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Democratic-Controlled Congress’ Approval Rating at 20%; 69% Disapprove

Posted by wdporter on November 20, 2007

Congress’ Approval Rating at 20%; Bush’s Approval at 32%
by Joseph Carroll
Page:12PRINCETON, NJ — Gallup’s latest poll finds only one in five Americans approving of the job Congress is doing at this time. The public’s rating of Congress had shown slight improvements in recent months, but the current rating is down again and is among the lowest that Gallup has ever measured dating back to 1974. Americans’ assessment of the job President George W. Bush is doing is also quite negative and has shown little change over the past two months, with about one in three Americans expressing approval of him.

Congressional Job Approval

According to the Nov. 11-14, 2007, poll, 20% of Americans approve of the way Congress is handling its job, while 69% disapprove. Congressional job approval ratings tied their historical low point — an 18% reading in 1992 — in August of this year. Americans’ ratings of Congress showed some improvement in the following months, reaching 29% in mid-October before falling back again this month.

By historical standards, the current 20% approval rating is among the lowest Gallup has ever recorded. In fact, in the 173 times since 1974 that Gallup has asked Americans to rate the job Congress is doing, Congress’ approval rating has been at or below 20% only four times.

Republicans and Democrats do not differ much in their ratings of Congress at this time. Just 26% of Democrats say they approve of the job Congress is doing, while 20% of Republicans approve. Independents’ approval rating is lower still, at 14%.

Presidential Job Approval Ratings
Bush’s job approval ratings have shown little change in the past two months — 32% of Americans now say they approve of the job he is doing as president and 61% disapprove. Over the course of the year, Bush’s approval ratings have been fairly stable, averaging 34% and fluctuating between a high of 38% in April and his administration’s low point of 29% in July.

Combined Gallup data from the past two months show that ratings of Bush vary most by political attitudes:

Seventy-two percent of Republicans approve of the job Bush is doing, compared with 27% of independents and just 7% of Democrats.
A majority of self-described conservatives, 54%, approve of Bush, while only 25% of moderates and 9% of liberals do.
Among the combined party and ideology groups, conservative Republicans show the highest level of support for Bush, at 74%, while liberal Democrats show the lowest support, at only 4%.
Bush’s approval rating is higher among men than among women; among frequent churchgoers than among those who seldom or never attend religious services; among those living in the South than among those living elsewhere; among those in higher-income than among those in lower-income households; and among whites than among blacks. There are only minor variations in Bush’s approval rating by age and education.
http://www.gallup.com/poll/102829/Congress-Approval-Rating-20-Bushs-Approval-32.aspx?version=print

Posted in Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), Democrat / Liberal / Communists, Legislative Idiots, US House of Representatives | Leave a Comment »

Hillary campaign takes cash from the people that Bill pardoned

Posted by wdporter on November 18, 2007

Cha-ching! Hillary campaign takes cash from the people that Bill pardoned
posted at 10:05 am on November 15, 2007 by Bryan
Three recipients of controversial 11th-hour pardons issued by former President Bill Clinton in January 2001 have donated thousands of dollars to the presidential campaign of his wife, Democratic front-runner Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., according to campaign finance records examined by ABC News, in what some good government groups said created an appearance of impropriety…
One of the pardonees who has become a donor to Sen. Clinton is David Herdlinger, a former prosecutor in Springdale, Ark., who, according to press accounts at the time of his pardon pleaded guilty in 1986 to mail fraud after taking bribes to reduce or drop charges against defendants charged with drunken driving offenses.
Now a life and business coach in Georgia, Herdlinger was pardoned by President Clinton in January 2001; he donated $1,000 to Sen. Clinton’s presidential campaign in August.
Insurance agent Alfredo Regalado, who gave Hillary Clinton $2,000, was pardoned by her husband for failing to “report the transportation of currency in excess of $10,000 into the United States,” according to the Department of Justice.
The third is John Deutch, the Clinton CIA Director who was accused of mishandling government secrets. ABC’s phrasing on this is worth repeating.
Pardoned by President Clinton for charges he had mishandled government secrets — but before the Department of Justice could file the proper paperwork against him — Deutch, now a professor at MIT, gave Sen. Clinton the maximum allowable donation, $2,300.
We never learned, and never will learn, the true extent of Deutch’s actions. Just like Sandy Berger, who is one of Hillary’s national security advisors.
Read the whole story. ABC does a good job of reminding readers about the controversial January 2001 pardons and shenanigans that the Clintons conducted on their way out of power, even mentioning Hillary’s brother’s involvement.
Hillary’s accepting these donations isn’t illegal. But it sure looks like a payback, and taken together with the massive and corrupt bundling that Norman Hsu did on Hillary’s campaign’s behalf, her campaign looks like it’s the most corrupt of the lot by a long shot.
http://hotair.com/archives/2007/11/15/cha-ching-hillary-campaign-takes-cash-from-the-people-that-bill-pardoned/

