McCain, Bush also predict chicken in every pot

mccainpredictions.jpgApparently today is the day to make extraordinarily optimistic predictions.
John McCain declared that by the end of his first term as president, the war in Iraq would be won, most U.S. troops would be home, Iraq would be a functioning democracy, Osama bin Laden would be captured, and the United States would have had several years of robust economic growth. Asked afterward if his outlook was a “magic carpet ride,” McCain responded: “I don’t think it has anything to do with fantasy. I think it has everything to do with setting goals and achieving.”

Meanwhile, President Bush, speaking today to the Israeli parliament, made even rosier projections for what the Middle East would be like in 60 years. He foresees “free and independent societies” across the region; that Iran and Syria “will be peaceful nations”; that al-Qaida, Hezbollah and Hamas “will be defeated”; and that “overall, the Middle East will be characterized by a new period of integration and tolerance.”

34 Comments

  1. Jed
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 12:37 pm | Permalink

    Hoo Boy! Now it becomes a contest of who can promise the biggest chicken!
    Ready, Set……….

  2. littlejohn
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 12:42 pm | Permalink

    Wow. another lying politician promoting a future of their own making that makes us all healthier, wealthier, and wise. Ho hum. No news here.
    And part of the continued reason I don;t support McCain.

  3. bth
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 12:44 pm | Permalink

    And the Cubs will win the World Series.

    WSU will win the NCAA basketball championship – playing in the Intrust Arena.

    The Atlanta Falcons will go to the Super Bowl and be defeated by the Kansas City Chiefs.

  4. Regular
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 12:58 pm | Permalink

    You forgot about placing your “sports bets” at the world’s largest Casino in Mulvane, Ben. :)

  5. JMWalker
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 1:15 pm | Permalink

    I watched McCain’s speech today, and found out he is the second coming of Christ, Batman, Superman and maybe even Elvis. According to him, all the world’s woes will end during his first four years. There will be no hungry mouths, no poverty, disease will be wiped out. There will be a chicken in every pot, and fuel will cost $0.10 a gallon again(Hey, I made that up . . . shoot me:-).

    Add to that McCains close friendship with people like Gordon Liddy, Charlie Black, Rick Davis, McCain’s campaign manager, and Paul Manafort, the Reverend Rod Parsley ( way more out there than Wright, but the press will never acknowledge that.), John Hagee, the man who has called Catholicism “a cult,” and has likened it to “the Great Whore” in Revelation 17, and you got another way out there neocon who will stoop that low to get elected.

  6. bth
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 1:36 pm | Permalink

    JMW – don’t forget their desire to trigger a world-wide Armageddon in order to bring about the Second Coming. And to sacrifice the Jews in that cataclysm – unless, of couse, they convert to Christianity (their version)

  7. LLTVET
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 1:39 pm | Permalink

    Well Walker, in all fairness to the good reverand Hagee, he has apologized to the Catholics. Now all he has to do is explain to my Uncle Frank and Aunt Eleanor in Mississippi how God, in his infinite mercy, let Hurricane Katrina ruin their house because some homosexuals in another state were going to have a parade.

  8. bth
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 1:41 pm | Permalink

    VET – it’s because your relatives didn’t join Phelps in denouncing them.

    And maybe they eat crawdads – which are as bad as shrimp!

  9. LLTVET
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 1:50 pm | Permalink

    Ben, How many times do I have to tell you? They amended the regulation about shrimp. Something about Peter having a dream. I won’t go into it. We wouldn’t want to be found guilty of, How did he say it? “gratuitously demagoguing religion”

  10. bth
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 1:54 pm | Permalink

    VET – but they are still in trouble for not joining Phelps.

  11. Predestined
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 3:07 pm | Permalink

    Just another day in La-La Land.

  12. DavidB
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 3:14 pm | Permalink

    And continue the Bush tax cuts.. $46 for me $67,000 for those making a million dollars a year….

    Hey, fair is fair…..

  13. DavidB
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 3:17 pm | Permalink

    This just in from the Tell it Like it is Department:

    “From CNN Congressional Producer Ted Barrett

    Biden had some strong words for the president.

    (CNN) — The chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Joe Biden, D-Delaware, called President Bush’s comments accusing Sen. Barack Obama and other Democrats of wanting to appease terrorists “bulls**t” and said if the president disagrees so strongly with the idea of talking to Iran then he needs to fire his secretaries of State and Defense, both of whom Biden said have pushed to sit down with the Iranians.

    “This is bullshit. This is malarkey. This is outrageous. Outrageous for the president of the United States to go to a foreign country, sit in the Knesset…and make this kind of ridiculous statement,” Biden said angrily in a brief interview just off the Senate floor.”

  14. Predestined
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 3:32 pm | Permalink

    But–but–Bush gave up GOLF!

