did you see this whiny creep, going ballistic over those who DARE question the wisdom, the power, the suzerainty of our maximum leader:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20040330/pl_nm/campa... SAN ANTONIO, Texas (Reuters) - An emotional former President George H.W. Bush on Tuesday defended his son's Iraq (news - web sites) war and lashed out at White House critics.
It is "deeply offensive and contemptible" to hear "elites and intellectuals on the campaign trail" dismiss progress in Iraq since last year's overthrow of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein (news - web sites), the elder Bush said in a speech to the National Petrochemical and Refiners Association annual convention.
"There is something ignorant in the way they dismiss the overthrow of a brutal dictator and the sowing of the seeds of basic human freedom in that troubled part of the world," he said.
The former president appeared to fight back tears as he complained about media coverage of the younger Bush that he called "something short of fair and balanced." you dried up old woman! SHUT UP SHUT UP SHUT UP......quit CRYING like the whinybaby you ARE.
are there ANY men in this family, besides Bar, that is?
now, here's the DEMOCRACY part....
Nudie movies, for the first time in your own Baghdad neighborhood:
By the second movie in the triple feature at Al Najoom theater, the projector had to cut through a thick cloud from the chain-smoking men killing an afternoon watching an obscure American action film.
The floors were sticky from spilled soda and candy, the subtitles were in Chinese, and the "Showdown in Little Tokyo" picture trailed the sound by at least three seconds. ok.....too obvious a spot here, right?
For admission costing the equivalent of about 65 cents, the moviegoers, if they could bear it, could sit through all three films--Dolph Lundgren's "Showdown in Little Tokyo," Demi Moore's "Striptease" and an Egyptian romance film.
Most didn't seem to expect much beyond some bloody fight scenes and a little titillation.
During the dialogue in "Showdown in Little Tokyo," the men (women don't come to the theater) chattered among themselves and paid little attention to the film.
Off go the clothes
But when the movie's leading actress, Tia Carrere, asks Lundgren to avert his eyes so she can disrobe in front of him while retaining her modesty, the theater instantly went silent and every man fixed his eyes on the screen. Then there was a collective and appreciative gasp.
During Saddam Hussein's rule, showing films with nudity was forbidden. http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0403300244mar30,1,151705.story?coll=chi-newsnationworld-hedso, next question: will this be enough to get the Count of Monte Crisco up out of his sick bay, and hightail if over there, to cover up those big American Breasts, riding pouty-high on those newly liberated movie screens?