Posted in Bill Clinton, Democrat / Liberal / Communists, Hillary Rodham Rodham | Leave a Comment »

Hillary denies, then plays the gender card

Posted by wdporter on November 18, 2007

Hillary denies, then plays the gender card
Send to a Friend printer-friendly Hillary Clinton answered the licenses for illegals question definitively tonight, removing it as a problem. She also answered the question concerning whether human rights or national security is more important (Richardson and Obama both whiffed badly on that one, as they did on the licenses question). But she’s still an equivocator. In this clip, which I’ve shamelessly swiped from Ian Schwartz and Stop the ACLU, she is asked whether she’s playing the gender card. She says no, but then goes on to lay that card right in the middle of the table like an Ace.
http://hotair.com/archives/2007/11/15/videos-hillary-denies-then-plays-the-gender-card-and-edwards-gets-booed/

Posted in Democrat / Liberal / Communists, Hillary Rodham Rodham, Presidential Race, Video | Leave a Comment »

Woman who asked Hillary moronic “diamonds/pearls” question: CNN set me up

Posted by wdporter on November 18, 2007

Woman who asked Hillary moronic “diamonds/pearls” question: CNN set me up!
posted at 12:19 pm on November 16, 2007 by Allahpundit Send to a Friend printer-friendly
I’m mildly suspicious that her MySpace page says she’s 15 years old when she introduced herself last night as being a UNLV student, but maybe she just hasn’t updated the page in awhile. Ambinder claims to have confirmed that she is who she says she is with one of her friends and the MySpace photo does look just like her, so, fine.
She’s speaking out this morning because her classmates understandably want to know why she’d ask a question that makes them all look developmentally disabled by extension. Don’t blame me, she responds, blame CNN. Would they really sandbag one of their questioners this way? Well … yeah.
“Every single question asked during the debate by the audience had to be approved by CNN,” Luisa writes. “I was asked to submit questions including “lighthearted/fun” questions. I submitted more than five questions on issues important to me. I did a policy memo on Yucca Mountain a year ago and was the finalist for the Truman Scholarship. For sure, I thought I would get to ask the Yucca question that was APPROVED by CNN days in advance.”…
That’s what the media does. See, the media chose what they wanted, not what the people or audience really wanted. That’s politics; that’s reality. So, if you want to read about real issues important to America–and the whole world, I suggest you pick up a copy of the Economist or the New York Times or some other independent source.
Follow the link to read the question she wanted to ask. In CNN’s defense, the “diamonds/pearls” debate is increasingly germane to Democratic voters these days.

http://hotair.com/archives/2007/11/16/woman-who-asked-hillary-moronic-diamondspearls-question-cnn-set-me-up/

Posted in Democrat / Liberal / Communists, Hillary Rodham Rodham, Liberal Media, Video | Leave a Comment »

Democrat Elliot Spitzer Finally Gives Up on Giving Driver’s Licenses for Illegal Aliens in New York

Posted by wdporter on November 14, 2007

NY Governor Drops Immigrant License Plan

Nov 14 12:57 PM US/Eastern
By DEVLIN BARRETT
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) – New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer said Wednesday he was abandoning a plan to issue driver’s licenses to illegal immigrants, but said that the federal government had “lost control” of its borders and left states to deal with the consequences.
“I have concluded that New York state cannot successfully address this problem on its own,” Spitzer said at a news conference after meeting with members of the state’s congressional delegation.

The Democratic governor introduced the plan two months ago with the goal of increased security, safer roads and an opportunity to bring immigrants “out of the shadows.” Opponents charged the scheme would make it easier for would-be terrorists to get identification, and make the country less safe.

