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JPS's hero recants...
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JPS's hero recants...
On Sep 17, 2:17 pm, jps wrote:
In article .com, says... On Sep 17, 12:12 pm, Tom Francis wrote: On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 16:09:11 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Oops.... http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...07/09/16/AR200... Precis: Greenspan, who was the country's top voice on monetary policy at the time Bush decided to go to war in Iraq, has refrained from extensive public comment on it until now, but he made the striking comment in a new memoir out today that "the Iraq War is largely about oil." In the interview, he clarified that sentence in his 531-page book, saying that while securing global oil supplies was "not the administration's motive," he had presented the White House with the case for why removing Hussein was important for the global economy. "I'm saying taking Saddam out was essential," he said. But he added that he was not implying that the war was an oil grab. Oh jps must be gnashing his teeth in flustration. Poor jps. Not really, they will just ignore the recant and continue to talk about Greenspan saying it was about oil. Yes, as if he didn't pause to think about it when he wrote it. It was just a flip remark from a man who's never made a flip remark in his entire life. jps- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - So then, why must he recant, is he dishonest, trying to sell books? |
JPS's hero recants...
In article .com,
says... On Sep 17, 2:17 pm, jps wrote: In article .com, says... On Sep 17, 12:12 pm, Tom Francis wrote: On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 16:09:11 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Oops.... http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...07/09/16/AR200... Precis: Greenspan, who was the country's top voice on monetary policy at the time Bush decided to go to war in Iraq, has refrained from extensive public comment on it until now, but he made the striking comment in a new memoir out today that "the Iraq War is largely about oil." In the interview, he clarified that sentence in his 531-page book, saying that while securing global oil supplies was "not the administration's motive," he had presented the White House with the case for why removing Hussein was important for the global economy. "I'm saying taking Saddam out was essential," he said. But he added that he was not implying that the war was an oil grab. Oh jps must be gnashing his teeth in flustration. Poor jps. Not really, they will just ignore the recant and continue to talk about Greenspan saying it was about oil. Yes, as if he didn't pause to think about it when he wrote it. It was just a flip remark from a man who's never made a flip remark in his entire life. jps- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - So then, why must he recant, is he dishonest, trying to sell books? He clarified his statement. "Recant" is the word Tom liberally used to describe Greenspan's clarification. Let me ask you freakin', what interest does the US have in the mideast that's more compelling than ensuring the free flow of oil? jps |
JPS's hero recants...
"jps" wrote in message ... In article .com, says... On Sep 17, 2:17 pm, jps wrote: In article .com, says... On Sep 17, 12:12 pm, Tom Francis wrote: On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 16:09:11 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Oops.... http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...07/09/16/AR200... Precis: Greenspan, who was the country's top voice on monetary policy at the time Bush decided to go to war in Iraq, has refrained from extensive public comment on it until now, but he made the striking comment in a new memoir out today that "the Iraq War is largely about oil." In the interview, he clarified that sentence in his 531-page book, saying that while securing global oil supplies was "not the administration's motive," he had presented the White House with the case for why removing Hussein was important for the global economy. "I'm saying taking Saddam out was essential," he said. But he added that he was not implying that the war was an oil grab. Oh jps must be gnashing his teeth in flustration. Poor jps. Not really, they will just ignore the recant and continue to talk about Greenspan saying it was about oil. Yes, as if he didn't pause to think about it when he wrote it. It was just a flip remark from a man who's never made a flip remark in his entire life. jps- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - So then, why must he recant, is he dishonest, trying to sell books? He clarified his statement. "Recant" is the word Tom liberally used to describe Greenspan's clarification. Let me ask you freakin', what interest does the US have in the mideast that's more compelling than ensuring the free flow of oil? jps Sand? |
JPS's hero recants...
In article ,
says... "jps" wrote in message ... In article .com, says... On Sep 17, 2:17 pm, jps wrote: In article .com, says... On Sep 17, 12:12 pm, Tom Francis wrote: On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 16:09:11 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: Oops.... http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...07/09/16/AR200... Precis: Greenspan, who was the country's top voice on monetary policy at the time Bush decided to go to war in Iraq, has refrained from extensive public comment on it until now, but he made the striking comment in a new memoir out today that "the Iraq War is largely about oil." In the interview, he clarified that sentence in his 531-page book, saying that while securing global oil supplies was "not the administration's motive," he had presented the White House with the case for why removing Hussein was important for the global economy. "I'm saying taking Saddam out was essential," he said. But he added that he was not implying that the war was an oil grab. Oh jps must be gnashing his teeth in flustration. Poor jps. Not really, they will just ignore the recant and continue to talk about Greenspan saying it was about oil. Yes, as if he didn't pause to think about it when he wrote it. It was just a flip remark from a man who's never made a flip remark in his entire life. jps- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - So then, why must he recant, is he dishonest, trying to sell books? He clarified his statement. "Recant" is the word Tom liberally used to describe Greenspan's clarification. Let me ask you freakin', what interest does the US have in the mideast that's more compelling than ensuring the free flow of oil? jps Sand? Bzzzt. Nope, got plenty of that. Try again. |
JPS's hero recants...
