot will come forth to be acclaimed the leader``
George Bush Jr. speaks out....
- ``The vast majority of our imports come from outside the country.``
...George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``If we don`t succeed, we run the risk of failure.``
....George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``Republicans understand the importance of bondage between a
mother and child.``
Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``Welcome to Mrs. Bush, and my fellow astronauts.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``Mars is essentially in the same orbit...Mars is somewhat the same
distance from the Sun, which is very important. We have seen
pictures where there are canals, we believe, and water. If there is
water, that means there is oxygen. If oxygen, that means we can
breathe.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr., 8/11/94
- ``The Holocaust was an obscene period in our nation`s history. I mean
in this century`s history. But we all lived in this century. I didn`t live
in this century.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr., 9/15/95
- ``I believe we are on an irreversible trend toward more freedom and
democracy -but that could change.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr., 5/22/98
- ``One word sums up probably the responsibility of any Governor, and
that one word is `to be prepared`.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr., 12/6/93
- ``Verbosity leads to unclear, inarticulate things.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr., 11/30/96
- ``I have made good judgments in the past. I have made good
judgments in the future.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``The future will be better tomorrow.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``We`re going to have the best educated American people in the world.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr., 9/21/97
- ``People that are really very weird can get into sensitive positions and
have a tremendous impact on history.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``I stand by all the misstatements that I`ve made.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr. to Sam Donaldson, 8/17/93
- ``We have a firm commitment to NATO, we are a part of NATO. We
have a firm commitment to Europe. We are a part of Europe.``
...Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``Public speaking is very easy.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr. to reporters in 10/9
- ``A low voter turnout is an indication of fewer people going to the
polls.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr
- ``When I have been asked who caused the riots and the killing in LA,
my answer has been direct & simple: Who is to blame for the riots?
The rioters are to blame. Who is to blame for the killings? The
killers are to blame.
....George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``Illegitimacy is something we should talk about in terms of not having
it.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr., 5/20/96
- ``We are ready for any unforeseen event that may or may not occur.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr., 9/22/97
- ``For NASA, space is still a high priority.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``Quite frankly, teachers are the only profession that teach our
children.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr., 9/18/95
- ``The American people would not want to know of any misquotes that
George Bush may or may not make.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``We`re all capable of mistakes, but I do not care to enlighten you on
the mistakes we may or may not have made.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``It isn`t pollution that`s harming the environment. It`s the impurities
in our air and water that are doing it.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
``[It`s] time for the human race to enter the solar system.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
thought it should be shared with friends. Dubya is a namoona, tohfa for the world. It is a low-fat, low
calorie, low IQ treat. Enjoy Dubya!
The Village Idiot:
Irrespective of whether we believe in Nostradamus or not, this is really
hilarious....
In 1555, Nostradamus wrote: ``Come the millennium, month 12, In the home of the greatest power, The
village idiot will come forth to be acclaimed the leader``
George Bush Jr. speaks out....
- ``The vast majority of our imports come from outside the country.``
...George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``If we don`t succeed, we run the risk of failure.``
....George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``Republicans understand the importance of bondage between a
mother and child.``
Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``Welcome to Mrs. Bush, and my fellow astronauts.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``Mars is essentially in the same orbit...Mars is somewhat the same
distance from the Sun, which is very important. We have seen
pictures where there are canals, we believe, and water. If there is
water, that means there is oxygen. If oxygen, that means we can
breathe.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr., 8/11/94
- ``The Holocaust was an obscene period in our nation`s history. I mean
in this century`s history. But we all lived in this century. I didn`t live
in this century.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr., 9/15/95
- ``I believe we are on an irreversible trend toward more freedom and
democracy -but that could change.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr., 5/22/98
- ``One word sums up probably the responsibility of any Governor, and
that one word is `to be prepared`.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr., 12/6/93
- ``Verbosity leads to unclear, inarticulate things.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr., 11/30/96
- ``I have made good judgments in the past. I have made good
judgments in the future.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``The future will be better tomorrow.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``We`re going to have the best educated American people in the world.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr., 9/21/97
- ``People that are really very weird can get into sensitive positions and
have a tremendous impact on history.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``I stand by all the misstatements that I`ve made.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr. to Sam Donaldson, 8/17/93
- ``We have a firm commitment to NATO, we are a part of NATO. We
have a firm commitment to Europe. We are a part of Europe.``
...Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``Public speaking is very easy.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr. to reporters in 10/9
- ``A low voter turnout is an indication of fewer people going to the
polls.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr
- ``When I have been asked who caused the riots and the killing in LA,
my answer has been direct & simple: Who is to blame for the riots?
The rioters are to blame. Who is to blame for the killings? The
killers are to blame.
....George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``Illegitimacy is something we should talk about in terms of not having
it.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr., 5/20/96
- ``We are ready for any unforeseen event that may or may not occur.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr., 9/22/97
- ``For NASA, space is still a high priority.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``Quite frankly, teachers are the only profession that teach our
children.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr., 9/18/95
- ``The American people would not want to know of any misquotes that
George Bush may or may not make.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``We`re all capable of mistakes, but I do not care to enlighten you on
the mistakes we may or may not have made.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
- ``It isn`t pollution that`s harming the environment. It`s the impurities
in our air and water that are doing it.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
``[It`s] time for the human race to enter the solar system.``
....Governor George W. Bush, Jr.
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