And this is a surpise to…who?

This entry was published at least two years ago (originally posted on October 2, 2003). Since that time the information may have become outdated or my beliefs may have changed (in general, assume a more open and liberal current viewpoint). A fuller disclaimer is available.

Remember all those weapons of mass destruction that Bush et al assured us were all over Iraq, just waiting to be found? Funny thing, that — apparently, they don’t exist after all.

The U.S-led team hunting for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq has found no stockpiles of biological or chemical weapons, six months after the United States launched a war against Baghdad to remove such a threat, CIA adviser David Kay said on Thursday.

Gee, imagine that.

Not that Bush cares.

The Bush administration is seeking more than \$600 million from Congress to continue the hunt for conclusive evidence that Saddam Hussein’s government had an illegal weapons program, officials said Wednesday.

The money, part of the White House’s request for \$87 billion in supplemental spending on Iraq and Afghanistan, comes on top of at least \$300 million that has already been spent on the weapons search, the officials said.

Um, Georgie-boy? They’re not there. Let’s just take our toys and go home before the other kids really get sick of our stomping around in the sandbox and gang up on us. Nobody likes a bully.

Shmuck.

(via Kos)

1 thought on “And this is a surpise to…who?”

  1. There was a letter in today’s ADN to which I could relate. It pointed out, when Bill Clinton had a tawdry affair, which really should have been a family matter, he was impeached, but when GWB gets us stuck in a war, based on untruth, and costing us billions and the lives of our service people, Congress just yawns.

    Gosh, I find this confusing, especially in light this person may be the next governer of CA:

    Oct. 3 — Four days before California’s recall election and just hours after saying he had “behaved badly” towards some women in the past, California gubernatorial candidate Arnold Schwarzenegger faced a new allegation: that he once said he admired Adolf Hitler “for what he did.” The actor said he did not recall ever praising the Nazi dictator, and the man making the allegations did later raise the possibility that Schwarzenegger was misquoted.

    GEORGE BUTLER, a film producer who documented Schwarzenegger’s body building career in the 1975 movie “Pumping Iron,” shopped a book proposal on the Republican’s life six years ago, parts of which were reported in the media overnight.
    In the proposal, Butler said that in conversations left out of the movie, Schwarzenegger named Hitler as one of his heroes.
    “It depends for what,” Mr. Schwarzenegger said when asked who he admired, according to the proposal. “I admired Hitler, for instance, because he came from being a little man with almost no formal education up to power. And I admire him for being such a good public speaker and for what he did with it.”
    But early Friday, Butler had contacted The New York Times, which ran a story about the book proposal, saying he had found another transcript of the interview, with different wording.
    That one has Schwarzenegger saying: “I admire him (Hitler) for being such a good public speaker and for his way of getting to the people and so on. But I didn’t admire him for what he did with it. It’s very hard to say who I admire, who are my heroes.”
    Butler said his transcribers had had difficulty rendering Schwarzenegger’s remarks because of his accent and said the only way to resolve the discrepancy was to listen to the tapes, which are in Schwarzenegger’s possession.

    OTHER NAZI ALLEGATIONS
    The Times also quoted Butler as saying he saw Schwarzenegger play Nazi marching songs on his record player and even click his heels and pretend to be an S.S. officer.

         Butler said he had considered Schwarzenegger in the 1970s to be a “flagrant, outspoken admirer of Hitler.”
       Thursday night, Schwarzenegger, with wife Maria Shriver at his side, responded to the allegations by saying that “I despise everything the Nazis or Hitler stood for.”
       Asked if it was possible if he had ever said these things, he said, “I can’t imagine because from the time I was a kid on, I always disliked everything that his regime stood for. I think Hitler was a disgusting villain.”
       Schwarzenegger grew up in Austria where his father was a member of the Nazi Party. He has faced charges of Nazi sympathizing before, but has worked hard to refute them and has donated to the Simon Wiesenthal Center, an international Jewish human rights organization.
       Butler told the Times he stood by a recollection of Schwarzenegger playing Nazi marches and mimicking S.S. officers, but said Schwarzenegger was an immature young man during the bodybuilding culture of the 1970s.
    

    ‘TRASH POLITICS’
    Less than a day earlier, Schwarzenegger was confronted with allegations from six women that he groped them on movie sets and in other settings over the last three decades, the last alleged incident in 2000.
    Speaking Thursday night with Chris Matthews on MSNBC’s “Hardball,” Schwarzenegger derided the timing of the new allegations. “I don’t pay much attention or point the finger. People know this is trash politics. They know that I will bring change…. This is what scares those guys,” he said referring to his Democratic challengers. “I will be able to represent the people for a change.”
    Schwarzenegger first responded to the sexual harassment allegations Thursday morning, as he spoke to supporters in San Diego before starting a bus tour ahead of Tuesday’s election to recall Gov. Gray Davis.
    “A lot of the stuff in the story is not true,” he said, referring to a Los Angeles Times story on the allegations. “But I have to say that where there’s smoke, there’s fire.”
    He did not acknowledge sexual harassment, instead saying that “yes, I have behaved badly sometimes. Yes, it is true that I was in rowdy movie sets and I have done things that were not right, which I thought then was playful but now I recognize that I offended people.”
    “Those people that I have offended,” he added. “I want to say to them I am deeply sorry about that and I apologize because that’s not what I’m trying to do.”
    Schwarzenegger added that from this point on he will prove he is a “champion for women.”
    Shriver, his wife, later responded to a reporter’s question about the groping allegations by stating that “As I say to my children it always takes great courage to stand before anybody and apologize and I think that’s what Arnold did today.”
    (Shriver is on leave of absence from NBC’s “Dateline” program. MSNBC is an NBC-Microsoft joint venture.)
    The Los Angeles Times said none of the actor’s political opponents put reporters in touch with the women and that none had come forward on their own. None have brought legal action against Schwarzenegger, the newspaper said.

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