If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
MMR JUDGE FAILED TO DISCLOSE HE WAS BROTHER OF Glaxo SmithKline DIRECTOR AND LANCET BOSS
PBS and NPR tend to be rather liberal. I guess it is not a very
conservative idea to pay for quality broadcasting, as the members of the individual NPR and PBS stations do. Jeff Hi Jeff, Wow, we agree on something. I will remember this in the future. Did you watch the documentary about how we landed up in Iraq on PBS? Here is the PBS Documentary... In "The Dark Side," FRONTLINE tells the story of the vice president's role as the chief architect of the war on terror, and his battle with Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet for control of the "dark side." Drawing on more than 40 interviews and thousands of documents, the film provides a step-by-step examination of what happened inside the councils of war. Early in the Bush administration, Cheney placed a group of allies throughout the government who advocated a robust and pre-emptive foreign policy, especially regarding Iraq. But a potential obstacle was Tenet, a holdover from the Clinton administration who had survived the transition by bypassing Cheney and creating a personal bond with the president. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/darkside/view/ Donna On May 22, 6:37 pm, Jeff wrote: Kevysmom wrote: While the media will occasionally blat out a story, they know who their daddy is...and they won't tick him off too much. The only really remotely honest show I've found on TV is on PBS called "Now". Is this the reason the Bush Administration has been trying to stop funding PBS? PBS and NPR tend to be rather liberal. I guess it is not a very conservative idea to pay for quality broadcasting, as the members of the individual NPR and PBS stations do. Jeff |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
MMR JUDGE FAILED TO DISCLOSE HE WAS BROTHER OF Glaxo SmithKlineDIRECTOR AND LANCET BOSS
Kevysmom wrote:
PBS and NPR tend to be rather liberal. I guess it is not a very conservative idea to pay for quality broadcasting, as the members of the individual NPR and PBS stations do. Jeff Hi Jeff, Wow, we agree on something. I will remember this in the future. Did you watch the documentary about how we landed up in Iraq on PBS? I rarely watch PBS. In fact, I rarely watch TV. Don't even get cable. I get Netflix instead. I get to choose what I watch when I want to watch it. And I get many of the old TV shows I like. I listen to NPR all the time. Here is the PBS Documentary... In "The Dark Side," FRONTLINE tells the story of the vice president's role as the chief architect of the war on terror, and his battle with Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet for control of the "dark side." Drawing on more than 40 interviews and thousands of documents, the film provides a step-by-step examination of what happened inside the councils of war. Early in the Bush administration, Cheney placed a group of allies throughout the government who advocated a robust and pre-emptive foreign policy, especially regarding Iraq. You would think with all that time to plan, apparently before the 9/11 attacks and most likely before taking office, someone would have thought, "We'd better come up with a plan to win the peace after the war is over. We don't want another View Nam. And we don't want 5000 Americans killed (which is the approximate number including the contractors who lost their lives)." (Sadly, 100x more Iraqis got killed and millions of Iraqis have fled their homes.) But a potential obstacle was Tenet, a holdover from the Clinton administration who had survived the transition by bypassing Cheney and creating a personal bond with the president. That reminds me of an old joke after Cheney had his heart problems: "Bush is only a heart beat away from being President." Jeff http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/darkside/view/ Donna On May 22, 6:37 pm, Jeff wrote: Kevysmom wrote: While the media will occasionally blat out a story, they know who their daddy is...and they won't tick him off too much. The only really remotely honest show I've found on TV is on PBS called "Now". Is this the reason the Bush Administration has been trying to stop funding PBS? PBS and NPR tend to be rather liberal. I guess it is not a very conservative idea to pay for quality broadcasting, as the members of the individual NPR and PBS stations do. Jeff |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
MMR JUDGE FAILED TO DISCLOSE HE WAS BROTHER OF Glaxo SmithKline DIRECTOR AND LANCET BOSS
Jeff,
