Rangel Rant Shows Democrats Still In Bush Love-Fest
September 22nd, 2006
Condemns Chavez for daring to criticize his leader, calls Bush “My President”
Comments made today by Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.) prove that the one party system in America is more prevalent than ever before and that under such circumstances President Bush will never come close to the prospect of an Impeachment that the left wing gatekeepers are screaming about.
“You don’t come into my country, you don’t come into my congressional district, and you don’t condemn my President,” Rangel (D-N.Y.) said after listening to Hugo Chavez’s speech at Harlem’s Mount Olivet Baptist Church.
Chavez made a 90 minute long speech in which he declared:
“Bush is an alcoholic, a sick man with a lot of hang-ups”, “He walks like John Wayne.” and Bush “doesn’t know anything about politics, he got there because of Daddy…”
Notable Democrats such as Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) denounced Chavez, but it was Rangal, a man who only a year ago compared Bush to a violent racist bigot, who was most outspoken.
“I just want to make it abundantly clear to Hugo Chavez or any other president: Don’t come to the United States and think because we have problems with our President that any foreigner can come to our country and not think that Americans do not feel offended when you offend our chief of state,” Rangel said from Washington.
- Video of Rangal’s comments can be viewed here.
Rangal’s comments come in the aftermath of Hugo Chavez’s address to the United Nations on Wednesday in which he said “yesterday the devil came here,” referring to Bush’s speech from the same stage 24 hours earlier.
“And it still smells of sulphur today, this table that I am now standing in front of.”
Chavez then crossed himself, brought his hands together as if in prayer and looked up to the ceiling of the assembly chamber, prompting noticeable applause.
These few lines of his presentation were quickly pounced upon by the media who denounced the performance as utterly sarcastic and downright immature. However, Chavez made it clear in Harlem that he intended absolutely NO sarcasm and was totally serious:
“I said he was a devil - yes, a devil. I think he’s a devil,” the Venezuelan president said in Spanish.”The devil, yes, the devil,” Chavez said. “Seriously.”
In focusing solely on Hugo Chavez’s characterization of Bush as the devil, the mainstream media aimed attention away from the Venezuelan President’s most salient point made during this speech - CIA control of terror cells around the world and their protection of plane bomber Luis Posada.
Chavez also alluded to U.S. government complicity in 9/11, a subject he had raised in a previous speech.
“And I would just add one thing: Those who perpetrated this crime are free. And that other event where an American citizen also died were American themselves. They were CIA killers, terrorists.”
If there was any doubt what Chavez was referring to here, it was washed away in Harlem as he further commented:
“To use arms with chemical weapons like they used in Fallujah, to kill all forms of life, to take planes filled with passengers and smash them into the towers … the Twin Towers, that’s barbarism,” Chavez said.
Venezuelan officials have also said that the New York Police Department cut off the satellite feed of the Harlem speech as a way to retaliate for the remarks Chavez made about Bush the day before at the UN.
Chavez’ appearance was arranged to launch this year’s campaign to give 100 million gallons of free or low-cost Venezuelan heating oil to poor Americans. Chavez also plans to donate 100 gallons of heating oil to 12,000 rural Alaskans.
For this move, an act which flies in the face of the corporate oil industry machine that manipulates and feeds upon the tax paying public to line the fat pockets of the elite barons, Chavez has been pounced upon by the right wing government owned media.
In particular Fox news and Neil Cavuto, who insinuated that any American who accepts heating oil from Chavez and Venezuela is “committing treason”.
So whilst Bush postures as if he cares about the American people, as he outsources their jobs and sells out the country to the North American Union, Chavez stands up to the empire and provides cheap gas to poor Americans yet is still vilified?
This is indicative of the problem the American people face today with a one party system firmly rooted in the politics of the country.
Charles Rangel yesterday appeared on the Alex Jones show and refused to address the subject of 9/11, instead seeming to answer all questions on 9/11 as if it and the war in Iraq were the same event. The MP3 of the interview is online here.
Rangel also wrote a piece in the New York Daily News today that stated:
“George Bush is the President of the United States and represents the entire country. Any demeaning public attack against him is - and should be viewed by Republicans and Democrats, and all Americans - as an attack on all of us.”
So you’re either with Bush or you’re with…. you know the rest.
The lefty bloggers out there calling for Bush’s impeachment need to realize that the false left-right paradigm WILL NOT ALLOW FOR THIS SCENARIO. What is the likelihood of bush being impeached by this crowd if they leap to his defense when someone dares criticize him?
