Tuesday, October 05, 2004
MORE TRAITORS IN OUR MIDST!
By Tweed
White House Be-yatch L. Paul Bremmer has turned on his master and bit the hand that fed him. In a series of speachifyings, Mr. Bremmer has criticized the Bush administration's handling of the situation in Iraq, in terms earily familiar to those used by Senator Kerry:
Bremeer could not resist reverting to his role as Chief White House Tool (See LB in 04' Posts of May 3, 2004 and May 14, 2004), however, noting that:
The White House quickly went into its usual attack mode after hearing of Bremmer's remarks. Vice President Cheney was the first on the attack noting that "Bremmer was never really a team player, and we always suspected that he just didn't want to see the President re-elected. No one ever really paid any attention to him anyway. I think he's mentally ill. His mother did a poor job raising him. And I saw him try to burn a cat once." When pressed, Cheney admitted that burning the cat had been his own idea.
Other White House officials were more forward looking in their statements. White House spokesman Scott McClellen noted that for some time the President had "wanted to put him down, for his own good," referring to Bremmer. "Bremmer was good for a period of time - but it's pretty clear that he's getting old and is in some serious pain. We think the only humane thing to do would be to end it sooner than let him linger like this."
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By Tweed
White House Be-yatch L. Paul Bremmer has turned on his master and bit the hand that fed him. In a series of speachifyings, Mr. Bremmer has criticized the Bush administration's handling of the situation in Iraq, in terms earily familiar to those used by Senator Kerry:
"We paid a big price for not stopping [the looting] because it established
an atmosphere of lawlessness. . . . We never had enough troops on the ground. .
. . The single most important change - the one thing that would have improved
the sutuation - would have been having more troops in Iraq at the beginning and
throughout. . . . There was planning, but planning for a situation that didn't arise."
Bremeer could not resist reverting to his role as Chief White House Tool (See LB in 04' Posts of May 3, 2004 and May 14, 2004), however, noting that:
"I believe that we currently have sufficient troop levels in Iraq."
The White House quickly went into its usual attack mode after hearing of Bremmer's remarks. Vice President Cheney was the first on the attack noting that "Bremmer was never really a team player, and we always suspected that he just didn't want to see the President re-elected. No one ever really paid any attention to him anyway. I think he's mentally ill. His mother did a poor job raising him. And I saw him try to burn a cat once." When pressed, Cheney admitted that burning the cat had been his own idea.
Other White House officials were more forward looking in their statements. White House spokesman Scott McClellen noted that for some time the President had "wanted to put him down, for his own good," referring to Bremmer. "Bremmer was good for a period of time - but it's pretty clear that he's getting old and is in some serious pain. We think the only humane thing to do would be to end it sooner than let him linger like this."