I dont watch tv. I was sent the documentary from a friend. Do you believe the Lancet report that 650 thousand Iraqis have been killed since the war started? This war cost 5 billion dolllars a month! How much we could all benefit from medical advances with all that money! Stem cell research, reverse dna damage! It really makes me sad. And what about alternative fuel? Donna On May 22, 8:42 pm, Jeff wrote: Kevysmom wrote: PBS and NPR tend to be rather liberal. I guess it is not a very conservative idea to pay for quality broadcasting, as the members of the individual NPR and PBS stations do. Jeff Hi Jeff, Wow, we agree on something. I will remember this in the future. Did you watch the documentary about how we landed up in Iraq on PBS? I rarely watch PBS. In fact, I rarely watch TV. Don't even get cable. I get Netflix instead. I get to choose what I watch when I want to watch it. And I get many of the old TV shows I like. I listen to NPR all the time. Here is the PBS Documentary... In "The Dark Side," FRONTLINE tells the story of the vice president's role as the chief architect of the war on terror, and his battle with Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet for control of the "dark side." Drawing on more than 40 interviews and thousands of documents, the film provides a step-by-step examination of what happened inside the councils of war. Early in the Bush administration, Cheney placed a group of allies throughout the government who advocated a robust and pre-emptive foreign policy, especially regarding Iraq. You would think with all that time to plan, apparently before the 9/11 attacks and most likely before taking office, someone would have thought, "We'd better come up with a plan to win the peace after the war is over. We don't want another View Nam. And we don't want 5000 Americans killed (which is the approximate number including the contractors who lost their lives)." (Sadly, 100x more Iraqis got killed and millions of Iraqis have fled their homes.) But a potential obstacle was Tenet, a holdover from the Clinton administration who had survived the transition by bypassing Cheney and creating a personal bond with the president. That reminds me of an old joke after Cheney had his heart problems: "Bush is only a heart beat away from being President." Jeff http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/darkside/view/ Donna On May 22, 6:37 pm, Jeff wrote: Kevysmom wrote: While the media will occasionally blat out a story, they know who their daddy is...and they won't tick him off too much. The only really remotely honest show I've found on TV is on PBS called "Now". Is this the reason the Bush Administration has been trying to stop funding PBS? PBS and NPR tend to be rather liberal. I guess it is not a very conservative idea to pay for quality broadcasting, as the members of the individual NPR and PBS stations do. Jeff- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
MMR JUDGE FAILED TO DISCLOSE HE WAS BROTHER OF Glaxo SmithKlineDIRECTOR AND LANCET BOSS
Kevysmom wrote:
Jeff, I dont watch tv. I was sent the documentary from a friend. Do you believe the Lancet report that 650 thousand Iraqis have been killed since the war started? That is 650,000 more Iraqis died than expected. Some were killed, some died from disease or injury unrelated to the war. But, those 650,000 are part of the death toll. This war cost 5 billion dolllars a month! That's all? I thought it was 3 or 4 times that. How much we could all benefit from medical advances with all that money! Stem cell research, reverse dna damage! It really makes me sad. And what about alternative fuel? How about, instead of bringing in people from outside the country to do our technical jobs, we teach our greatest untapped natural asset? Our kids. Jeff Donna On May 22, 8:42 pm, Jeff wrote: Kevysmom wrote: PBS and NPR tend to be rather liberal. I guess it is not a very conservative idea to pay for quality broadcasting, as the members of the individual NPR and PBS stations do. Jeff Hi Jeff, Wow, we agree on something. I will remember this in the future. Did you watch the documentary about how we landed up in Iraq on PBS? I rarely watch PBS. In fact, I rarely watch TV. Don't even get cable. I get Netflix instead. I get to choose what I watch when I want to watch it. And I get many of the old TV shows I like. I listen to NPR all the time. Here is the PBS Documentary... In "The Dark Side," FRONTLINE tells the story of the vice president's role as the chief architect of the war on terror, and his battle with Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet for control of the "dark side." Drawing on more than 40 interviews and thousands of documents, the film provides a step-by-step examination of what happened inside the councils of war. Early in the Bush administration, Cheney placed a group of allies throughout the government who advocated a robust and pre-emptive foreign policy, especially regarding Iraq. You would think with all that time to plan, apparently before the 9/11 attacks and most likely before taking office, someone would have thought, "We'd better come up with a plan to win the peace after the war is over. We don't want another View Nam. And we don't want 5000 Americans killed (which is the approximate number including the contractors who lost their lives)." (Sadly, 100x more Iraqis got killed and millions of Iraqis have fled their homes.) But a potential obstacle was Tenet, a holdover from the Clinton administration who had survived the transition by bypassing Cheney and creating a personal bond