Spitzer said overwhelming public opposition led to his decision.

“You don’t need a stethoscope to hear the heartbeat of the public on this one,” said the governor, adding: “There are some moments where emotions are simply too hot.”

Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff called Spitzer’s reversal on the license issue “a good development” and said immigration is a federal issue for which his department has to “ramp up enforcement.”

“What I want to make sure is that states aren’t working at cross- purposes with us and enabling the kind of conduct we’re enforcing against,” Chertoff told The Associated Press by phone from London.

Last month, Spitzer sought to salvage the license effort by striking a deal with the Department of Homeland Security to create three distinct types of state driver’s licenses: one “enhanced” card that would be as secure as a passport; a second-tier license good for boarding airplanes; and a third marked not valid for federal purposes that would be available to illegal immigrants and others.

The signed agreement with Washington may still be salvaged: Aides to Spitzer said Wednesday he planned to go forward with the border- crossing card. The state took a wait-and-see approach to the second- tier license that would meet federal standards for what is known as Real ID—a national and secure identification that would make it much harder for terrorists to get licenses.

Chertoff said the signed agreement between his agency and the state would “absolutely” still go forward for the other two types of licenses.

The license issue has reverberated in the presidential campaign, particularly for New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, who was asked about Spitzer’s plan during a debate.

Clinton has been criticized by her Democratic and Republican rivals for her noncommittal answers on the subject. She has said she sympathizes with governors like Spitzer who are forced to confront the issue of immigration because the federal government has not enacted immigration reform. She has not taken a position on the actual plan offered by Spitzer.

About 70 percent of New Yorkers opposed the plan, according to a Siena College poll of 625 registered voters released Tuesday. The poll, conducted Nov. 5-8, had a sampling error margin of 3.9 percentage points.

After meeting privately with the governor, New York Democrats who agreed with him said they understood he had to retreat—but insisted the need for immigration reform would only grow.

“This governor was not defeated by anything other than the hate in this country toward immigrants right now,” said Rep. Jose Serrano, a Bronx Democrat.

Others saw it as further proof the political paralysis over immigration issues has spread from the federal to state governments.

“This is an issue that’s vexed Washington for a while. Now it’s spread it’s plague to Albany and I think the governor learned the lesson that immigration has become the new third rail of politics,” said Rep. Anthony Weiner, a New York City Democrat.

http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D8STIIP80&show_article=1

Posted in Democrat / Liberal / Communists, Elliot Spitzer, Illegal Immigration, New York | Leave a Comment »

Obama says he’ll raise taxes on the rich to shore up Social Security

Posted by wdporter on November 14, 2007

Posted in Democrat / Liberal / Communists, Senator Barack Obama (D-IL), Video | Leave a Comment »

Louisiana Democrat Representative to civil rights veteran: “Talk to you later, Buckwheat” (Democrats Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton remain silent)

Posted by wdporter on November 14, 2007

La. Pol’s ‘Buckwheat’ Remark Sparks Ire
1 day ago
HOUMA, La. (AP) — A white state lawmaker in a runoff election called a black civil-rights veteran who had helped her campaign “Buckwheat,” prompting the NAACP to urge voters to kick her out of office.
Rep. Carla Blanchard Dartez, a Democrat, acknowledged that she ended a Thursday night conversation with Hazel Boykin by saying, “Talk to you later, Buckwheat.” Dartez had been thanking Boykin for driving voters to the polls.
Buckwheat, a black child character in the “Little Rascals” comedies of the 1930s and ’40s, is viewed as a racial stereotype.
Boykin, 75, helped desegregate restaurants and the parish school system in the 1960s. Her son, Jerome, is president of the Terrebonne Parish chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
“I’ve never had no one talk to me that way and I considered it a racial slur,” Hazel Boykin said. “I know the meaning of it, it’s just like the N-word.”
Jerome Boykin said Monday he planned to ask voters to cast ballots against Dartez, who faces Republican Joe Harrison in Saturday’s runoff.
“At this point, the NAACP is not concerned about the Democratic Party or the Republican Party. If a Republican is elected because of her racist remarks, that’s her responsibility,” he said of Dartez.
Dartez did not immediately return a call Monday.
“I made an insensitive comment, and I regret my choice of words,” she said Friday. “I have apologized to both Hazel and Jerome Boykin. The Boykin family has been a huge help in my campaign for re-election, and I did not mean to offend them.”
Dartez has represented parts of Terrebonne, St. Mary and Assumption parishes since 1999. She has said she does not intend to drop out of the race.

