|
| quote: | Originally posted by DaveSZ
That 40% who celebrate it make up Bush's core base of support, and he will still retain about 40% support regardless of what he does.
He could rape a little girl on live tv, and his approval numbers still wouldn't go below about 36-40%.
Anyways, as for your contention that he's doing well in the polls, I'd have to disagree. He's getting his ass kicked in the polls.
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004...ain619786.shtml |
Those videos and photo's are really putting him in a rut now though. I think a lot of Americans are starting to use their brains and think, "How are we stopping the spread of terrorism by substituting it with torture?" Okay, so maybe their thought process would be deemed more simple, such as "torture = bad", but regardless, this isn't doing well for him. For a "peace loving country" we sure have our foot in our mouth.
| quote: | | Sixty-three percent say torture is never acceptable, even in cases in which a suspect is believed to have knowledge of an upcoming terrorist attack. |
Regardless, they still can't agree on what's "humane" torture.
| quote: |
Among the techniques that a majority of Americans see as allowable: depriving a suspected terrorist of sleep (66 percent), keeping a hood on a suspect for long periods (57 percent), and playing loud music or other noises for extended periods (54 percent). All of these techniques have reportedly been used in Iraq and elsewhere to force suspects to talk to military or government investigators.
Among the techniques Americans reject are some of those featured in photographs and videos that have become the chilling visual record of abuse at the Abu Ghraib prison outside Baghdad.
Clear majorities rejected sexually humiliating a suspect (84 percent), applying electric shocks to a prisoner (82 percent), threatening to harm the suspect's family (80 percent), holding a suspect's head under water (78 percent), forcing the suspect to go naked (74 percent), punching or kicking a suspect (69 percent), withholding food or water (61 percent), exposing the suspect to extreme heat or cold (58 percent), or threatening to shoot the suspect (57 percent). |
clicky
Kerry and his damn taxes still have people turning away from him as well. Seems to be a lose-lose situation IMO. Even Washington Post is confused with what Kerry "coulda shoulda woulda" done if he were president in the situation with Iraq.
| quote: | | Still, it is unclear how Kerry's multilateralism would administer military force. In a briefing before the speech, Kerry's foreign policy advisers said it is uncertain whether the senator from Massachusetts would have waged war with Iraq if he were president. |
clicky
Fuck all this, let's vote Nader! 
___________________
aka Tits McGee
aka Chesty LaRue
aka Busty St. Claire
Last edited by squirrelly on May-28-2004 at 03:08
|