I dunno... I could conceive of voting for him and I am sure as hell not a
Republican. This may change if he appears to have been dishonest. I also
wondered if he wasn't the source for that story.

Dana

jon hall writes:

> Perhaps it may appear so on the surface, but I really can't agree. The
> administration want's Powell to be a "yes man", but obviously he
> doesn't like it. Cheney is the one who originally wrote the BS in the
> first place.
> Much has been made about Powell disagreeing with the administration on
> a lot of issues. The problem is that he is outnumbered in the White
> House with Cheney, Rumsfeld, and Rice usually lining up against him.
> 
> My take is the almost extreme opposite of this somehow being a sign of
> weakness on Powell's part. I see it as a sign of strength that he
> disagree's so much with the party line, but refuses to try and make it
> an issue of right and wrong in the public eye. Especially since the
> American voter only really cares about the truth when their party
> doesn't have the White House. I doubt Powell would have gained more
> Democratic supporters than Republican supporters he would have lost if
> he refused to go along with the White House.
> 
> When it comes down to it, the first black man to have a chance of
> becoming President has more important things to worry about than
> whether or not one reason to go to war with Iraq is better than
> another.
> He has a strong support base on the right currently and can't
> let the media screw up his image by painting him as a maverick, and I
> can't help but draw a parallel between David Palmer in the show 24,
> and Powell. Playing ball now will go a long way in the future.
> 
> -- 
>  jon
>  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> Monday, June 2, 2003, 10:24:00 PM, you wrote:
> MD> Powell, who I once thought I respected, is nothing more than a "yes man" for
> MD> Bush and the forces in the state department. He is definitely not in charge of
> MD> anything.
> 
> 
> >> On the evening of February 1, two dozen American officials gathered in a
> MD> spacious conference room at the Central Intelligence Agency in Langley, Va. The
> MD> time had come to make the public case for war against Iraq. For six hours that
> MD> Saturday, the men and women of the Bush administration argued about what
> MD> Secretary of State Colin Powell should--and should not--say at the United
> MD> Nations Security Council four days later. Not all the secret intelligence about
> MD> Saddam Hussein's misdeeds, they found, stood up to close scrutiny. At one point
> MD> during the rehearsal, Powell tossed several pages in the air. "I'm not reading
> MD> this," he declared. "This is bulls- - -."
> >>
> >> http://www.usnews.com/usnews/issue/030609/usnews/9intell.htm
> >> 
> 
> 
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