with the president. That reminds me of an old joke after Cheney had his heart problems: "Bush is only a heart beat away from being President." Jeff http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/darkside/view/ Donna On May 22, 6:37 pm, Jeff wrote: Kevysmom wrote: While the media will occasionally blat out a story, they know who their daddy is...and they won't tick him off too much. The only really remotely honest show I've found on TV is on PBS called "Now". Is this the reason the Bush Administration has been trying to stop funding PBS? PBS and NPR tend to be rather liberal. I guess it is not a very conservative idea to pay for quality broadcasting, as the members of the individual NPR and PBS stations do. Jeff- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
MMR JUDGE FAILED TO DISCLOSE HE WAS BROTHER OF Glaxo SmithKline DIRECTOR AND LANCET BOSS
That is 650,000 more Iraqis died than expected. Some were killed, some
died from disease or injury unrelated to the war. But, those 650,000 are part of the death toll. "80% of Iraqis lack access to sanitation, 70% lack regular access to clean water and 60% lack access to the public food distribution system... As a result of these multiple public health failings, diarrhea and respiratory infections now account for two-thirds of the deaths of children under 5... According to a 2006 national survey conducted by UNICEF, 21% of Iraqi children are chronically malnourished." Isnt lack of sanitation a leading cause of disease? http://youtube.com/watch?v=Z0pUzGblOlg Americans have blood on thier hands! It is up to US, To stop this blood bath! How about, instead of bringing in people from outside the country to do our technical jobs, we teach our greatest untapped natural asset? Our kids. We have GREAT minds in America, But its cheaper to hire outside help. They can bring a engineer over from India, and pay him half the cost to hire an American. Doctors are next! On May 23, 5:44 pm, Jeff wrote: Kevysmom wrote: Jeff, I dont watch tv. I was sent the documentary from a friend. Do you believe the Lancet report that 650 thousand Iraqis have been killed since the war started? That is 650,000 more Iraqis died than expected. Some were killed, some died from disease or injury unrelated to the war. But, those 650,000 are part of the death toll. This war cost 5 billion dolllars a month! That's all? I thought it was 3 or 4 times that. How much we could all benefit from medical advances with all that money! Stem cell research, reverse dna damage! It really makes me sad. And what about alternative fuel? How about, instead of bringing in people from outside the country to do our technical jobs, we teach our greatest untapped natural asset? Our kids. Jeff Donna On May 22, 8:42 pm, Jeff wrote: Kevysmom wrote: PBS and NPR tend to be rather liberal. I guess it is not a very conservative idea to pay for quality broadcasting, as the members of the individual NPR and PBS stations do. Jeff Hi Jeff, Wow, we agree on something. I will remember this in the future. Did you watch the documentary about how we landed up in Iraq on PBS? I rarely watch PBS. In fact, I rarely watch TV. Don't even get cable. I get Netflix instead. I get to choose what I watch when I want to watch it. And I get many of the old TV shows I like. I listen to NPR all the time. Here is the PBS Documentary... In "The Dark Side," FRONTLINE tells the story of the vice president's role as the chief architect of the war on terror, and his battle with Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet for control of the "dark side." Drawing on more than 40 interviews and thousands of documents, the film provides a step-by-step examination of what happened inside the councils of war. Early in the Bush administration, Cheney placed a group of allies throughout the government who advocated a robust and pre-emptive foreign policy, especially regarding Iraq. You would think with all that time to plan, apparently before the 9/11 attacks and most likely before taking office, someone would have thought, "We'd better come up with a plan to win the peace after the war is over. We don't want another View Nam. And we don't want 5000 Americans killed (which is the approximate number including the contractors who lost their lives)." (Sadly, 100x more Iraqis got killed and millions of Iraqis have fled their homes.) But a potential obstacle was Tenet, a holdover from the Clinton administration who had survived the transition by bypassing Cheney and creating a personal bond with the president. That reminds me of an old joke after Cheney had his heart problems: "Bush is only a heart beat away from being President." Jeff http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/darkside/view/ Donna On May 22, 6:37 pm, Jeff wrote: Kevysmom wrote: While the media will occasionally blat out a story, they know who their daddy is...and they won't tick him off too much. The only really remotely honest show I've found on TV is on PBS called "Now". Is this the reason the Bush Administration has been trying to stop funding PBS? PBS and NPR tend to be rather liberal. I guess it is not a very conservative idea to pay for quality broadcasting, as the members of the individual NPR and PBS stations do. Jeff- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
