Wednesday, March 12, 2008

George W. Bush seems to suffer from a bad case of verbal diarrhea

VHeadline commentarist Kenneth T. Tellis writes: I don't personally think the George W. Bush will ever be cured of his bouts of verbal diarrhea before he leaves office. Remember that George W. Bush is head of the biggest TERRORIST organization in the world, the U.S. Government.

It began at the close of World War II, and has continued after the fall of the Soviets to our present time.

Everywhere you look you see the handiwork of the CIA espionage. They also have a special group operating out of the Pentagon which gives out false information worldwide. Before calling Venezuela a sponsor of terrorism, the U.S. should first look at its own record of TERRORISM in Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen, Iran and indeed all of Latin America. Somehow the U.S. believes that it is above international law, because it is a Super Power. That position is about to end very shortly, with Russia and China nw on the horizon. The collapse of the U.S. has already begun and it can seen even in the economic sector. Their once mighty Dollar is no more and their country is teetering on bankruptcy.

As for the efforts of the U.S. to create chaos in Latin America, it has not worked at all. Latin Americans can now see through the charades being played by the Bush regime in Colombia/Venezuela. The Colombian government of Alvaro Uribe Velez is merely a front for both Drugs and Terrorist, aided by U.S. government money. But sometime soon the Money Pit will become empty and then Uribe will be left in the lurch.

The situation in Afghanistan is not any better than when the U.S. first began its invasion. Iraq at best is a write off, since the U.S. forces there cannot move outside their bases. Soon, there will be no more money to carry on the Wars and it will be a case of GAME OVER for the U.S.

In Pakistan, the U.S. puppet Pervez Musharraf is about to given his walking papers from the newly elected government ... and so, one more American Dream of World Domination has ended in failure.

Kenneth T. Tellis
kenttellis@rogers.com

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