Buttle's World

3 November, 2006

Teddy Kennedy: Traitor

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 18:11

According to CNS News the senator from Mass volunteered his help to the Soviets. Working against Reagan? No.

But, in Kennedy’s estimation, the Carter administration had assumed an overly belligerent posture toward the Soviet Union after the invasion of Afghanistan, Mitrokhin wrote.

In Kennedy’s view, “the atmosphere of tension and hostility towards the whole Soviet people was being fuelled by Carter” as well as by some key advisors, the Pentagon and the U.S. military industrial complex, the Mitrokhin report states.

The Patriot Post observes

Kennedy and Tunney are likely guilty of
treason—violating Article three, Section three of the
U.S. Constitution, the U.S. Code and the Logan Act of 1799,
barring citizens from giving aid and comfort to the enemy or
from engaging in diplomacy with foreign governments in an effort
to undermine U.S. policy. The junior senator from Massachusetts,
one John F. Kerry, also remains guilty for meeting with the North
Vietnamese in 1970.

Hey. At least it’s not like he killed a woman or something.

Under-reported Story?

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 15:05

The Anchoress wonders about the locks at Alamo.

Voter fraud is another big concern of mine. While I’m not a tinfoil-hat conspiracy theorist about it, neither am I comfortable with the level of security and lack of paper trail offered by current systems. I can’t help but wonder if the open-source community couldn’t solve both problems if given the right opportunity and inducements.

NYT Shoots Self in Foot

Filed under: Posts — clgood @ 11:32

Which? The left one, of course. They don’t have a right foot.

I think Hoekstra nails it in a letter posted on Michelle Malkin’s site. Especially this:

“Finally, it is disappointing but not surprising that the New York Times would continue to participate in such blatant and transparent political ploys, including what I believe are improper efforts by the IAEA to interfere with U.S. domestic affairs. The sad reality is that the New York Times has done far more damage to U.S. national security by the disclosure of vital, classified, intelligence programs than is likely to be caused by the inadvertent disclosure of decades-old information that had already been in the hands of Saddam’s regime.”

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