Posted in Democrat / Liberal / Communists, Louisiana, Race in America | Leave a Comment »

HILLARY CLINTON HANDLER WARNED WOLF BLITZER: NO GANGING UP ON HILLARY IN VEGAS!

Posted by wdporter on November 13, 2007

CNN’s Wolf Blitzer has been warned not to focus Thursday’s Dem debate on Hillary. ‘This campaign is about issues, not on who we can bring down and destroy,’ top Clinton insider explains. ‘Blitzer should not go down to the levels of character attack and pull ‘a Russert.” Blitzer is set to moderate debate from Vegas, with questions also being posed by Suzanne Malveaux…
http://drudgereport.com/

Posted in Democrat / Liberal / Communists, Hillary Rodham Rodham, Presidential Race | Leave a Comment »

Hillary Questioner Claims: ‘I wasn’t the only one at the event who was a plant’

Posted by wdporter on November 13, 2007

Student claims she was fed question for Clinton
GRINNELL, Iowa (CNN) — The college student who says she was told what question to ask at one of New York Sen. Hillary Clinton’s campaign events said Monday that “voters have the right to know what happened” and she wasn’t the only one who was planted.
In an exclusive taped interview with CNN, Muriel Gallo-Chasanoff, a 19-year-old sophomore at Grinnell College in Grinnell, Iowa, said that giving anyone specific questions to ask is “dishonest,” and the whole incident has given her a negative outlook on politics.
Gallo-Chasanoff, whose story was first reported in the campus newspaper, said what happened was really pretty simple: She says a senior Clinton staffer asked if she’d like to ask the senator a question after an energy speech the Democratic presidential hopeful gave in Newton, Iowa, on November 6.
“I sort of thought about it, and I said ‘Yeah, can I ask how her energy plan compares to the other candidates’ energy plans?’” Gallo-Chasanoff said.
“‘I don’t think that’s a good idea,” the staffer said, according to Gallo-Chasanoff, “because I don’t know how familiar she is with their plans.”
He then opened a binder to a page that, according to Gallo-Chasanoff, had about eight questions on it.
“The top one was planned specifically for a college student,” she added. ” It said ‘college student’ in brackets and then the question.”
Topping that sheet of paper was the following: “As a young person, I’m worried about the long-term effects of global warming. How does your plan combat climate change?”
And while she said she would have rather used her own question, Gallo-Chasanoff said she generally didn’t have a problem asking the campaign’s because she “likes to be agreeable,” adding that since she told the staffer she’d ask their pre-typed question she “didn’t want to go back on [her] word.”
Clinton campaign spokesman Mo Elleithee has said in a statement responding to the initial campus article that the senator “did not know which questioners she was calling on during the event.”
Gallo-Chasanoff wasn’t so sure.
“I don’t know whether Hillary knew what my question was going to be, but it seemed like she knew to call on me because there were so many people, and … I was the only college student in that area,” she said.
In a statement, the campaign also added, “On this occasion a member of our staff did discuss a possible question about Senator Clinton’s energy plan at a forum. … This is not standard policy and will not be repeated again.”
Gallo-Chasanoff may have some doubts about that one as well.
“After the event,” she said, “I heard another man … talking about the question he asked, and he said that the campaign had asked him to ask that question.”
The man she references prefaced his question by saying that it probably didn’t have anything to do with energy, and then posed the following: “I wonder what you propose to do to create jobs for the middle-class person, such as here in Newton where we lost Maytag.”
A Maytag factory in Newton recently closed, forcing hundreds of people out of their jobs.
During the course of the late-night interview on Grinnell’s campus, Gallo-Chasanoff also told CNN that the day before the school’s newspaper, Scarlet and Black, printed the story, she wanted the reporter to inform the campaign out of courtesy to let them know it would be published.
She said the “head of publicity for the campaign,” a man whose name she could not recall, had no factual disputes with the story. But, she added, a Clinton intern spoke to her to say the campaign requests she “not talk about” the story to any more media outlets and that if she did she should inform a staffer.
“I’m not under any real obligation to do that, and I haven’t talked to [the campaign] anymore,” Gallo-Chasanoff said, adding that she also doesn’t plan to.
“If what I do is come and just be totally truthful, then that’s all anyone can ask of me, and that’s all I can ask of myself. So I’ll feel good with what I’ve done. I’ll feel like I’ve done the right thing.”
Asked if this experience makes her less likely to support Clinton’s presidential bid, Gallo-Chasanoff, an undecided voter, said, “I think she has a lot to offer, but I — this experience makes me look at her campaign a little bit differently.”
“The question and answer sessions — especially in Iowa — are really important. That’s where the voters get to … have like a real genuine conversation with this politician who could be representing them.”
While she acknowledged “it’s possible that all campaigns do these kind of tactics,” she said it still doesn’t make it right.
“Personally I want to know that I have someone who’s honest representing me.”
Calls placed to representatives from the Clinton campaign late Monday night were not immediately returned.
Gallo-Chasanoff’s story comes at a time when a second person has also come forward with a similar one. Geoffrey Mitchell of Hamilton, Illinois, a town located on the Iowa border, told CNN the Clinton campaign also wanted him to ask a certain question at an Iowa event in April.
“He asked me if I would ask Sen. Clinton about ways she was going to confront the president on the war in Iraq, specifically war funding,” said Geoffrey Mitchell, a supporter of Sen. Barack Obama, D-Illinois. “I told him it was not a question I felt comfortable with.”
No questions were taken at the event. Elleithee said this incident was different than what happened with Gallo-Chasanoff in Newton. Elleithee said the staffer “bumped into someone he marginally knew” and during a conversation with Mitchell, “Iraq came up.” Elleithee denied the campaign tried to plant him as a friendly questioner in the audience.
Mitchell said he had never met the staffer before the event.
http://www.cnn.com/2007/POLITICS/11/13/clinton.planted/index.html

