ABSOLUTE ZERO; The operating temperature of BUSH’S BRAIN


ABSOLUTE ZERO; The operating temperature of BUSH’S BRAIN




Lets look at who George W. Bush actually is and where he’s BEEN.

1. ---A world leader who didn’t dry out until 12-14 years ago

2. ---A president who didn’t abandon the crack pipe until 12 years ago

3. ---Someone who decided it was about time to find A god------ after he screwed everything else up so badly---- no one else would talk to him-----probably a Karl Rove idea

4. ---A national leader who has no intellectual curiosity and scoffs at the concept of personal reflection----self examination and-----thinking

5. ---An individual who attended a lot of prestigious schools and universities but never learned a thing during his education------and is proud of it

6. ---A person who has never had to clean up any mess he ever created------but has to now------and doesn’t have the intellectual------ where—with--all ------to know where to begin

7. ---Thinks the Iraq war is about terrorism----and---will never realize it is SLOWLY BECOMING A CIVIL WAR mostly about historical nationalism-----same misunderstanding happened in Vietnam but-----he wouldn’t know because he was DRUNK AND AWOL.

8. ---Has no understanding of the forces behind outsourcing; How to curtail them AND How to inspire a nation toward a NEW NATIONAL VISION in a technological era of prosperity and global information.

9. ---Thinks tax cuts------ in a world economy where capital is free to flow ------to world regions----- with the best returns------- ARE A DOMESTIC PANACEA

10. —WILL HAVE TO EXPAND MILITARY CONFLICT TO ENTERTAIN THE RED STATES---and divert attention away from his incompetence-----once again

11. —Lacks the intellectual discipline, courage and creativity to control spending------SOOooooooo-----we could be looking at the first $ trillion dollar ANNUAL deficit.

12. —Will be dealing with a new round of domestic terrorism------CLUELESSLY-------possibly non-urban based-------POSSIBLY BEGINNING THIS SUMMER-------with a whole new set of tactics.-----
This time under the leadership of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi ----after instructions from Bin Laden----who gave hints during his studio quality video----prior to the election?
WASN’T THIS GUY LIVING IN CAVES 5 YEARS AGO---???----JUST ASKING----!!!!!

13. ---Thinks the Middle East------ are suburbs----- of midland Texas, and that democracy there is like democracy here. Only there Bin Laden has a favorable rating of nearly 60% whereas the SHRUBSTERS is around 6%

14.---Will have spent nearly $ ONE TRILLION DOLLARS OF THIS NATIONS RESOURCES---probably 5000 military dead with another 100,000 disabled in one form or another---not counting ---yet to come domestic terrorist-----flowing across our southern borders into the Southern hinterland to disrupt our economy and disable our citizens
Will Star Wars stop this migration and influx of terrorist accompanying our migrant workers who pick our vegetables and mow our lawns and do our laundry
JUST ASKING-----????

So it’s----- neo-con-stalin-lite-shrublicanism------ for 4 more years

F_U_N________F_U_N__________F_U_N____SIT__ back_ and_ enjoy







Silence is acceptance -- so-let-- “cynicism set you free””—and--let “the onion” be your guide

””An “eye for an eye” leaves the whole world “blind” making us---- “better---listeners”, ---SOooo---do it---!!!


When you pay attention to the right things----the wrong things don’t happen


When our-- BEST AND BRIGHTEST --don’t pay attention to the right things

Maybe----- THEY BENEFIT ----- from the wrong things happening-----????


Why is hindsight--- 20/20 -------when------ perfect vision--------- exceeds----- 20/10------??????


"What, therefore, is truth? A mobile army of metaphors... ~Nietzsche~

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[deleted]

"There's no money in counterinsurgency," BUT THERE IS IN STARWARS


"There's no money in counterinsurgency," said Hammes, the Marine colonel, who served in Iraq and whose recent book, "The Sling and the Stone," has stirred more debate within the military. "It's about language skills. It's about people. It's about a lot of soft money moving over to [the Departments of] State, Commerce, Treasury, and there's no F-22 [fighter jet] in this program."

Critics: Pentagon in blinders

Long before 9/11, the military was warned about low-tech warfare, but it didn't listen



By Stephen J. Hedges

Washington Bureau

June 6, 2005

WASHINGTON -- Nearly 16 years ago, a group of four military officers and a civilian predicted the rise of terrorism and anti-American insurgencies with chilling accuracy.