MMR JUDGE FAILED TO DISCLOSE HE WAS BROTHER OF Glaxo SmithKlineDIRECTOR AND LANCET BOSS
Kevysmom wrote:
That is 650,000 more Iraqis died than expected. Some were killed, some died from disease or injury unrelated to the war. But, those 650,000 are part of the death toll. "80% of Iraqis lack access to sanitation, 70% lack regular access to clean water and 60% lack access to the public food distribution system... As a result of these multiple public health failings, diarrhea and respiratory infections now account for two-thirds of the deaths of children under 5... According to a 2006 national survey conducted by UNICEF, 21% of Iraqi children are chronically malnourished." Isnt lack of sanitation a leading cause of disease? It is. But, the lack of sanitation is also a result of war. http://youtube.com/watch?v=Z0pUzGblOlg Americans have blood on thier hands! It is up to US, To stop this blood bath! How about, instead of bringing in people from outside the country to do our technical jobs, we teach our greatest untapped natural asset? Our kids. We have GREAT minds in America, But its cheaper to hire outside help. They can bring a engineer over from India, and pay him half the cost to hire an American. Doctors are next I disagree. It is not as cheap to bring someone from India. And a lot of the money goes to India, not to the US. Jeff On May 23, 5:44 pm, Jeff wrote: Kevysmom wrote: Jeff, I dont watch tv. I was sent the documentary from a friend. Do you believe the Lancet report that 650 thousand Iraqis have been killed since the war started? That is 650,000 more Iraqis died than expected. Some were killed, some died from disease or injury unrelated to the war. But, those 650,000 are part of the death toll. This war cost 5 billion dolllars a month! That's all? I thought it was 3 or 4 times that. How much we could all benefit from medical advances with all that money! Stem cell research, reverse dna damage! It really makes me sad. And what about alternative fuel? How about, instead of bringing in people from outside the country to do our technical jobs, we teach our greatest untapped natural asset? Our kids. Jeff Donna On May 22, 8:42 pm, Jeff wrote: Kevysmom wrote: PBS and NPR tend to be rather liberal. I guess it is not a very conservative idea to pay for quality broadcasting, as the members of the individual NPR and PBS stations do. Jeff Hi Jeff, Wow, we agree on something. I will remember this in the future. Did you watch the documentary about how we landed up in Iraq on PBS? I rarely watch PBS. In fact, I rarely watch TV. Don't even get cable. I get Netflix instead. I get to choose what I watch when I want to watch it. And I get many of the old TV shows I like. I listen to NPR all the time. Here is the PBS Documentary... In "The Dark Side," FRONTLINE tells the story of the vice president's role as the chief architect of the war on terror, and his battle with Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet for control of the "dark side." Drawing on more than 40 interviews and thousands of documents, the film provides a step-by-step examination of what happened inside the councils of war. Early in the Bush administration, Cheney placed a group of allies throughout the government who advocated a robust and pre-emptive foreign policy, especially regarding Iraq. You would think with all that time to plan, apparently before the 9/11 attacks and most likely before taking office, someone would have thought, "We'd better come up with a plan to win the peace after the war is over. We don't want another View Nam. And we don't want 5000 Americans killed (which is the approximate number including the contractors who lost their lives)." (Sadly, 100x more Iraqis got killed and millions of Iraqis have fled their homes.) But a potential obstacle was Tenet, a holdover from the Clinton administration who had survived the transition by bypassing Cheney and creating a personal bond with the president. That reminds me of an old joke after Cheney had his heart problems: "Bush is only a heart beat away from being President." Jeff http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/darkside/view/ Donna On May 22, 6:37 pm, Jeff wrote: Kevysmom wrote: While the media will occasionally blat out a story, they know who their daddy is...and they won't tick him off too much. The only really remotely honest show I've found on TV is on PBS called "Now". Is this the reason the Bush Administration has been trying to stop funding PBS? PBS and NPR tend to be rather liberal. I guess it is not a very conservative idea to pay for quality broadcasting, as the members of the individual NPR and PBS stations do. Jeff- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
MMR JUDGE FAILED TO DISCLOSE HE WAS BROTHER OF Glaxo SmithKline DIRECTOR AND LANCET BOSS
Isnt lack of sanitation a leading cause of disease?
