besides the charges put out by O'Neill and Clarke, there was another tid bit that catches my eye.
I suggest that before WBush uses the next 90 days to define Kerry, he may wanna redefine who he is instead.
QUOTE
in this morning's Wall Street Journal (a conservative paper), Scot J. Paltrow writes about how the commission is trying to fill the gaps and inconsistencies in the government account about what actually happened on Sept. 11.
\"Among other things, the commission is examining such questions as how long Mr. Bush remained in a Florida classroom just after the World Trade Center strikes, whether there really was a threat to Air Force One that day, how effectively American fighter jets reacted to the attacks, and who activated the national-emergency-response plan.\"
White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card, who famously whispered in the president's ear, \"A second plane hit the second tower. America is under attack,\" has previously said that Bush left the Florida classroom he was sitting in within seconds.
\"But uncut videotape of the classroom visit obtained from the local cable-TV station director who shot it, and interviews with the teacher and principal, show that Mr. Bush remained in the classroom not for mere seconds, but for at least seven additional minutes. He followed along for five minutes as children read aloud a story about a pet goat. Then he stayed for at least another two minutes, asking the children questions and explaining to Ms. Rigell that he would have to leave more quickly than planned.\"
Paltrow writes: \"Both Republican and Democratic commissioners have said they are focusing closely on what happened next -- and whether mere minutes could have affected the outcome on Sept. 11. The panel's investigators are looking at questions such as the timeliness of presidential orders about intercepting the jet that at 9:37 a.m. plowed into the Pentagon.\"
Paltrow also writes that Bush could not have been telling the truth when he told a town-hall meeting in December, 2001: \"I was sitting outside the classroom, waiting to go in, and I saw an airplane hit the tower -- the TV was obviously on. And I used to fly myself, and I said, 'Well, there's one terrible pilot.' \"
There was no such video until late that night, and the TV wasn't even plugged in, Paltrow writes.
The "I used to fly myself" comment really kills me. \"Among other things, the commission is examining such questions as how long Mr. Bush remained in a Florida classroom just after the World Trade Center strikes, whether there really was a threat to Air Force One that day, how effectively American fighter jets reacted to the attacks, and who activated the national-emergency-response plan.\"
White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card, who famously whispered in the president's ear, \"A second plane hit the second tower. America is under attack,\" has previously said that Bush left the Florida classroom he was sitting in within seconds.
\"But uncut videotape of the classroom visit obtained from the local cable-TV station director who shot it, and interviews with the teacher and principal, show that Mr. Bush remained in the classroom not for mere seconds, but for at least seven additional minutes. He followed along for five minutes as children read aloud a story about a pet goat. Then he stayed for at least another two minutes, asking the children questions and explaining to Ms. Rigell that he would have to leave more quickly than planned.\"
Paltrow writes: \"Both Republican and Democratic commissioners have said they are focusing closely on what happened next -- and whether mere minutes could have affected the outcome on Sept. 11. The panel's investigators are looking at questions such as the timeliness of presidential orders about intercepting the jet that at 9:37 a.m. plowed into the Pentagon.\"
Paltrow also writes that Bush could not have been telling the truth when he told a town-hall meeting in December, 2001: \"I was sitting outside the classroom, waiting to go in, and I saw an airplane hit the tower -- the TV was obviously on. And I used to fly myself, and I said, 'Well, there's one terrible pilot.' \"
There was no such video until late that night, and the TV wasn't even plugged in, Paltrow writes.
It becomes painfully obvious from that comment and his carefully orchestrated display of parading around in a flight suit that W simply loves to play "dress up" as a glamorous fighter pilot. It has to be an unrequited dream/fantasy of some sort for him.
It's like a kid putting on a cowboy hat while imagining he is lassoing cattle. or a kid pretending to play a cop. Except it's cute on kids and frightening when it's an adult. and what is it when it's done by our president? tragic.