Wait a minute... Canada has oil, beer, and beautiful women? Why the hell aren't we invading them?
Uh... the border is too long? NAFTA? Oh... wait... we can't (based on current "intelligence") blame Canada for 9/11!
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Wait a minute... Canada has oil, beer, and beautiful women? Why the hell aren't we invading them?
Uh... the border is too long? NAFTA? Oh... wait... we can't (based on current "intelligence") blame Canada for 9/11!
Clearly, you haven't seen the South Park movie. Blame Canada
Heck I have been blaming Canada for YEARS.. sitting up there all peaceful and happy not bothering anyone.... THOSE are EXACTLY the ones you have to watch
I blame them for those goofy dimes that end up in your pocket just when you really need a soda from the vending machine.
Clearly, you haven't seen the South Park movie. Blame Canada
Heck I have been blaming Canada for YEARS.. sitting up there all peaceful and happy not bothering anyone.... THOSE are EXACTLY the ones you have to watch
Blaming Canada and attacking Canada are two different things!
. The trick is to avoid an explosion ...
well, I think it's time to take the next step.
There are a proven 600 or more Concentration camps that the US military are planning on using when Martial Law uprises. The POLICE STATE mentality is on the rise. As a police officer who knows of many who work for Homeland Security I've found out and heard of some of the stories of Martial Law. Just recently the US MARINES done a 2 week "mock urban warfare" training within the city and the streets of Indianapolis. WHY? WHy must they prepare to do such things within the city? Do they not have multi million dollar training camps and facilities for such training?
Bush never lied to us about Iraq
The administration simply got bad intelligence. Critics are wrong to assert deception.
By James Kirchick
June 16, 2008
LATimes
Excerpt:
Touring Vietnam in 1965, Michigan Gov. George Romney proclaimed American involvement there "morally right and necessary." Two years later, however, Romney -- then seeking the Republican presidential nomination -- not only recanted his support for the war but claimed that he had been hoodwinked.
"When I came back from Vietnam, I had just had the greatest brainwashing that anybody can get," Romney told a Detroit TV reporter who asked the candidate how he reconciled his shifting views.
Romney (father of Mitt) had visited Vietnam with nine other governors, all of whom denied that they had been duped by their government. With this one remark, his presidential hopes were dashed.
The memory of this gaffe reverberates in the contemporary rhetoric of many Democrats, who, when attacking the Bush administration's case for war against Saddam Hussein, employ essentially the same argument. In 2006, John F. Kerry explained the Senate's 77-23 passage of the Iraq war resolution this way: "We were misled. We were given evidence that was not true." On the campaign trail, Hillary Rodham Clinton dodged blame for her pro-war vote by claiming that "the mistakes were made by this president, who misled this country and this Congress."
Nearly every prominent Democrat in the country has repeated some version of this charge, and the notion that the Bush administration deceived the American people has become the accepted narrative of how we went to war.
((END EXCERPT))
James Kirchick is an assistant editor at The New Republic. Even in that bastion of liberalism (American style for our British friends who will argue against the term AGAIN) he can understand truth, why can't some of you?