Steve Hayes wrote:
> On Mon, 07 Jul 2008 12:15:23 +0000, Dave Heil <k8mn@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
wrote:
>
>> Steve Hayes wrote:
>>> On Sun, 06 Jul 2008 19:08:52 +0000, Dave Heil <k8mn@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
wrote:
>>>
>>>> Steve Hayes wrote:
>>>>> On Sun, 06 Jul 2008 05:04:00 +0000, Dave Heil <k8mn@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> What Steve is attempting is to be disingenuous in placing blame on
the
>>>>>> U.S. President. South Africa has enough problems now and a history
of
>>>>>> simply terrible things in its past, to keep Steve busy for the
balance
>>>>>> of his life.
>>>>> So in your view John McCain has an immaculate nomination -- all
stain of
>>>>> original sin and actual sin is immaculately removed by virtue of
nomination by
>>>>> the Republican Party, and Mat Staver's endorsement?
>>>> Please point to where I've written anything about John McCain?
>>> Why should I point that out?
>>>
>>> Can you give me one good reason?
>> Look at what you asked in the earlier post. Do you see the part which
>> reads, "So in your view John McCain has an immaculate nomination -- all
>> stain of original sin and actual sin is immaculately removed by virtue
>> of nomination by the Republican Party, and Mat Staver's endorsement?"
>>
>> That'd provide a good reason.
>>
>>> If you want me to point it out, then perhaps you could point out how I
was
>>> being "disingenuous" as you claimed.
>> I'd be happy to do so. Your claim about George Bush coveting the oil
of
>> another country is disingenuous. U.S. companies develop other
countries
>> oil. U.S. companies purchase other countries oil. President Bush is
>> not actively involved in the oil business. He will make certain that
the
>> United States has free access to purchase Mid-East oil because it is in
>> the best interest of the United States to do so.
>
> AlterNet
>
> Chomsky: Bush & Cheney Always Saw Iraq as a Sweetheart Oil Deal
>
> By Noam Chomsky, Khaleej Times Online
> Posted on July 12, 2008, Printed on July 12, 2008
> http://www.alternet.org/story/91123/
From an online biography of Chomsky:
"Noam has always been interested in politics, and it is said that
politics has brought him into the linguistics field. His political
tendencies toward socialism and anarchism are a result of what he calls
'the radical Jewish community in New York.' Since 1965 he has become one
of the leading critics of U.S. foreign policy."
I don't subscribe to Socialism or anarchy, Steve, and I reject the
writings of radicals such as Chomsky. Instead of bolstering your claim,
you've made me suspicious of your continuing anti-American sniping from
problem-filled South Africa.
Dave Heil


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