  15. LR2
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 3:58 pm | Permalink

    Worse President ever to be followed by oldest and worse presideent ever —- one for Guinness

    This President continues to be a world wide embarrassment —- for a retirement from the presidency we should buy him some diction, pronunciation and articulation lessons — better enroll him in English as a second language classes
    didn’t say nuclar — but one of his gems today was argooment

  16. Fiore_Buccieri
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 4:32 pm | Permalink

    So McCain and Bush suffer from the same sort of self-delusions. Nothing surprising about it.

  17. george
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 4:33 pm | Permalink

    There can be no appeasement to the terrorists. We have enough doom and gloom from the press.

  18. LLTVET
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 4:53 pm | Permalink

    John McCain just claimed that the Iraq war could be won by 2013.

  19. DavidB
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 5:01 pm | Permalink

    Yeah in the first year of his second term… he says the war will be over

  20. Phantom
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 6:19 pm | Permalink

    Right, we should no longer appease Al-Quida with a war of their convenience in Iraq!

  21. Phantom
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 6:20 pm | Permalink

    Mc Cain and Un Able bush.

  22. CF2K
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 7:03 pm | Permalink

    McCain, clearly, has lost his bearings.

  23. American_Way
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 7:31 pm | Permalink

    Were they “ball” bearings?

  24. Posted May 15, 2008 at 7:35 pm | Permalink

    I thought America already won in Iraq. Wasn’t that what the “Mission Accomplished” banner was all about?

  25. Political_mama
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 9:17 pm | Permalink

    Keep electing Republicans…they promise better…and always give you worse.

    What about their policies is working? And you isn’t it coincidence that MCSame is spouting the same ideals.

    Be afraid Americans…be very afraid.

  26. LR2
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 9:18 pm | Permalink

    McCains Health Care plan —- 3 points of view:

    May 11, 2008, 9:57PM
    McCain health care plan is both radical and right
    Uncoupling insurance from employment long overdue

    By MICHAEL TANNER
    Copyright 2008 Houston Chronicle

    John McCain is proposing the most radical overhaul of American health-care policy in a decade and a half. Not since Bill and Hillary Clinton’s failed reform attempt has a presidential candidate, or even a president, called for such sweeping changes to the way health care is delivered and health insurance is purchased. more at:

    http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/editorial/outlook/5771291.html

    WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 2008
    McCain’s Health Care Plan: Why It’s Another Dumb Idea
    John McCain has just issued a new health-care bulletin about his health-care plan. In response to criticisms from the likes of Elizabeth Edwards, who notes his plan wouldn’t cover people with pre-existing conditions like her and, indeed, like McCain himself, McCain has amended his plan: States would create “high-risk” pools for people with risky pre-existing conditions. More at:
    //robertreich.blogspot.com/2008/04/mccains-health-care-plan-why-its.html

    Why McCain has the best health-care plan
    His is the only one of the candidate proposals that has a chance of getting medical costs under control. An argument for some free-market sanity.

    By Shawn Tully, editor-at-large

    (Fortune Magazine) — Fellow Americans, choose your revolution. One way or another, we’re getting a new health-care system. The old one is obviously broken. The U.S. now has 47 million uninsured, and costs are out of control. The Department of Health and Human Services predicts that if things continue as they are, health spending will almost double by 2017 to $4.3 trillion, or one-fifth of GDP, vs. 16% today.
    The crisis has gotten so severe that fixing the system is no longer a partisan issue. Everyone understands that something has to change, and fast. In this presidential race, both sides are proposing radical fixes that would totally transform the way health care is delivered and paid for in America. Both the Democrats and the Republicans embrace the same goals: John McCain, Barack Obama, and Hillary Clinton are all putting forth ways of making health care affordable for every American and stopping a disastrous escalation in costs. Both sides also envision a world where employers play a much smaller role in medical benefits. The differences, of course, are in the way each candidate intends to reach those laudable goals. In essence, McCain wants to create a kind of national insurance market that shoves more decision-making power into the hands of consumers; the Democrats are aiming for a Medicare-like federal superprogram. (We’ll stick with the “Democrat” label in this story. The nominee status was still unclear at presstime, and, intraparty sniping notwithstanding, the Clinton and Obama plans are extremely similar.) more at:

    //money.cnn.com/2008/03/10/news/economy/tully_healthcare.fortune/

  27. American
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 9:20 pm | Permalink

    http://www.statesville.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=SRL/MGArticle/SRL_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1173354527285

  28. American
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 9:25 pm | Permalink

    Bible illiteracy threatens the church, the entire nation

    By Rev. Trent Patterson

    Statesville Record and Landmark

    Friday, February 8, 2008

    I recently read a book about one of the greatest problems facing our country today. You are asking yourself, what could that problem be? Could it be taxes, economics, war, Iran, Iraq, global climate change or high gas prices? If you are a Patriots fan, you may not be focused on any of the problems listed above; you may still be suffering from the loss Sunday night. The current political season has all of us thinking about the problems that we face as individuals.

    So what is the greatest problem facing our nation today? I agree with author Woodrow Kroll when he identifies the problem as Bible illiteracy. It is one of the greatest threats to our nation and to the church.

