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Are they that desperate for a seat in the Senate?

2006-12-14 01:01:17 · 17 answers · asked by Anti-illegals are out to get me 2 in Politics & Government Politics

The news said he had stoke-like symptoms and was in critical condition after surgery. It didn't say he had a stroke for sure.

2006-12-14 01:16:54 · update #1

17 answers

Yes, start a conspiracy. You people have no game, but to bash Bush and Republicans.

2006-12-14 01:03:16 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 6 0

Let's think about a few key facts.

Bush was quoted in 1998 saying that if he ever became president he would send troops back to Iraq.

In 2001 a plane hits the pentagon in a section where construction is being done and no videos of the supposed plane crash have ever been shown despite many nearby business security cameras capturing it.

Another plane crashes into the ground and leaves no pieces of an airplane anywhere.

2 more planes hit the WTC and it falls to the ground exactly as if it had been demolished from the inside.

Bush declares war in Iraq based on the supposed events of terrorism.

Bush, an oil tycoon himself, claims the war has nothing to do with oil, but a change in power in Iraq would give us access to Kuwati and Iraqi oil fields.

The price of gasoline to the public takes a significant dip down close to 2.00 a gallon a few weeks before the power of the republican party is in jeopardy. Right after the republicans lost it has creeped back up to close to 3.00 a gallon.

And now a senator from South Dakota has a very mysterious stroke 2 weeks before the democrats take power. In a state where the governer happens to be republican and according to the 17th ammendment has the right to choose whoever he wants to replace Tom Johnson, in the event of his death. In the case of him choosing a republican the senate would be 50/50 and then given to the republicans based on Dead Eye Dick.

So many people might think your question is a joke, but I think it's a very resonable question. And in any situation you should always think about who has the most to gain from the outcome of the situation.

2006-12-14 02:26:09 · answer #2 · answered by henne831 3 · 1 1

Okay, I reserve this answer just for people like yourself and I don't trot it out much. You're a putz and this doesn't rise to the level of intellignet debate in anyone's book. The man suffered a stroke, it is a very unfortunate situation and I have great sympathy for his family. Frankly if I were a liberal or Democrat, I would be embarassed to even be associated remotely with a twisted mind such as yours.

2006-12-14 01:09:49 · answer #3 · answered by Bryan 7 · 4 0

Doh! The Bushies have sunk pretty low, but even I react negatively to this kind of question - if the worst happens to this senator I think we on the left should see this as a blessing in disguise. Because again the will of the people will have been thwarted, and it will open the floodgates of support for the left in 2008. Why should the left be held partly responsible for clearing up the mess of Iraq until the credibility of the right has been lost totally in the minds of the American public.

2006-12-14 01:11:44 · answer #4 · answered by Hayley 2 · 1 2

It would be a dark day for the country if he cannot return. The Governor of South Dakota must transcend party and appoint another Democrat if he does not, or he will be thwarting the will of the country to satisfy his privilege. As disgusting as BushCo has been over the years, starting with Preston funding the Nazis, down to Bush Jr.'s fascist agenda, the thought of your question admittedly crossed our minds as well. It appears they will go to any extreme to further their agenda, so, as much as I would not like to believe it, I would not be surprised after 9/11. http://patriotsquestion911.com/

2006-12-14 01:31:03 · answer #5 · answered by michaelsan 6 · 0 0

I have to admit I do find something "fishy" about the whole thing. Then again, he could have just had a stroke. I'd like to think that no one would do something so sinister and evil to someone else as far as poison him. Let's hope and pray that he recovers. Not for the sake of the Senate, but for the sake of his family.

2006-12-14 01:11:55 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

I believe that GOP might find in the official GOP ethic code book that political assassination it’s a small price to pay for the good of the people. I can see Dick Cheney doping Tim's scotch. I think ex-KGB need help field testing new products.

2006-12-14 09:02:01 · answer #7 · answered by RostikBr 1 · 0 0

you are pathetic. Maybe if his parents, or God, are Republicans, then the Republicans had a hand in this. From the most recent news:

"Johnson, 59, suffered from bleeding in the brain caused by a congenital malformation..."

2006-12-14 03:59:28 · answer #8 · answered by almost3am 3 · 0 0

Republican, Democrat, I don't care what you are, having a stroke, aneurism, or any other type of serious illness isn't something to joke about. Leave the poor man alone.

2006-12-14 01:13:01 · answer #9 · answered by kenrayf 6 · 3 0

They tried to fill his head with Bush's thought process regarding the Iraq war and the new "way forward"...it caused a short circuit.

2006-12-14 01:05:07 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

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