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As I cited in my post #102, Cyberella and another new poster, “The Infidel”, post on the Jewish Task Force (JTF) forum.
Cyberella profile at JTF forum
View the profile of Cyberella
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Thanks for the reminder, Tethys; it is a good catch that I, being new to this forum, had failed to notice.
Cyberella, you got caught. Now I believe you will need to spread that message of hatred of yours in some other place where you will end up with the same fate of being refuted and rejected.
I believe you are a decent person and we, Obama supporters, are open to constructive and just criticism, since we know we, too, are not free from flaws. The problem is that the message you spread can only be found in the most extremist corners of the web and guess who loves to be there: Daniel Pipes (an extremist Muslim-hater), John Bolten (an extremist Iran hater), Paul Wolfowitz (an extremist blood-thirsty man, the architect of Iraq war) and the like. Now, dost thee like to be on their cart which goes to hell?
By the way, Obama continues to gather support from different layers of our nation. A must-read article on Obama's foreign policy judgement and courage by General Tony McPeak in the Huffington Post:
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"Barack Obama put his political career on the line in 2002 to speak out against a "dumb war" and "a rash war" in Iraq. He warned of, "an occupation of undetermined length, at undetermined costs, with undetermined consequences." Read this speech - he got it right...
Hillary Clinton made a different choice. For starters, she refused to even read the National Intelligence Estimate that was made available to Senators before the vote for war - an NIE that was so thin that Bob Graham, the Chairman of the Intelligence Committee, decided to vote against the war when he read it...
Barack Obama, on the other hand, opposed the war in Iraq in 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2007. Just this morning, the Washington Post feature "The Facts" found, "Of the major Democratic candidates, Barack Obama has been the most consistent on Iraq." Obama introduced comprehensive legislation to bring our troops home in January. He voted earlier this year to stop giving George Bush a blank check (Senator Clinton waited until after he voted, before casting her own vote). And he has proposed removing all of our combat brigades in sixteen months, and opposes using our troops in Iraq to counter Iran.
If the American people are looking for who has the strength and experience to end the war, they should look very carefully at who had the strength and experience to get Iraq right from the beginning. Because the Clinton campaign may be able to plant Senator Clinton's questions, but they can't change her record, or Senator Obama's answers."
Gen. Tony McPeak: Obama Was Right on the War From the Start - Politics on The Huffington Post
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