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10-5-2007 9:03 AM
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schreibe says:
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On Wednesday, President Bush vetoed legislation that would have expanded S-chip, the State Children’s Health Insurance Program, providing health insurance to an estimated 3.8 million children who would otherwise lack coverage.

In anticipation of the veto, William Kristol, the editor of The Weekly Standard, had this to say: “First of all, whenever I hear anything described as a heartless assault on our children, I tend to think it’s a good idea. I’m happy that the president’s willing to do something bad for the kids.” Heh-heh-heh.

Most conservatives are more careful than Mr. Kristol. They try to preserve the appearance that they really do care about those less fortunate than themselves. But the truth is that they aren’t bothered by the fact that almost nine million children in America lack health insurance. They don’t think it’s a problem.

HERE'S A REALLY SAD STATEMENT FROM OUR PRESIDENT!
“I mean, people have access to health care in America,” said Mr. Bush in July. “Af
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10-5-2007 9:20 AM
schreibe
Continued....(ran out of room on first comment page, but just had to make the full statement that ....to me.....shows that our current President is a little off his rocker!)

HERE'S A REALLY SAD STATEMENT FROM OUR PRESIDENT!
“I mean, people have access to health care in America,” said Mr. Bush in July. “After all, you just go to an emergency room.”
DISGUSTING!
10-5-2007 9:30 AM
schreibe
For the full Krugman article, check out my blog
This one is worth a few minutes of your time!
10-7-2007 12:14 PM
thinkingblue
The conservatives have always been uncompassionate... why would they create a slogan calling themselves THE COMPASSIONATE CONSERVATIVE...? If you look like a duck, walk like a duck and talk like a duck - guess what?
The late Molly Ivins had their number years ago:

Commentary: It's not that he's mean. It's just that when it comes to seeing how his policies affect people, George W. Bush doesn't have a clue.

By Molly Ivins
November/December 2003 Issue
In order to understand why George W. Bush doesn't get it, you have to take several strands of common Texas attitude, then add an impressive degree of class-based obliviousness. What you end up with is a guy who sees himself as a per...
10-7-2007 12:15 PM
thinkingblue
The Reverend Jim Wallis, leader of Call to Renewal, a network of churches that fight poverty, told the New York Times that shortly after his election, Bush had said to him, "I don't understand how poor people think," and had described himself as a "white Republican guy who doesn't get it, but I'd like to." What's annoying about Bush is when this obtuseness, the blinkeredness of his life, weighs so heavily on others, as it has increasingly as he has acquired more power.
There was a telling episode in 1999 when the Department of Agriculture came out with its annual statistics on hunger, showing that once again Texas was near the top. Texas is a perennial leader in hunger because we have 43 c...
10-7-2007 12:21 PM
thinkingblue
Take any area -- environment, labor, education, taxes, health -- and go to the websites of public-interest groups in that field. You will find page after page of minor adjustments, quiet repeals, no-big-deal new policies, all of them cruel, destructive, and harmful. A silent change in regulations, an executive order, a funding cutoff. No headlines. Below the radar. Again and again and again. Head Start, everybody's favorite government program, is being targeted for "improvement" by leaving it to the tender mercies of Mississippi and Alabama. An AIDS program that helps refugees in Africa and Asia gets its funding cut because one of the seven groups involved once worked with the United Nations...
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