(Page 6 of 15)
As to the final point, I would suggest that with the massive deficits we're running and the fact that on 9/10/2001 we were spending 3.1 percent of GDP on defense and yet five years later it's only 4.0 percent (compared to 14% during the Korean War), that if we find a few billion in loose change laying around we should spend that on preventing future attacks and not on presumptive payments for unproved illnesses.
p> SIN PAYS br> Re: Paul Chesser's A McGreevey Kind of Love : /p>I personally don't care about McGreevey's sex life. I despise the man for the way he lied to and stole from the citizens of New Jersey. Of course, he personal and professional corruption are just two different aspects of the man's complete lack of morality. Anyone who reads his book and believes it is delusional.
p>He is just another in a long line of disgraced New Jersey politicians. My regret is that he is going to profit from it instead of being prosecuted and jailed for his corruption (as much as he may have enjoyed that experience). br> -- Chris B. br> New Jersey /p> p> FEAR ITSELF
ADVERTISEMENT
SPONSORED LINKS
The speech our President should make.
A noted economist fires back.
How political can you get?
You might have missed it, but it was boomed in January.
Farcical feminism is a decades-old phenomenon, as George Will's essay from 1970 reminds us.