The group said U.S. military technology was so advanced that foreign forces would be unlikely to challenge it directly, and it forecast that future foes would be non-state insurgents and terrorists whose weapons would be suicide car bombs, not precision-guided weapons.

"Today, the United States is spending $500 million apiece for stealth bombers," the group wrote in a 1989 article that appeared in a professional military journal. "A terrorist stealth bomber is a car with a bomb in the trunk--a car that looks like every other car."

The five men dubbed their theory "Fourth Generation Warfare" and warned that the U.S. military had to adapt. In the years since, the original group of officers, joined by a growing number of officers and scholars within the military, has pressed Pentagon leaders to acknowledge this emerging threat.
But rather than adopting a new strategy, the generals and civilian leaders in the Defense Department have continued to support conventional, high-intensity conflict and the expensive weapons that go with it. That is happening, critics say, despite lethal insurgencies in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"They don't understand this kind of warfare," said Greg Wilcox, a retired Army lieutenant colonel, Vietnam veteran and critic of Pentagon policies. "They want to return to war as they envision it. That's not going to happen."


Wilcox is just one of a number of maverick officers, active and retired, who have been agitating for change. Others include Marine Col. T.X. Hammes, whose recent book on the subject is required reading in some units, as well as Marine Col. G.I. Wilson, currently serving in Iraq, and H. John Poole, a retired Marine who has written extensively on insurgencies.

Together they make up the public face of a much larger debate within the U.S. military over whether the Defense Department is doing enough to train troops to fight insurgents.

It is a debate with enormous consequences. Though most of the more than 1,350 American combat deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan have been caused by low-tech insurgent weaponry such as roadside bombs, the Army plans to spend more than $120 billion in the next decade on a future combat system of digitally linked vehicles, weapons and unmanned aircraft. It is based largely on conventional warfare theory.

The Army also is reorganizing its 10 divisions into 43 more flexible, 5,000-soldier brigades that can be plunked down in a war zone. But the weapons and training those forces receive still will lean heavily toward the traditional view of conflict, with heavy tanks, helicopters, close air support and terrain-holding troops.

Soldiers take initiative

The mavericks' Fourth Generation Warfare theory is about as far as one can get from current Pentagon doctrine. But many of the captains, corporals and privates fighting today have adopted the mavericks' theories and tactics.
"So much of it was validated that it's theoretically right on the money," said Jim Roussell, a chief warrant officer in the Marine Reserves who focuses on gang crime in Chicago as a sergeant in the city's Police Department. He recently returned from Iraq after leading a Marine unit against insurgents.
Army and Marine Corps officials in Washington declined to answer questions on the changes suggested by the mavericks.

But in November, the Army issued a revised field manual on fighting insurgencies that had not been updated in more than a decade. It has received a mixed reception.

"We really have a lot of institutional friction right now," said Lt. Col. Jan Horvath, the Army manual's primary author. "There are a number of junior officers who understand this." Senior officers, Horvath said, have been less accepting.

Still, some units are adapting. The Army's 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, for instance, last month began its second tour of Iraq after months of innovative training, including a requirement that all officers and soldiers receive basic Arabic language and culture training.

"It's working," said Col. H.R. McMaster, the regiment's commander, who has lectured at U.S. Military Academy in West Point, N.Y., and written a book about the failures of the Vietnam War. "It's a hard problem. Nothing is easy over here. But I'm telling you we're getting after it, we're pursuing the enemy, we are totally on the offensive right now."

Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's office has given irregular warfare a "higher priority" in the upcoming 2006 Quadrennial Defense Review, according to an excerpt of the document. But the report will not be completed until next year. Real war, the mavericks point out, is happening now.

Chinese war philosopher "Sun Tzu had it right," said one Army lieutenant colonel who spent a year fighting insurgents in Iraq and who requested anonymity. "If you know your enemy and if you know yourself, you'll never lose. We know about half of what we should about the enemy, and we don't know ourselves. We can't figure out what kind of Army we want to be."

The 1989 article that broached the rise of terrorism and insurgencies sprang from a group of officers who met regularly to discuss tactics and strategy. The group gathered in the Alexandria, Va., home of William Lind, a military analyst and former Senate aide who is director of the Free Congress Foundation's Center for Cultural Conservatism.

Lind already had written about the first three generations of modern warfare: Napoleonic-style lines of battle, World War I trench conflict and the swift-moving "maneuver" warfare that the German army displayed in World War II. In the 1980s, the Marine Corps adopted maneuver warfare as its official doctrine.
What, the group wondered, would be the next generation of war?