    If you look on the Internet at numerous booksellers’ Web sites, or visit a Christian bookstore, you will find thousands of choices of Bibles. There are numerous choices of bindings, study notes, themes, helps, versions, and (as I am finding out at this point in my life) choices in print size. Yet in Bible-rich America, we are experiencing a serious lack of respect, knowledge, and love for God’s Word. Kroll said, “If Christians blew the dust off their Bibles at the same time, we’d all be killed in the dust storm.” I wholeheartedly agree.

    Gone are the days when the Bible was a priority in the majority of people’s lives in our land. Every generation is shrinking further and further away from knowing the basic stories and personalities of the Bible. Many of our grandparents were well versed in the simple stories of David, Jesus, Noah, Jonah, Daniel and Abraham. They were taught these stories at church, home and in many instan-ces, school.

    Today’s generation is being denied an exposure to the Bible. If you go back even further than our grandparents you can see the great influence that the Bible had on our society. The Liberty Bell is inscribed with a direct quote from Leviticus 25:10 “Proclaim Liberty throughout the land and to all the inhabitants thereof.”

    According to David Barton, almost half (24 of 56) of the signers of the Declaration of Independence had what would be considered seminary or Bible school degrees. This nation’s founding was clearly influenced by the Holy Scriptures.

    The Bible has also impacted science, literature, politics and all other areas of our culture. The Bible had such an influence on the world, that our calendar system is based on the central figure of Scripture, Jesus Christ. However, it is time for the church to take a stand and put the Bible back in its rightful place in our lives. The Word of God has the answers to all of life’s problems. This is not a time for us to back away and doubt the inspiration, inerrancy, and infallibility of the Word. Let’s read it more. Let’s trust it more. We can all take part in a revival of God’s word by making it “a lamp unto our feet and a light unto our path.”

  29. Phantom
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 10:09 pm | Permalink

    Let’s go back to being people of one book!

  30. bth
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 10:13 pm | Permalink

    “The Bible has also impacted science, literature, politics and all other areas of our culture”

    And during the Dark Ages, when they were happily torturing women to death as witches, the Bible was impacting that as well. Or at least someone’s interpretation of the Bible. Meanwhile, science was kept alive in the Middle East – impacted by the Quran.

  31. WSClark
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 10:17 pm | Permalink

    Throughout history, the Bible has been used for far more evil than good.

    The more dust the better.

    The same goes for the Koran and the Torah.

  32. Jed
    Posted May 15, 2008 at 10:37 pm | Permalink

    And I’m sure Pastor Trent will be more than glad to tell all us poor illiterate souls how the bible admonishes us to get together and buy him that new Mercedes next Sunday for the glory of Jayzus!

  33. spiro_agnew_crook
    Posted May 16, 2008 at 5:50 am | Permalink

    uh em……….pssst john mc same . dick cheney has already declared the “insurgency” is in its last throes since 2003 and “mission accomplished” has been around for years.

  34. Phantom
    Posted May 16, 2008 at 9:37 am | Permalink

    This country is in dire need of an ethics reformer like Mccain!
    McCain action helped Arizona developer: report Fri May 16, 1:05 AM ET

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Presumptive Republican presidential candidate John McCain secured millions in federal funds for a land acquisition program that provided a windfall for an Arizona developer whose executives were major campaign donors, according to a USA Today report.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    McCain, an Arizona senator, inserted $14.3 million in a 2003 defense bill to buy land around Luke Air Force Base in Glendale, Arizona, in a provision sought by SunCor Development, the largest of 50 landowners near the base, the newspaper reported on its Web site Thursday, citing public records.

    Upset with a state law that restricted development around the base, SunCor representatives met with McCain’s staff to lobby for funding, USA Today reported, citing the company’s president at the time, John Ogden.

    The Air Force later paid SunCor $3 million for 122 acres near the base — three times its assessed value and twice the military’s estimated value, the newspaper said.

    USA Today said its analysis of campaign finance data compiled by the nonpartisan CQ MoneyLine shows that McCain’s campaigns have received $224,000 since 1998 from donors connected to SunCor’s parent company Pinnacle West, including $104,100 for his current presidential run.

    Two current and one retired Pinnacle executives are fundraisers for McCain’s presidential campaign.

    McCain has made fighting special interest projects on Capitol Hill a centerpiece of his White House bid.

    McCain campaign spokesman Brian Rogers told the newspaper the senator’s ties to SunCor had nothing to do with his support for the base project.

    Rogers said the Air Force had a legitimate need for the land and asked for money to buy it in a March 2002 budget planning document, USA Today reported.

    Asked about the newspaper’s report, Rogers told Reuters: “This is absurd.”

    “This project was requested by the Air Force and supported by virtually everyone in AZ (Arizona) politics — Governor Napolitano, the entire congressional delegation, etc. — but that’s not even mentioned in this story. It’s shameful,” Rogers said in an email.

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