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  1.     
    #1
    Senior Member

    Bush tells a report he wasted his question

    All right...I've really about had it with this fascist motherfucker already!!! Only a fascist dictator would say such a thing to the press, as if the laws do not apply to him.

    Plus, Bush says something VERY stupid in the article. It's in the first part of it. All that coke will do it to ya!!
    ------------------------------------------------
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/5131662.stm
    ------------------------------------------------

    And in his first public appearance after the announcement - alongside Japan's Junichiro Koizumi - he showed how rattled he was by the news.

    "It was not always a given that the United States and America would have a close relationship," he said, trying to highlight the remarkable turnaround in relations between the US and Japan - not America - since World War II.

    And his annoyance showed a moment later when not just one but two reporters asked him about the ruling.

    He said he had not had time to take it in, finishing his answer to the second journalist with: "I'm sorry you wasted your question."

    Senate support

    But while the 5-3 decision on the prisoners at Guantanamo Bay may have thrown the president off his stride, his Senate allies soon showed they were prepared to leap hurdles to support him.

    Bill Frist - Mr Bush's personal choice to lead the Republicans in the Senate, and a man who hopes to replace him in the White House - declared that he would press for a law giving the president the power to do what the Supreme Court said he could not.

    Sen Arlen Specter, a moderate Republican who chairs the powerful judiciary committee, moved even faster.

    Within hours of the Supreme Court ruling, he introduced an "Unprivileged Combatant Act" which would, he said, balance "the need for national security with the need to afford detainees with sufficient due process".

    Predictably, defenders of the roughly 450 detainees at Guantanamo Bay hailed the Supreme Court ruling.

    "Any real lawyer who isn't part of the administration knows this violates the Geneva Conventions," said Michael Mori, a military lawyer defending Guantanamo detainee David Hicks.

    But the president has made it clear that he will continue trying to find a way to try the detainees by military tribunal rather than releasing them, giving them courts martial or prosecuting them in the civilian court system.

    No early release

    And even some of his critics implicitly concede that a change in the law may make that possible.

    Democratic Sen Carl Levin said in a statement that the court ruling "firmly and appropriately establishes that the president acting alone lacks the power to unilaterally determine basic legal rights of detainees at Guantanamo Bay".

    But note the caveats about the president "acting alone" and "unilaterally".

    Sen Levin seems to leave open the possibility that Congress could change the law to support the president - as, indeed, the Supreme Court did in its verdict.

    The court's ruling was about the powers of the president, not - technically - about the treatment of the detainees, and certainly not about the authority of Congress.

    Whatever the administration's next move, the Supreme Court ruling does nothing to speed the release of the detainees.

    In fact, Bush spokesman Tony Snow said it might do just the opposite, keeping them there longer as the White House tries to figure out how to move forward.

    Part of the problem is that it does not know what to do even with those it would like to release.

    The US is afraid some will face torture in their own countries if they are sent home.

    Others, it fears, will engage in attacks on Americans targets if they are freed.

    And it remains determined to try some in military tribunals rather than open court so as not to reveal classified information.

    In theory, the Supreme Court verdict gives the White House the option of doing nothing, simply leaving the men in Guantanamo indefinitely.

    But that would definitely be challenged in court.

    Wider implications

    In fact, the Supreme Court verdict may have opened the way for challenges to other aspects of the "Global War on Terror", such as the alleged mistreatment of prisoners from Guantanamo to Abu Ghraib, Marty Lederman of Georgetown University Law school said.

    The ruling explicitly said the Geneva Conventions apply to the detainees at Guantanamo Bay - something the administration has steadfastly denied.

    "The [military] commissions are the least of it," Mr Lederman wrote in his Supreme Court blog.

    "This almost certainly means that the CIA's interrogation regime is unlawful, and indeed, that many techniques the Administration has been using, such as waterboarding and hypothermia (and others) violate the War Crimes Act."

    Other analysts have speculated that the ruling may have implications for the administration's surveillance of banking transfers and phone calls.

    In other words, the White House may suddenly find itself fighting a raft of new legal battles as it prosecutes its ongoing war on terror.
    Great Spirit Reviewed by Great Spirit on . Bush tells a report he wasted his question All right...I've really about had it with this fascist motherfucker already!!! Only a fascist dictator would say such a thing to the press, as if the laws do not apply to him. Plus, Bush says something VERY stupid in the article. It's in the first part of it. All that coke will do it to ya!! ------------------------------------------------ http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/5131662.stm ------------------------------------------------ And in his first public appearance after the Rating: 5

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  3.     
    #2
    Senior Member

    Bush tells a report he wasted his question

    Yeah i'd seen the news and thought what is the point of him even speaking half the time you can't understand him and unless he has his speaches written out for him and be told exactly how to speak he couldn't speak for himself even if his life depended on it.And how was the elvis tour?I'm sure elvis would of been turning in his grave if he knew that bush was touring his musem (Whatever it was)Its a joke.

  4.     
    #3
    Senior Member

    Bush tells a report he wasted his question

    Miss Green (with all due respect) you are beyond me..........


    GS......... i have giving up trying to explain Gdub. All I can say is we will have a bunch of cleaning up to do when he is gone. He is No Republican.

  5.     
    #4
    Senior Member

    Bush tells a report he wasted his question

    Quote Originally Posted by Bong30
    Miss Green (with all due respect) you are beyond me..........


    GS......... i have giving up trying to explain Gdub. All I can say is we will have a bunch of cleaning up to do when he is gone. He is No Republican.
    Bush is no true Republican! He is a Nazi! True Republicans are for smaller government and less taxes. Bush wants big brother type government and to cut taxes for his corporations that put him in power! Remember, fascism is a mix of government AND corporate power!

  6.     
    #5
    Senior Member

    Bush tells a report he wasted his question

    Quote Originally Posted by Great Spirit
    Only a fascist dictator would say such a thing to the press, as if the laws do not apply to him.
    Under what law does Bush have to reveal his feelings on a surpreme court ruling? =)

  7.     
    #6
    Senior Member

    Bush tells a report he wasted his question

    Quote Originally Posted by Nylo
    Under what law does Bush have to reveal his feelings on a surpreme court ruling? =)
    Bush was "appointed" to serve the people of the United States of America....not his corporate friends. He was "appoi nted" to tell the truth. He was "appointed" to defend the US Constitution...not shred it.

  8.     
    #7
    Senior Member

    Bush tells a report he wasted his question

    Quote Originally Posted by Bong30
    Miss Green (with all due respect) you are beyond me..........


    GS......... i have giving up trying to explain Gdub. All I can say is we will have a bunch of cleaning up to do when he is gone. He is No Republican.
    And how is that bong30,why is it that I am beyond you? :thumbsup:

  9.     
    #8
    Senior Member

    Bush tells a report he wasted his question

    Quote Originally Posted by Nylo
    Under what law does Bush have to reveal his feelings on a surpreme court ruling? =)
    Bush works for me! I am the people of the United States! Even though the people never elected him, he is still supposed to work for the people and answer ANY questions that we ask him! Oh wait...does the Patriot Act get rid of that??

    I'm sorry, but if your leader lies to his own people to go into a war for his own profits, than he should removed from office immediately and imprisoned!

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