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Congressman Kucinich made the AP newswire today with his remarks about President Bush:

"I seriously believe we have to start asking questions about his mental health," Kucinich, an Ohio congressman, said in an interview with The Philadelphia Inquirer's editorial board on Tuesday. "There's something wrong. He does not seem to understand his words have real impact."

...

"You cannot be a president of the United States who's wanton in his expression of violence," Kucinich said. "There's a lot of people who need care. He might be one of them. If there isn't something wrong with him, then there's something wrong with us. This, to me, is a very serious question."



Will Nancy Pelosi condemn his comments and browbeat him into submission for speaking the obvious truth like she did to Pete Stark? Maybe she can try, but Dennis has never been one to back down from speaking the truth.

Our friends over at A Town Called Dobson sum that up quite well:



Oh Dennis, why can't more Presidential candidates be like you?

- Zaid

4 comments:

At October 30, 2007 at 6:55 PM Anonymous said...

Every time, I hear a story which involves Kucinich and Bush makes my head hurt. Can Kucinich just drop the bush bashing and run an actual campaign. Also my head really hurts when he says 9/11 was not done by terrorist. You are two to three times more mental ill if you think 9/11 was done by the Bush administration or any American gov't officials. Sorry for the rant but FAU's sga blogs arent fun to rant on anymore.

 
At October 31, 2007 at 6:30 PM Zaid at UGA said...

I believe you also said this in another post, but you still haven't given evidence that Congressman Kucinich did actually say that 9/11 was Bush's doing. Do you have evidence?

 
At November 3, 2007 at 11:17 AM Anonymous said...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QYpgCt-s808
He didn't say it was bush's doing directly ,but seems like he thinks its some type of inside job.

 
At November 4, 2007 at 5:15 AM Anonymous said...

the congressman is actually in favor of establishing an investigation of the financial "paper trail" post-9/11. he doesn't actually believe that the attacks themselves were part of an inside job, but rather that the government may not have fully disclosed all the details related to its economic responses.

 

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