Source: Infowars / Steve Watson
Rangel Rant Shows Democrats Still In Bush Love-Fest
September 22nd, 2006
Condemns Chavez for daring to criticize his leader, calls Bush “My President”
Comments made today by Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.) prove that the one party system in America is more prevalent than ever before and that under such circumstances President Bush will never come close to the prospect of an Impeachment that the left wing gatekeepers are screaming about.
“You don’t come into my country, you don’t come into my congressional district, and you don’t condemn my President,” Rangel (D-N.Y.) said after listening to Hugo Chavez’s speech at Harlem’s Mount Olivet Baptist Church.
Chavez made a 90 minute long speech in which he declared:
“Bush is an alcoholic, a sick man with a lot of hang-ups”, “He walks like John Wayne.” and Bush “doesn’t know anything about politics, he got there because of Daddy…”
Notable Democrats such as Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) denounced Chavez, but it was Rangal, a man who only a year ago compared Bush to a violent racist bigot, who was most outspoken.
“I just want to make it abundantly clear to Hugo Chavez or any other president: Don’t come to the United States and think because we have problems with our President that any foreigner can come to our country and not think that Americans do not feel offended when you offend our chief of state,” Rangel said from Washington.
- Video of Rangal’s comments can be viewed here.
Rangal’s comments come in the aftermath of Hugo Chavez’s address to the United Nations on Wednesday in which he said “yesterday the devil came here,” referring to Bush’s speech from the same stage 24 hours earlier.
“And it still smells of sulphur today, this table that I am now standing in front of.”
Chavez then crossed himself, brought his hands together as if in prayer and looked up to the ceiling of the assembly chamber, prompting noticeable applause.
These few lines of his presentation were quickly pounced upon by the media who denounced the performance as utterly sarcastic and downright immature. However, Chavez made it clear in Harlem that he intended absolutely NO sarcasm and was totally serious:
“I said he was a devil - yes, a devil. I think he’s a devil,” the Venezuelan president said in Spanish.”The devil, yes, the devil,” Chavez said. “Seriously.”
In focusing solely on Hugo Chavez’s characterization of Bush as the devil, the mainstream media aimed attention away from the Venezuelan President’s most salient point made during this speech - CIA control of terror cells around the world and their protection of plane bomber Luis Posada.
Chavez also alluded to U.S. government complicity in 9/11, a subject he had raised in a previous speech.
“And I would just add one thing: Those who perpetrated this crime are free. And that other event where an American citizen also died were American themselves. They were CIA killers, terrorists.”
If there was any doubt what Chavez was referring to here, it was washed away in Harlem as he further commented:
“To use arms with chemical weapons like they used in Fallujah, to kill all forms of life, to take planes filled with passengers and smash them into the towers … the Twin Towers, that’s barbarism,” Chavez said.
Venezuelan officials have also said that the New York Police Department cut off the satellite feed of the Harlem speech as a way to retaliate for the remarks Chavez made about Bush the day before at the UN.
Chavez’ appearance was arranged to launch this year’s campaign to give 100 million gallons of free or low-cost Venezuelan heating oil to poor Americans. Chavez also plans to donate 100 gallons of heating oil to 12,000 rural Alaskans.
For this move, an act which flies in the face of the corporate oil industry machine that manipulates and feeds upon the tax paying public to line the fat pockets of the elite barons, Chavez has been pounced upon by the right wing government owned media.
In particular Fox news and Neil Cavuto, who insinuated that any American who accepts heating oil from Chavez and Venezuela is “committing treason”.
So whilst Bush postures as if he cares about the American people, as he outsources their jobs and sells out the country to the North American Union, Chavez stands up to the empire and provides cheap gas to poor Americans yet is still vilified?
This is indicative of the problem the American people face today with a one party system firmly rooted in the politics of the country.
Charles Rangel yesterday appeared on the Alex Jones show and refused to address the subject of 9/11, instead seeming to answer all questions on 9/11 as if it and the war in Iraq were the same event. The MP3 of the interview is online here.
Rangel also wrote a piece in the New York Daily News today that stated:
“George Bush is the President of the United States and represents the entire country. Any demeaning public attack against him is - and should be viewed by Republicans and Democrats, and all Americans - as an attack on all of us.”
So you’re either with Bush or you’re with…. you know the rest.
The lefty bloggers out there calling for Bush’s impeachment need to realize that the false left-right paradigm WILL NOT ALLOW FOR THIS SCENARIO. What is the likelihood of bush being impeached by this crowd if they leap to his defense when someone dares criticize him?
Source: Infowars / Steve Watson

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