Questions For The Coward In Crawford
I have a few questions for that sleazy coward hiding out in Crawford:
You managed to cut short a weekend in Crawford to fly back to DC to sign a bill that would interfere with a personal matter between a husband and his brain-dead wife.....Why not walk a few hundred feet and meet with Cindy?
You managed to interrupt your vacation to fly to New Mexico to sign an "energy bill" that did nothing to help the energy problem but did plenty to enrich the oil companies that supported you financially.....Why not walk a few hundred feet and meet with Cindy?
You manage to fly from state to state to try and force-feed a social security plan on the public that does nothing but enrich the investment groups on Wall Street.....Why not walk a few hundred feet and meet with Cindy?
You fly far and wide imploring us to support the troops with "living" troops as a backdrop for your photo-op.....Why not walk a few hundred feet and meet with Cindy?
Have you no sense of decency and compassion to.....walk a few hundred feed and meet with Cindy?
After you answer my questions President Coward, you might read (or have Laura read it to you) this editorial in the NYT. Since I know you have a hard time even getting through to the end of "My Pet Goat" here is what I find is the most relevant snippet for you...Mr. Bush obviously failed to comfort Ms. Sheehan when he met with her and her family. More important, he has not helped the nation give fallen soldiers like Casey Sheehan the honor they deserve. The administration seems reluctant to have the president take part in events that would direct widespread attention to soldiers' funerals or to the thousands who have returned with serious injuries. Perhaps most troubling, Mr. Bush is not leveling about where things stand with the war. He continues to stay on message, as he did with the platitude he offered last week: "We will stay the course; we will complete the job in Iraq." The public knows that things in Iraq are not going well on any number of levels, and deserves a fuller, more honest discussion led by the commander in chief. Just 38 percent of the respondents in a recent Associated Press-Ipsos poll, a new low, approved of Mr. Bush's handling of Iraq. That does not mean the remaining 62 percent agree with Ms. Sheehan that the troops should come home immediately. But it does mean that many Americans are with her, at least figuratively, at that dusty roadside in Crawford, expecting better answers. |
Comments on "Questions For The Coward In Crawford"