"jps" wrote in message
... Let me ask you freakin', what interest does the US have in the mideast that's more compelling than ensuring the free flow of oil? jps Sand? Bzzzt. Nope, got plenty of that. Try again. Well, let's see....the Saudis are our single biggest customer for weaponry. The royals live in constant fear of their Wahhabi lunatic population, even though the government supports the very schools that produce them. The more we do to meddle in the Middle East, the more religious fanatics we **** off, the greater the perceived need for the Saudi royals to buy weapons. Lots of weapons. And, every prince involved with the purchasing of weapons skims off a few million bucks a year, more than enough to pay for their fancy digs in France, Colorado, etc.* It's just good business. Good for the defense biz, good for the real estate biz, good for the oil biz. *We're currently investigating military personnel who took "commissions" on all sorts of things involving the war in Iraq. But, in Saudi Arabia, it's legal and it's a tradition. |
JPS's hero recants...
|
JPS's hero recants...
"jps" wrote in message
... In article , says... "jps" wrote in message ... Let me ask you freakin', what interest does the US have in the mideast that's more compelling than ensuring the free flow of oil? jps Sand? Bzzzt. Nope, got plenty of that. Try again. Well, let's see....the Saudis are our single biggest customer for weaponry. The royals live in constant fear of their Wahhabi lunatic population, even though the government supports the very schools that produce them. The more we do to meddle in the Middle East, the more religious fanatics we **** off, the greater the perceived need for the Saudi royals to buy weapons. Lots of weapons. And, every prince involved with the purchasing of weapons skims off a few million bucks a year, more than enough to pay for their fancy digs in France, Colorado, etc.* It's just good business. Good for the defense biz, good for the real estate biz, good for the oil biz. *We're currently investigating military personnel who took "commissions" on all sorts of things involving the war in Iraq. But, in Saudi Arabia, it's legal and it's a tradition. It's likely an insult to not skim, as if you're too good to take free money. I think we've misplaced a couple of containers of $100 bills over there so I guess we understand something of Arab culture and tradition. Ya know, there have been a few non-fiction books which included descriptions of why and how we purchase the appropriate people in the Middle East. Sadly, the guvmint chooses to hide this reality. Remember that interesting "bank robbery" in Iraq a couple of months ago? The story died 24 hours after it appeared. I e-mailed the author of one newspaper article, who said she knew nothing more about it. Sounds like the source dried up and blew away. |
JPS's hero recants...
In article ,
says... "jps" wrote in message ... In article , says... "jps" wrote in message ... Let me ask you freakin', what interest does the US have in the mideast that's more compelling than ensuring the free flow of oil? jps Sand? Bzzzt. Nope, got plenty of that. Try again. Well, let's see....the Saudis are our single biggest customer for weaponry. The royals live in constant fear of their Wahhabi lunatic population, even though the government supports the very schools that produce them. The more we do to meddle in the Middle East, the more religious fanatics we **** off, the greater the perceived need for the Saudi royals to buy weapons. Lots of weapons. And, every prince involved with the purchasing of weapons skims off a few million bucks a year, more than enough to pay for their fancy digs in France, Colorado, etc.* It's just good business. Good for the defense biz, good for the real estate biz, good for the oil biz. *We're currently investigating military personnel who took "commissions" on all sorts of things involving the war in Iraq. But, in Saudi Arabia, it's legal and it's a tradition. It's likely an insult to not skim, as if you're too good to take free money. I think we've misplaced a couple of containers of $100 bills over there so I guess we understand something of Arab culture and tradition. Ya know, there have been a few non-fiction books which included descriptions of why and how we purchase the appropriate people in the Middle East. Sadly, the guvmint chooses to hide this reality. Remember that interesting "bank robbery" in Iraq a couple of months ago? The story died 24 hours after it appeared. I e-mailed the author of one newspaper article, who said she knew nothing more about it. Sounds like the source dried up and blew away. I imagine those folks who're hired to keep rich kids names out of the paper also work on plugging these types of leaks. |
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