There is a cloud of stupidity that hangs over federal and state government. I see it as being consistent with a radioactive cloud... a silent killer of our individual intelligence... designed to count on Obama's "the voters are stupid" shtick... where we are just supposed to believe this lying bastard merely because he says so.
Kind of like... "if you like your plan, you can keep your plan."
The President of the United States wants an agreement with a terrorist state that has killed at least 2500 American troops and wounded 10's of thousands more.
The President of the United State wants to fork over billions of dollars to that state.
The reality that the money in question should be evenly distributed to the victims of the Iranian scum who killed, maimed, kidnapped and terrorized American citizens without suffering for it goes without saying.
Every penny of that money should go to the families of those killed, to the wounded and their families, to those held hostage and their families and those who have suffered while the coward running our government does nothing to retaliate.
Failing that, the money should go back into the military to keep our personnel strength at a level where the military can actually, realistically, defend us.
I understand the money is $150 billion. The military could do quite a bit with that, as could the victims and their families.
And... on top of that... Lurch and Barry were moronic enough to agree to allow a deal where Iran... effectively... gets to inspect itself.
Inspect.
Itself.
That makes as much sense as allowing the Germans to self-inspect their concentration camps during the War.
It takes a unique... special kind of idiocy to agree to that. But then, we have a unique... special kind of idiot running the show.
No one in government should allow this agreement to go forward and not one cent should ever go back to Iran or any of it's satellites.
Rumors to this effect have been swirling for weeks, as you're already aware. The Obama administration has been evasive about several secret side deals cut between Iran and the IAEA, prompting criticism from skeptics of the accord who note that US law requires the White House to release every single letter of the agreement to Congress for review. Secretary of State John Kerry has dodged questions about what these bonus bargains entail, and which US officials are privy to their contents. The Associated Press is now confirming that the IAEA has agreed to allow Iran to effectively inspect itself at the controversial Parchin nuclear site, within the context of accounting for the past military dimensions of the regime's nuclear program. Details:
Nothing to see here, the White House insists, describing the arrangement as "routine," even as the AP and top IAEA officials explicitly describe how it's anything but routine. Obama administration officials say they're "confident" that the watchdog agency will be able hold Iran to account even under these special circumstances. When we wrote about this issue last month, however, we linked to a piece quoting a nuclear inspections expert who expressed concerns about Iran's ability to tamper with the samples it provides. If Iran has nothing to hide at Parchin, what possible justification to they have for excluding any international inspectors from overseeing this process? It's one thing for Iran to bar any Americans from joining any of the inspections teams and to wield veto power over which inspectors will be permitted into the country. It's another thing altogether to exclusively entrust the regime with the on-the-ground logistics of inspecting a crucial nuclear site. As a reminder, when it comes to other suspected nuclear sites, this deal allows Iran to contest "snap" inspections, triggering an appeal process of up to 24 days. Nuclear experts have criticized this concession, too. “A 24-day adjudicated timeline reduces detection probabilities exactly where the system is weakest: detecting undeclared facilities and materials,” one told the New York Times. Another added that Tehran is "practiced at cheating." Sen. Lindsey Graham and others are threatening to use a major US leverage point to put the squeeze to the IAEA:
Republican leaders and their Democratic allies on this issue have been insisting that every element of the Iran deal be made public, in accordance with the legislation signed by President Obama himself:
More:
Kind of like... "if you like your plan, you can keep your plan."
The President of the United States wants an agreement with a terrorist state that has killed at least 2500 American troops and wounded 10's of thousands more.
The President of the United State wants to fork over billions of dollars to that state.
The reality that the money in question should be evenly distributed to the victims of the Iranian scum who killed, maimed, kidnapped and terrorized American citizens without suffering for it goes without saying.
Every penny of that money should go to the families of those killed, to the wounded and their families, to those held hostage and their families and those who have suffered while the coward running our government does nothing to retaliate.
Failing that, the money should go back into the military to keep our personnel strength at a level where the military can actually, realistically, defend us.
I understand the money is $150 billion. The military could do quite a bit with that, as could the victims and their families.
And... on top of that... Lurch and Barry were moronic enough to agree to allow a deal where Iran... effectively... gets to inspect itself.
Inspect.
Itself.
That makes as much sense as allowing the Germans to self-inspect their concentration camps during the War.
It takes a unique... special kind of idiocy to agree to that. But then, we have a unique... special kind of idiot running the show.
No one in government should allow this agreement to go forward and not one cent should ever go back to Iran or any of it's satellites.
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Rumors to this effect have been swirling for weeks, as you're already aware. The Obama administration has been evasive about several secret side deals cut between Iran and the IAEA, prompting criticism from skeptics of the accord who note that US law requires the White House to release every single letter of the agreement to Congress for review. Secretary of State John Kerry has dodged questions about what these bonus bargains entail, and which US officials are privy to their contents. The Associated Press is now confirming that the IAEA has agreed to allow Iran to effectively inspect itself at the controversial Parchin nuclear site, within the context of accounting for the past military dimensions of the regime's nuclear program. Details:
Nothing to see here, the White House insists, describing the arrangement as "routine," even as the AP and top IAEA officials explicitly describe how it's anything but routine. Obama administration officials say they're "confident" that the watchdog agency will be able hold Iran to account even under these special circumstances. When we wrote about this issue last month, however, we linked to a piece quoting a nuclear inspections expert who expressed concerns about Iran's ability to tamper with the samples it provides. If Iran has nothing to hide at Parchin, what possible justification to they have for excluding any international inspectors from overseeing this process? It's one thing for Iran to bar any Americans from joining any of the inspections teams and to wield veto power over which inspectors will be permitted into the country. It's another thing altogether to exclusively entrust the regime with the on-the-ground logistics of inspecting a crucial nuclear site. As a reminder, when it comes to other suspected nuclear sites, this deal allows Iran to contest "snap" inspections, triggering an appeal process of up to 24 days. Nuclear experts have criticized this concession, too. “A 24-day adjudicated timeline reduces detection probabilities exactly where the system is weakest: detecting undeclared facilities and materials,” one told the New York Times. Another added that Tehran is "practiced at cheating." Sen. Lindsey Graham and others are threatening to use a major US leverage point to put the squeeze to the IAEA:
Republican leaders and their Democratic allies on this issue have been insisting that every element of the Iran deal be made public, in accordance with the legislation signed by President Obama himself:
More:
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