Tuesday, June 24, 2003

Months before the 2000 presidential elections, the offices of Florida Governor Jeb Bush and Secretary of State Katherine Harris ordered the removal of 90,000 citizens from the voter rolls because they were convicted felons . . . and felons can’t vote in Florida. There was one problem: 97 percent of those on the list were, in fact, innocent.

The so-called Madrid initiative is a far-reaching proposal to legitimise what previously has been regarded as piracy or an act of war—the interception of ships on the high seas and aircraft in international airspace—in the name of halting the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.
Pyongyang’s official newspaper, Rodong Sinmun, warned that North Korea would take “an immediate physical retaliatory step against the US, once it judges that its sovereignty is infringed by Washington’s blockade operation.”

Someday, President Bush might face a worst-case scenario that was once unthinkable: America's president urgently calls upon the world to act against a new terror threat - but a disbelieving Atlas just shrugs.

But Abderrazzak insisted he had asked his staff to thoroughly check the story and it was definitely true.
"Let the coalition prove that our report is false and I will fire the two journalists (who wrote it). So far, they haven't," he said.

Flat out lies should be confronted
~ Bill O'Reilly; Fox News Channel; May 22, 2003

March 24: Fox and Friends. Anchor Juliet Huddy asks Colonel David hunt why coalition forces don't "blow up" Al Jazeera TV.

That is without contemplating that Springer was once secretly videotaped romping with a porn star, while her stepmother watched, the day before she came on his show to detail her plan for a sex marathon with 350 men.




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