Fearing more of the same
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Fearing more of the same
| Mon, 10-27-2008 - 7:50am |
McCain/Palin say that we should fear an Obama/Biden White House.
What I fear is more of the same. For the last eight years, this country has been headed in the wrong direction.
Think of all of the catastrophic things that have happened...9-11, the second Iraq War, Katrina, the loss of jobs to outsourcing, the collapse of the economy...just to name a few.
McCain has supported Bush time and again on just about everything during the last eight years.
My Friends, I may not know what to expect from Obama/Biden, but I pretty much know how things will go under McCain/Palin. I don’t believe our country can survive four more years of the last eight years. The status quo just will not work. It is time for a change.
What I fear is more of the same. For the last eight years, this country has been headed in the wrong direction.
Think of all of the catastrophic things that have happened...9-11, the second Iraq War, Katrina, the loss of jobs to outsourcing, the collapse of the economy...just to name a few.
McCain has supported Bush time and again on just about everything during the last eight years.
My Friends, I may not know what to expect from Obama/Biden, but I pretty much know how things will go under McCain/Palin. I don’t believe our country can survive four more years of the last eight years. The status quo just will not work. It is time for a change.

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GEEEsh, Went so far as the blame an act of God (Katrina), on Bush.
Just remember "change", can be for the worse.
Obama DOES NOT have a record on the economy that should give Americans "faith" in his ability to help them economically speaking.
That's right, Mayor Nagin wasn't competent to handle things. I forgot. LOL
Why stop with Naign, what about Brown? Oh that's right we wouldn't want to blame Brown for anything because he was only the Federal Emergency Management Agency Director!
"Finding fault with the White House down to local officials, the 520-page report, titled "A Failure of Initiative," determined that authorities failed to move quickly to protect people — even when faced with warnings days before the catastrophic storm struck last Aug. 29.
"Passivity did the most damage," concluded the report, which was written by a Republican-dominated special House committee and obtained Tuesday night by The Associated Press. "The failure of initiative cost lives, prolonged suffering, and left all Americans justifiably concerned our government is no better prepared to protect its people than it was before 9/11, even if we are."
"Earlier presidential involvement might have resulted in a more effective response," the inquiry concluded.
White House spokesman Allen Abney declined to comment. On Monday, White House Homeland Security adviser Frances Fragos Townsend said Bush was "fully involved" in Washington's preparations and response to Katrina. (Related story: Bush reactions defended)
The inquiry into one of the nation's worst natural disasters looked at everything from the evacuation to the military's role to planning for emergency supplies and in each category found much to criticize.
"The single biggest failure of the federal response was that it failed to recognize the likely consequences of the approaching storm and mobilize federal assets for a post-storm evacuation of the flooded city," the report said. "If it had, then federal assistance would have arrived several days earlier."
Typical of the report's unsparing tone, it warned, "The preparation for and response to Hurricane Katrina should disturb all Americans."
The House study is the first to be completed in a series of inquiries by Congress and the Bush administration about the massive failures exposed by Katrina.
The storm left more than 1,300 people in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama dead, hundreds of thousands homeless and tens of billions of dollars worth of damage in its wake. Despite Bush's accepting full responsibility for the federal government's shortfalls, the storm response continues to generate finger-pointing.
The panel was chaired by Rep. Tom Davis, R-Va."
Oh brother, & where's the state's/New Orlean's
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