It is. But, the lack of sanitation is also a result of war. My point is; The 650 thousand in the Lancet study, How many developed diseases because of the war? It is not as cheap to bring someone from India. And a lot of the money goes to India, not to the US. It is cheaper to bring engineers to America to take American Engineer jobs. Then to hire an American Engineer. Too much of our money is in India. Good for thier economy, bad for us. On May 23, 6:40 pm, Jeff wrote: Kevysmom wrote: That is 650,000 more Iraqis died than expected. Some were killed, some died from disease or injury unrelated to the war. But, those 650,000 are part of the death toll. "80% of Iraqis lack access to sanitation, 70% lack regular access to clean water and 60% lack access to the public food distribution system... As a result of these multiple public health failings, diarrhea and respiratory infections now account for two-thirds of the deaths of children under 5... According to a 2006 national survey conducted by UNICEF, 21% of Iraqi children are chronically malnourished." Isnt lack of sanitation a leading cause of disease? It is. But, the lack of sanitation is also a result of war. http://youtube.com/watch?v=Z0pUzGblOlg Americans have blood on thier hands! It is up to US, To stop this blood bath! How about, instead of bringing in people from outside the country to do our technical jobs, we teach our greatest untapped natural asset? Our kids. We have GREAT minds in America, But its cheaper to hire outside help. They can bring a engineer over from India, and pay him half the cost to hire an American. Doctors are next I disagree. It is not as cheap to bring someone from India. And a lot of the money goes to India, not to the US. Jeff On May 23, 5:44 pm, Jeff wrote: Kevysmom wrote: Jeff, I dont watch tv. I was sent the documentary from a friend. Do you believe the Lancet report that 650 thousand Iraqis have been killed since the war started? That is 650,000 more Iraqis died than expected. Some were killed, some died from disease or injury unrelated to the war. But, those 650,000 are part of the death toll. This war cost 5 billion dolllars a month! That's all? I thought it was 3 or 4 times that. How much we could all benefit from medical advances with all that money! Stem cell research, reverse dna damage! It really makes me sad. And what about alternative fuel? How about, instead of bringing in people from outside the country to do our technical jobs, we teach our greatest untapped natural asset? Our kids. Jeff Donna On May 22, 8:42 pm, Jeff wrote: Kevysmom wrote: PBS and NPR tend to be rather liberal. I guess it is not a very conservative idea to pay for quality broadcasting, as the members of the individual NPR and PBS stations do. Jeff Hi Jeff, Wow, we agree on something. I will remember this in the future. Did you watch the documentary about how we landed up in Iraq on PBS? I rarely watch PBS. In fact, I rarely watch TV. Don't even get cable. I get Netflix instead. I get to choose what I watch when I want to watch it. And I get many of the old TV shows I like. I listen to NPR all the time. Here is the PBS Documentary... In "The Dark Side," FRONTLINE tells the story of the vice president's role as the chief architect of the war on terror, and his battle with Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet for control of the "dark side." Drawing on more than 40 interviews and thousands of documents, the film provides a step-by-step examination of what happened inside the councils of war. Early in the Bush administration, Cheney placed a group of allies throughout the government who advocated a robust and pre-emptive foreign policy, especially regarding Iraq. You would think with all that time to plan, apparently before the 9/11 attacks and most likely before taking office, someone would have thought, "We'd better come up with a plan to win the peace after the war is over. We don't want another View Nam. And we don't want 5000 Americans killed (which is the approximate number including the contractors who lost their lives)." (Sadly, 100x more Iraqis got killed and millions of Iraqis have fled their homes.) But a potential obstacle was Tenet, a holdover from the Clinton administration who had survived the transition by bypassing Cheney and creating a personal bond with the president. That reminds me of an old joke after Cheney had his heart problems: "Bush is only a heart beat away from being President." Jeff http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/darkside/view/ Donna On May 22, 6:37 pm, Jeff wrote: Kevysmom wrote: While the media will occasionally blat out a story, they know who their daddy is...and they won't tick him off too much. The only really remotely honest show I've found on TV is on PBS called "Now". Is this the reason the Bush Administration has been trying to stop funding PBS? PBS and NPR tend to be rather liberal. I guess it is not a very conservative idea to pay for quality broadcasting, as the members of the individual NPR and PBS stations do. Jeff- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
