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Today Bush said "I will strongly reject an artificial timetable (for) withdrawal and/or Washington politicians trying to tell those who wear the uniform how to do their job," .

Minus the 'artificial timetable withdraw' part sense it is a "and/or" statement, he is part of the "Washington politicans" in my view, so he should back off on telling those in uniform what to do. Right?

2007-04-23 12:51:05 · 3 answers · asked by ruggedwarrior_love 2 in Politics & Government Politics

earl, were in the constitution talkes about "Washington politician"?

Did you know that during the writing of the constitution were the politicians gathered at that time?

Watch how you call people 'dummy', confused, ingnoranted individual.

2007-04-23 13:12:28 · update #1

3 answers

Well, he's a politician, even though he won't be running for re-election, and he's in Washington, so I don't see how he could be anything else.

Though, unlike Congress, he has a constitutional duty to act as 'commander in chief.'

2007-04-23 13:00:01 · answer #1 · answered by B.Kevorkian 7 · 0 0

read the constitution,dummy.

2007-04-23 12:55:34 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

AGREED

2007-04-23 12:53:50 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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