The group--Lind, Wilson, John Schmitt of the Marines, and Keith Nightengale and Joseph Sutton of the Army--put its collective answer in a short article in the October 1989 issue of the Marine Corps Gazette. As the Soviet Union faltered, they wrote, new insurgencies and terrorist groups could erupt in countries with an "Islamic or Asiatic tradition."

"Mass, of men or fire power, will no longer be an overwhelming factor," they wrote. "In fact, mass may become a disadvantage, as it will be easy to target.

Small, highly maneuverable, agile forces will tend to dominate."


The article marked a radical departure from military thinking. Until then, the word "insurgency" had been virtually banned inside the Pentagon.

In his 1986 book, "The Army and Vietnam," military analyst and Army veteran Andrew Krepinevich details just how reviled a fight against insurgents is among U.S. military leaders. Top Army commanders in Washington, Krepinevich found, brushed aside orders from President John Kennedy in the early 1960s to build a counterinsurgent capability in Vietnam. And after the war, he said, counterinsurgency theory was purged from the Pentagon. Instead, the military returned to preparing for a conventional war with the Soviet Union.
"In a way, the lesson of Vietnam for the American people and the Army was `No more Vietnams,'" Krepinevich said. "Vietnam was a searing personal experience for the Army, incredibly negative."

After the 1991 Persian Gulf war, the mavericks argued that it was less a victory than it appeared. The war was "a throwback to World War II in Europe with updated weapons," they wrote in a 1994 Marine Corps Gazette article. U.S. claims of success, they suggested, masked the vulnerabilities of lumbering, heavy armor, a notion borne out in 1993 during the U.S. military's misadventure in Somalia.

The Pentagon, though, continued to equip for battlefield warfare, encouraged by a Congress that was more than willing to back big weapons, ships and aircraft programs and the jobs they create.

"There's no money in counterinsurgency," said Hammes, the Marine colonel, who served in Iraq and whose recent book, "The Sling and the Stone," has stirred more debate within the military. "It's about language skills. It's about people. It's about a lot of soft money moving over to [the Departments of] State, Commerce, Treasury, and there's no F-22 [fighter jet] in this program."

A 9/11 realization

On the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, Schmitt, a former Marine and a co-author of the 1989 article, was at O'Hare International Airport on his way to Pittsburgh. Minutes before boarding his flight, he saw a television report that an airliner had hit New York's World Trade Center. He kept watching as the second plane hit.
"I was thinking, `We're at war here,'" said Schmitt, a military consultant based in Champaign, Ill. "This is the new warfare."

The Sept. 11 attacks, Schmitt and others hoped, would bring change within the Pentagon. Even an Al Qaeda terrorist Web site referred to the 1989 article, noting that "some American military experts predict a fundamental change in the future form of warfare" and that "this new type of war presents significant difficulties for the Western war machine." But little changed. The U.S. forces that flowed into Afghanistan in late 2001 and into Iraq in March 2003 were largely conventional. The U.S. military quickly toppled the Taliban regime in Afghanistan and the Saddam Hussein regime in Iraq.

But after those successes, both the Afghan extremists and Hussein's sympathizers transformed into effective insurgencies.

The mavericks contend that the U.S. response has been a string of classic military mistakes, especially in Iraq.

U.S. forces took over Hussein's palaces and military bases, secluding themselves from ordinary Iraqis and cutting off lines of intelligence. Thousands of innocent Iraqis were wrongfully imprisoned in a ham-handed search for insurgents, breeding contempt for the American occupiers.


Training to fight insurgents lagged. Emphasis instead was put on finding technical solutions--another echo of Vietnam. They include devices that detect roadside explosives placed by insurgents, surveillance drones and the belated armoring of vehicles, which so far has cost more than $600 million.

"Here's an army that went into Iraq in 2003 with exactly the same set of equipment it had in 1991, with very few modifications," said Douglas Macgregor, a tank commander in the first Iraq war who wrote several books about reforming the Army before retiring as a colonel a year ago. "It hasn't produced anything new at all in 20 years." Still, the mavericks argue that, even today, changes could have an impact on the way soldiers are fighting.

First, the mavericks call for ground forces to reorganize into distinct, small units--not large, lumbering divisions or expeditionary forces--that will live among Iraqis. "Why are we still riding around in Humvees?" asks Poole, the retired Marine, whose Posterity Press has published books on counterinsurgent tactics. "In a war like this, you've got to get off the vehicle and into the neighborhood."

Second, more needs to be done to give soldiers language and cultural training, they say, something that officers in the Army and Marine Corps say has recently begun.