MMR JUDGE FAILED TO DISCLOSE HE WAS BROTHER OF Glaxo SmithKline DIRECTOR AND LANCET BOSS
In article .com,
Kevysmom wrote: Jeff, I dont watch tv. I was sent the documentary from a friend. Do you believe the Lancet report that 650 thousand Iraqis have been killed since the war started? This war cost 5 billion dolllars a month! How much we could all benefit from medical advances with all that money! Stem cell research, reverse dna damage! It really makes me sad. And what about alternative fuel? Iraq is useless for that. They don't produce any significant amount of alternative fuel. -- David Wright :: alphabeta at prodigy.net These are my opinions only, but they're almost always correct. "I'll kill anyone that tries to stop me from killing anyone." -- Yellowbeard On May 22, 8:42 pm, Jeff wrote: Kevysmom wrote: PBS and NPR tend to be rather liberal. I guess it is not a very conservative idea to pay for quality broadcasting, as the members of the individual NPR and PBS stations do. Jeff Hi Jeff, Wow, we agree on something. I will remember this in the future. Did you watch the documentary about how we landed up in Iraq on PBS? I rarely watch PBS. In fact, I rarely watch TV. Don't even get cable. I get Netflix instead. I get to choose what I watch when I want to watch it. And I get many of the old TV shows I like. I listen to NPR all the time. Here is the PBS Documentary... In "The Dark Side," FRONTLINE tells the story of the vice president's role as the chief architect of the war on terror, and his battle with Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet for control of the "dark side." Drawing on more than 40 interviews and thousands of documents, the film provides a step-by-step examination of what happened inside the councils of war. Early in the Bush administration, Cheney placed a group of allies throughout the government who advocated a robust and pre-emptive foreign policy, especially regarding Iraq. You would think with all that time to plan, apparently before the 9/11 attacks and most likely before taking office, someone would have thought, "We'd better come up with a plan to win the peace after the war is over. We don't want another View Nam. And we don't want 5000 Americans killed (which is the approximate number including the contractors who lost their lives)." (Sadly, 100x more Iraqis got killed and millions of Iraqis have fled their homes.) But a potential obstacle was Tenet, a holdover from the Clinton administration who had survived the transition by bypassing Cheney and creating a personal bond with the president. That reminds me of an old joke after Cheney had his heart problems: "Bush is only a heart beat away from being President." Jeff http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/darkside/view/ Donna On May 22, 6:37 pm, Jeff wrote: Kevysmom wrote: While the media will occasionally blat out a story, they know who their daddy is...and they won't tick him off too much. The only really remotely honest show I've found on TV is on PBS called "Now". Is this the reason the Bush Administration has been trying to stop funding PBS? PBS and NPR tend to be rather liberal. I guess it is not a very conservative idea to pay for quality broadcasting, as the members of the individual NPR and PBS stations do. Jeff- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
MMR JUDGE FAILED TO DISCLOSE HE WAS BROTHER OF Glaxo SmithKline DIRECTOR AND LANCET BOSS | JOHN | Kids Health | 6 | May 22nd 07 11:37 PM |
Lancet vs. Babies (also: A British GP vs. Peta Dowle, editor of 'Positive Birth Dunedin') | Todd Gastaldo | Pregnancy | 0 | March 21st 07 09:21 PM |
Every state CPS failed Fed report cards-16 FAILED ALL AREAS | Fern5827 | Spanking | 3 | May 15th 04 08:32 PM |
Lancet 'Regrets' Publishing Controversial MMR Report | Mark Probert-February 20, 2004 | Kids Health | 2 | February 21st 04 04:01 PM |
Glaxo chief: "Our drugs do not work on most patients" | Rich Shewmaker | Kids Health | 11 | December 18th 03 05:58 PM |