Wednesday, October 29, 2014

What should we expect from people who can't tell the truth?


Tinker
Making a political problem to advance the Ivy Leagues political interest has become a very foolish TV show that now is flopping from coast to coast. The problems in the United States society is mostly a matter of dollars and sense and common sense and has nothing to do with politics at all. So as the media keeps broadcasting what worked so well before from these selfsame political leaders of this now politic of fools TV Show that is truly falling apart? No one in the Media/White House seem to be able to retrieve their ability to fix anything much less this country's very big problem that they help created in the first place.
So when we hear President Barack Obama tell the American people this is who we are. The wreckage of his voice will of course fade into the dusty shelves of so many other failed political substations that can't ever seem to replace what our forefathers did in the First Continental Congress on October 14, 1774 by forming on this continent a better Government for and by the people.
So in 2014 when you go to the polls again vote with the right feeling and trust in each other. Because we can really do without the politics from the Washington DC establishment that keeps failing over and over again.


Mounting Crises Raise Questions on Obama Team’s Ability to Cope

By MARK LANDLEROCT. 29, 2014

WASHINGTON — One day this month, as the nation shuddered with fears of an Ebola outbreak and as American warplanes pounded Sunni militants in Syria, President Obama’s national security adviser, Susan E. Rice, invited a group of foreign policy experts to the White House Situation Room to hear their assessment of how the administration was performing.

She was peppered with critiques of the president’s Syria and China policies, as well as the White House’s repeated delays in releasing a national security strategy, a congressionally mandated document that sets out foreign policy goals. On that last point, Ms. Rice had a sardonic reply.

“If we had put it out in February or April or July,” she said, according to two people who were in the room, “it would have been overtaken by events two weeks later, in any one of those months.”
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