Cheney To Seek Higher Office?
When it comes to needling Democrats in one of their most sensitive places, Liz Cheney is proving that the apple doesn't fall far from the family tree.
The daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney started the work week dunning the Democrats for being congenitally unable to defend the nation while accusing President Obama of "weakening" the country against its enemies. And oh, did I mention that she may be considering political office in her own right?
In a Wall Street Journal op-ed piece, Cheney slammed recent speeches by President Obama in Cairo and Russia for papering over the nature of good and evil and the battle between "tyranny and freedom." More specifically, she wrote of the president that "he proclaims moral equivalence between the U.S. and our adversaries, he readily accepts a false historical narrative, and he refuses to stand up against anti-American lies."
But that was just a warm-up for her appearance on the Washington Times' America's Morning News radio show today, where Cheney responded to a weekend report in the New York Times that her father ordered the CIA to conceal a covert spy program from Congress. Democratic leaders, including Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) and Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wis.), a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, have since called for an investigation.
Cheney told her radio hosts that the Democrats were only marching toward a political trap of their own making.
"I am really surprised that the Democrats decide that that's what they want to fight over. I mean, if they want to go to the American people and say that they disagree with the notion that we ought to be capturing and killing al Qaeda leaders, I think it's just going to prove to the American people one more time why they can't trust the Democrats with our national security."
She later described as "shameful" reports that Attorney General Holder may designate a special prosecutor to investigate the Bush administration's interrogation practices." Asked what her father thought, Cheney said he was "very angry" about possible prosecution plans.
"You know, he is very angry, as you've heard him say publicly. You know the notion that this administration is going to come into office and they're going to prosecute the brave men and women who carried out this program that kept America safe. It is, it is un-American. It's something that hasn't happened before in this country, in terms of somebody taking office and then starting to prosecute people who carried out policies that they disagreed with, you know, in the previous administration. He's been very public about that."
Her comments were in line with Cheney's previous statements about the propriety of the tactics used by U.S. interrogators of prisoners held in Guantanamo. In an April appearance on MSNBC,Cheney offered a staunch defense of waterboarding and other harsh treatment to extract information from detainees.
But instead of playing the role of political surrogate for the Republican Party, Cheney might soon be taking her policy prescriptions to the body politic for ballot approval. In the same Washington Times interview, Cheney indicated that she'd be open to running for elected office. "It's something I may very well do," she said.
She worked in the U.S. State Department during the Bush administration as deputy assistant secretary of state and principal deputy assistant secretary of state for near eastern affairs.
With President Obama's national support slipping to 57%, according to the results of the latest CBS News poll, Cheney has chosen as good a time as any to air her criticism. One point to note: the drop in the president's approval rating was largely a function of skepticism about his administration's stewardship of the economy as well as doubts about the efficacy of the stimulus package.
The daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney started the work week dunning the Democrats for being congenitally unable to defend the nation while accusing President Obama of "weakening" the country against its enemies. And oh, did I mention that she may be considering political office in her own right?
In a Wall Street Journal op-ed piece, Cheney slammed recent speeches by President Obama in Cairo and Russia for papering over the nature of good and evil and the battle between "tyranny and freedom." More specifically, she wrote of the president that "he proclaims moral equivalence between the U.S. and our adversaries, he readily accepts a false historical narrative, and he refuses to stand up against anti-American lies."
But that was just a warm-up for her appearance on the Washington Times' America's Morning News radio show today, where Cheney responded to a weekend report in the New York Times that her father ordered the CIA to conceal a covert spy program from Congress. Democratic leaders, including Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) and Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wis.), a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, have since called for an investigation.
Cheney told her radio hosts that the Democrats were only marching toward a political trap of their own making.
"I am really surprised that the Democrats decide that that's what they want to fight over. I mean, if they want to go to the American people and say that they disagree with the notion that we ought to be capturing and killing al Qaeda leaders, I think it's just going to prove to the American people one more time why they can't trust the Democrats with our national security."
She later described as "shameful" reports that Attorney General Holder may designate a special prosecutor to investigate the Bush administration's interrogation practices." Asked what her father thought, Cheney said he was "very angry" about possible prosecution plans.
"You know, he is very angry, as you've heard him say publicly. You know the notion that this administration is going to come into office and they're going to prosecute the brave men and women who carried out this program that kept America safe. It is, it is un-American. It's something that hasn't happened before in this country, in terms of somebody taking office and then starting to prosecute people who carried out policies that they disagreed with, you know, in the previous administration. He's been very public about that."
Her comments were in line with Cheney's previous statements about the propriety of the tactics used by U.S. interrogators of prisoners held in Guantanamo. In an April appearance on MSNBC,Cheney offered a staunch defense of waterboarding and other harsh treatment to extract information from detainees.
But instead of playing the role of political surrogate for the Republican Party, Cheney might soon be taking her policy prescriptions to the body politic for ballot approval. In the same Washington Times interview, Cheney indicated that she'd be open to running for elected office. "It's something I may very well do," she said.
She worked in the U.S. State Department during the Bush administration as deputy assistant secretary of state and principal deputy assistant secretary of state for near eastern affairs.
With President Obama's national support slipping to 57%, according to the results of the latest CBS News poll, Cheney has chosen as good a time as any to air her criticism. One point to note: the drop in the president's approval rating was largely a function of skepticism about his administration's stewardship of the economy as well as doubts about the efficacy of the stimulus package.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."
I wonder if this woman realizes how much she sounds like Forest Gump.
It's actually pathetically sad.
It must be rough to have a mass murderer and bloodthirsty killer for a dad.
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Now Ms. Cheney, tell your dad to chill out. Anger can bring on massive heart attacks.
Also, Eric Holder represents good. Your father represents evil.
Lets not paper over the war between good and evil.
Accept it philosophically.
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She's been watching too many Saturday morning cartoons.
The world is a more complicated place than that.
Even in America we don't have perfect freedom.
Liz Cheney is the enemy; the ultimate propagandist.
When you think of the Cheney family; think dynasty.
Liz Cheney is now the face of ugliness within our great nation. The Cheney?s are defenders of torture and war profits and would willfully ignore the intentions of our laws just to justify wars that will continue the profits they believe their families deserve. Beware the intentions of people who profit in silence with the deaths, indefinite imprisonment and torture of others. The only thing the Cheney?s would protect is the legacy and profits of their family, which makes them honorary members of the Blue Sky Tribe. They don?t want the enemies of our nation to be killed, because when there is no one to fight then the Cheney family chicken-hawks have to actually work for a living.
As the Morning Joe?s and Mika?s of our world sit in admiration of the power of the military industrial complex, the mission of the Blue Sky Tribe slowly comes to fruition as the R?s and D?s become divided through propaganda displayed for profit, in spite of the facts.
In the sense that they support propping up our economy with constant defense spending, Republicans have become the cynical tag that they would pin on all Ds; Marxists. Some spit in the eyes of the Cheney?s is what they deserve, not air time.
The Blue Sky Tribe has not left the building......but they do want you to hate somebody.
- by TXliberal July 13, 2009 8:32 PM EDT
- This can almost not get better...maybe if Rush Limbaugh ran. At this point, every single Republican candidate has gone down with political/social scandals, Palin went cuckoo for cocoa puffs and think she can change what words mean, and Darth Vader himself...the guy who is charged as a war criminal in a couple of countries currently, and should be held for treason in ours...is the next up. Wow. Why don't you all just draw a picture of Reagan and run that? You'd have a better shot
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