From the Great Divider

Bush says some war critics irresponsible By Steve

Holland

“A country that divides into factions and dwells on old grievances cannot move forward and risks sliding back

into tyranny,” Bush said.

Wow. Of course, in the quote above, Bush was referring to Iraq.

In the same speech, he advised his adversaries to “watch their words.” Spoken like a true tyrant. mjh

Bush to critics: Don’t

‘comfort our adversaries’ BY JENNIFER LOVEN

President Bush warned Democratic critics of his Iraq policy on Tuesday

to watch what they say or risk giving ”comfort to our adversaries” and suffering at the ballot box in November.

Democrats said Bush should take his own advice.

There are still 10 months left before congressional elections; a recent AP-Ipsos

poll found Americans prefer Democratic control of Congress over a continued GOP majority by 49 percent to 36 percent. But Bush is wasting

no time engaging the battle. …

He said he welcomed ”honest critics,” but he termed irresponsible ”partisan critics who

claim that we acted in Iraq because of oil or because of Israel or because we misled the American people,” as well as ”defeatists

who refuse to see that anything is right.”

With that description, Bush lumped the many Democrats who have accused him of

twisting prewar intelligence with the few people, mostly outside the mainstream, who have raised issues of oil and Israel. …

Democrats said Bush has no business trying to define what sort of talk is acceptable.

ACLU president draws links between Bush spying, Nixon lying and Martin Luther King

Jr. by Daniel Strumpf

The ACLU recently placed two full-page ads in The New York Times comparing Bush to Richard Nixon.

I think there is a very strong comparison between the two, in terms of having such an exaggerated sense of the power of the

executive branch to ride roughshod over the rights of people who aren’t even suspected of any crimes at all other than political

dissent,” she said. “To me, that links up directly to Martin Luther King.

“Martin Luther King should be remembered not only for

his towering contributions to social justice and racial equality but also as a victim of government spying and abuses of power by the FBI

because of disagreement with his ideas.”

Strossen points out that King was punished for attempting to exercise his First Amendment

rights and draws a direct analogy to the monitoring of citizens Bush perceives to be enemies of the U.S.