Posted in Democrat / Liberal / Communists, Hillary Rodham Rodham, Presidential Race | Leave a Comment »

Congressional Democrats 0 for 40 on Iraq Retreat

Posted by wdporter on November 13, 2007

Democrats zero for 40 on Iraq
By: Jim VandeHei and John F. Harris
November 13, 2007 09:46 AM EST

As the congressional session lurches toward a close, Democrats are confronting some demoralizing arithmetic on Iraq.

The numbers tell a story of political and substantive paralysis more starkly than most members are willing to acknowledge publicly, or perhaps even to themselves.

Since taking the majority, they have forced 40 votes on bills limiting President Bush’s war policy.

Only one of those has passed both chambers, even though both are run by Democrats. That one was vetoed by Bush.

Indeed, the only war legislation enacted during this Congress has been to give the president exactly what he wants, and exactly what he has had for the past five years: more money, with no limitations.

Disapproval of the Democratic majority in Congress has risen steadily, albeit with no corresponding increase in enthusiasm for Republicans.

Even more notably, public opinion about the war — while still dominated by opposition to a military adventure most people think was a mistake — has risen modestly in recent weeks, according to several nonpartisan polls.

Money woes keep GOP worried about 2008
Note to staffers: Trust your candidate
Rudy parody less than ‘glamorous’
Democrats plan to spend the December recess reviewing their strategy and determining if they missed opportunities to put limitations, even if they were smaller than war activists were demanding, on Bush’s war policies.

Some Democratic strategists are warning that congressional leaders are “muddling through” with a strategy that carries both political and military risks for the party.

John Podesta, who runs the Center for American Progress, a liberal think tank, is advising Democrats to try to shift war policy around the edges while carefully setting the stage for an easier withdrawal when the next president takes office.

There may well have been paths not taken this year that would have produced better results.

But what the year has mostly highlighted is that Democrats and anti-war activists were in the grip of two illusions after their triumph in the 2006 elections.

The first illusion is that taking power on Capitol Hill was by its very nature — no matter the precise legislation that emerged — something that would alter the basic dynamics of Iraq policy.

Instead, it’s now clear that even a weakened, and in many ways discredited, president remains the dominant policymaker on Iraq.

For 50 years, legislators of both parties have ceded war-making power to the executive branch, and there is no reversing that in a matter of months — least of all when the opposition party is itself divided over what to do.