A third reform would prescribe a more judicious use of powerful weapons, such as tank rounds and 2,000-pound precision aerial bombs, especially in cities. Insurgencies exploit the deaths of civilians, the mavericks argue.
They say that the most important change would be a new command system, one that bases promotions on initiative rather than obedience and encourages taking risks, recognizing that mistakes will happen.

"One of the things we found in our experiments was the idea of strategic corporals," said Roussell, the Marine reservist and Chicago policeman. "The corporals are capable of doing it. We just need to empower them."


The military has taken some small steps toward change, and it is promising more.
Other units are following the lead of the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment and offering more language and cultural training, as well as a review of tactics.
Units rotating to Iraq now get several weeks of specialized training at the Army's two national training centers; tactics simulate life among Iraqis, including the use of Iraqi-American role players. Additional focus has been put on running road checkpoints, detecting roadside explosives and protecting convoys. But those efforts give new troops just a brief taste of the challenges they will be facing, and they put a heavy emphasis on defensive measures. According to officers who have been involved in counterinsurgent operations, there still is a reluctance among top commanders to acknowledge the nature of the enemy and what skills American soldiers need to fight.

"There's definitely the sensation that the Army's holding its breath," said one officer who recently took command of deploying forces, "that this will all blow over, and they can go back to what they want to do."

Changes in the field

At the same time, said the officer, who requested anonymity, younger officers with command of fighting units are making the changes they need to, whether the Pentagon approves or not.

"There's a way the institution does things," he said, "and then there's the way that things are actually done."

Receiving little notice inside the Pentagon, the maverick officers have continued to post their theories, criticisms and extensive PowerPoint briefings on unofficial military Web sites.

One notable article last year, written by Marine Col. Wilson, was titled "Iraq--Fourth Generation Warfare Swamp." The Marines denied permission for Wilson, who is in Iraq, to be interviewed for this article.

Although they differ on the particulars of changing the military, the mavericks agree that the U.S. effort in Afghanistan and Iraq has been a lost opportunity. At best, they say, the outcome of both conflicts is uncertain. Some say they are doomed.

"There's nothing that you can do in Iraq today that will work," said Lind, one of the original Fourth Generation Warfare authors. "That situation is irretrievably lost."
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[email protected]


God Bless George W Bush

'Trust our president in every decision'

Allyn & Bacon's

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[deleted]

The country may finally be realizing that the PRESIDENT IS AN EMPTY SUIT

And WEARING a cheap suit at that

With 3 1/2 years left I have everything I need so to me it's

Free tickets to the freak show

The country voted for these clowns so now they're stuck with them---!!!

They can suffer with all of it

It’s all cheap entertainment for me----!!!!






God Bless George W Bush

'Trust our president in every decision'

Allyn & Bacon's

reply

[deleted]

When he got into the White House the first thing THE SHRUBSTER DID was appropriate $80 Billion dollars for STARWARS, A defense imitative, not needed and which didn't work and still doesn’t

MEANWHILE

Richard Clark and others were running around trying to get these clowns to pay attention to low-technology NATIONAL SECURITY THREATS with potentially devastating consequences

SURE ENOUGH 9/11 HAPPENED, THEN THEY BLAMED IT ALL ON SOMEONE AND EVERYONE ELSE WHILE SAYING

"Who ever would have thought anyone would use civilian aircraft as missiles"

Read a Book see a movie Study the report YOU IDIOT NEOCLOWNS


THING IS

At $300 Billion Dollars and growing, the Iraq War is paying off handsomely for all these Military industrialists and Military medical rehabilitation specialty clinics down the road as this steady stream of payments makes this medical health care field a long term CASH COW for some time to come

Looks like a lot of executive are going to be purchasing (F.F.O.G.) BOATS, Family Friendly Ocean Going Boats In The Near Future




God Bless George W Bush

'Trust our president in every decision'

Allyn & Bacon's

reply

[deleted]

The building was designed to have a fully loaded 707 crash into it. That was the largest plane at the time. I believe that the building probably could sustain multiple impacts of jetliners because this structure is like the mosquito netting on your screen door -- this intense grid -- and the jet plane is just a pencil puncturing that screen netting. It really does nothing to the screen netting.