What’s more, it turns out that Washington matters less than many Democrats and even many journalists supposed in determining political momentum in the Iraq debate.

Events on the ground — including regular, if still fragmentary, evidence that security is improving somewhat in the wake of the military’s “surge” policy — matter more.

The second illusion is that Democrats could stall substantively and still prosper politically.

A few months ago, many lawmakers were saying something like this: “It’s true we can’t force Bush’s hand on Iraq because we do not have veto-proof majorities. But the longer he sticks with an unpopular war, the better it will be for Democrats, and eventually the moderates and war skeptics in the GOP will stage a full revolt.”

This might yet come true by the next election, in 2008. For now, it looks like substantive weakness — the failure to drive policy changes on Iraq — has reinforced political weakness.

“Republicans (including the president) have made real progress in swaying opinion to their side, while 10 months of Democratic efforts have failed to persuade citizens that the war continues to be a disaster,” according to Charles Franklin, a University of Wisconsin political scientist who analyzed public opinion on the nonpartisan Pollster.com.

“The war of partisan persuasion has tilted towards the Republicans and away from the Democrats, at least in this particular aspect.”

This surprising turn has prompted a what-if debate among Democratic lawmakers.

Some of them have told us privately that their leaders botched a chance earlier this year — before the surge appeared to have some success — to work with Republicans on modest restrictions on the war.

House Minority Whip Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) told us last week his biggest fear early on was that Democrats would seek compromise solutions with moderate Republicans on the war and other issues.

Blunt suggested the strategy probably would have worked.

But once Rep. Brian Baird (D-Wash.), a staunch war opponent, returned from a visit to Iraq and applauded the surge, any chance of a compromise clampdown ended.

Repeated predictions that GOP support was on the verge of collapsing never materialized, and Republican support for the war is probably stronger today than when Democrats took power.

Jim Manley, a spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, said the only strategic miscalculation Democrats might have made was “failing to grasp how much Republicans were willing to stick with the president.”

Still, he said Republicans pursued unity at their own peril.

“The Republicans own this thing, lock, stock and barrel.”

For the first time in years, Republicans are privately telling their members with a straight face that the war, in political terms, may be neutralized for next year’s election, which would have big ramifications for both sides.

A word of caution before we go into the numbers: Republicans remain broadly disliked, the war remains powerfully unpopular and opinion is prone to shift rapidly with events.

That said, 44 percent of Americans now believe the war is going “very” or “fairly” well, a high point in the past year, according to The Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, a nonpartisan group.

At the same time, CBS News polling has found U.S. opposition to Bush’s troop surge softening a bit.

Yes, public opposition to the war remains high.

But there has been a small uptick even in the number of independents and Democrats who are optimistic the surge might work (though most remain pessimistic).

The Democratic base’s negative view of the war also has lessened of late.

This summer, CBS News found that 57 percent of Democrats thought the war was going “very badly.”

Today, the number has fallen by 12 points, to 45 percent.

The changing views probably have little to do with Congress, said Stephen Biddle, a senior fellow for defense policy at the Council on Foreign Relations.

“You have also had the near absence of the war coverage in the last months, and since the coverage is generally negative, the less coverage, the less negative communications that reaches people’s living rooms.”

Pew reported Friday that only 16 percent of Americans name the Iraq war as the news story that first comes to mind today — a huge shift.

In January, when Democrats took office, 55 percent of Americans said Iraq was on the top of their minds.
Pelosi is trying to end the congressional year on a familiar note.

She is pushing for a House vote on legislation that would directly tie new money for the war to specific troop withdrawals.

It would provide Bush only $50 billion of the $196 billion he requested for war operations.

And it has no chance of becoming law. Manley said the Senate would push similar legislation, likely next week.

Meanwhile, both sides must contemplate the most dispiriting piece of Iraq arithmetic of all.

At the start of the year, there had been 3,003 U.S. military casualties in Iraq.

Now there have been 3,860 — already making this the deadliest year of the five-year military campaign.

http://dyn.politico.com/printstory.cfm?uuid=3602EDC4-3048-5C12-005578659CDA41C0

Posted in Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), Democrat / Liberal / Communists, Iraq, Legislative Idiots, US Military | Leave a Comment »