THIS IS ABSOLUTELY CORRECT----however the idiot designers forgot about the fuel

to save money they insulated the columns of the building with insulation that was easily blown away by the impact of the crash leaving the columns bare and vulnerable to be cooked in a high temperature fire

24,000 gallons of fuel translates into 150,000 lbs of kerosene

BELIEVE IT OR NOT----9 LBS OF TNT EQUALS JUST 1 LBS OR KEROSENE which is jet fuel------the energy is simply released differently----it burns slowly----BUT THE ENERGY CONTENT IS STILL THERE-----it is not dispersed rapidly because it requires an outside oxidant (AIR)---which regulated it rate of combustion along with other physical and chemical attributes of kerosene.

And please look these up in any table or book of energy conversions for physical properties of matter

The energy content of 150,000 lbs of kerosene is equivalent to 1,350,000 lbs of dynamite or TNT

In other words .675 kilotons of TNT of energy equivalent energy was released on each tower in the form of fuel not including the combustibles which were in the buildings

A bomb 1/20 the size of the device dropped over Hiroshima Japan was set lose on each tower---BUT IT BURNED SLOWLY, over 1-2 hours----playing havoc with the buildings construction.

Apparently Bin Laden----BEING IN CONSTRUCTION----counted on this and is why he wanted planes which had just taken off, were long distance flights and therefore full of fuel.




God Bless George W Bush

'Trust our president in every decision'

Allyn & Bacon's

reply

The building was designed to have a fully loaded 707 crash into it. That was the largest plane at the time. I believe that the building probably could sustain multiple impacts of jetliners because this structure is like the mosquito netting on your screen door -- this intense grid -- and the jet plane is just a pencil puncturing that screen netting. It really does nothing to the screen netting.

THIS IS ABSOLUTELY CORRECT----however the idiot designers forgot about the fuel

to save money they insulated the columns of the building with insulation that was easily blown away by the impact of the crash leaving the columns bare and vulnerable to be cooked in a high temperature fire

24,000 gallons of fuel translates into 150,000 lbs of kerosene

BELIEVE IT OR NOT----9 LBS OF TNT EQUALS JUST 1 LBS OR KEROSENE which is jet fuel------the energy is simply released differently----it burns slowly----BUT THE ENERGY CONTENT IS STILL THERE-----it is not dispersed rapidly because it requires an outside oxidant (AIR)---which regulated it rate of combustion along with other physical and chemical attributes of kerosene.

And please look these up in any table or book of energy conversions for physical properties of matter

The energy content of 150,000 lbs of kerosene is equivalent to 1,350,000 lbs of dynamite or TNT

In other words .675 kilotons of TNT of energy equivalent energy was released on each tower in the form of fuel not including the combustibles which were in the buildings

A bomb 1/20 the size of the device dropped over Hiroshima Japan was set lose on each tower---BUT IT BURNED SLOWLY, over 1-2 hours----playing havoc with the buildings construction.

Apparently Bin Laden----BEING IN CONSTRUCTION----counted on this and is why he wanted planes which had just taken off, were long distance flights and therefore full of fuel.




God Bless George W Bush

'Trust our president in every decision'

Allyn & Bacon's

reply

[deleted]

Finally, a brilliant human bieng has been discovered.

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Too many colors. Brain shutting down.
*WHIRR!*
---
"The furious strength of the creature was ample enough to protect its terror-stricken cubs."

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President George W. (the W stands for "why did I vote for him") Bush, believe it or not, is actually a very clever guy - or at least the suits who really run the country in his name are. Mind you, this has nothing to do with intelligence, which the president has none. I mean, really, you'd have to be clever to put on such a PR show in the face of adversity, and have it be successful enough that there are more than two people on this planet that are still in support of this moron (the aforementioned core two being himself and possibly his father - though we can't be 100% sure of that). An aside, I'd say that the oil barons in the Middle East that are in bed with the Bush family (particularly the bin Ladens) are people, but then again they're not Americans, are they? They don't count. Ha, ha.

Anyway, for someone to ride this country for so long and put them away wet and sore and yet not have them realize it is a real feat of ingenuity. Hell, kudos to Bush for showing at least a modicum of brainpower. Yes, people are starting to awaken, but the shocking realization of what this monster is doing to the American people won't become readily apparent to the Average Joe until he's doing dry-humps of glee in his vacation home 3 or 4 years after he's left the White House. I'd say impeachment is in order, but then again that would be giving too much credit to the system of checks and balances that be (also which doesn't really exist).

So, nevermind, then. Hoorah for nationalism, hoorah for capitalism, hoorah for imperialism, and hoorah for Bush's pocketbook. We all should be proud for allowing him into the White House.

I wore pants once, but felt it was overrated.

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