V: "People should not be afraid of their governments. Governments should be afraid of their people."
Welcome Back The Spotlight 'O Terror
Green - Low: This setting is here just as a reference point. DHS will never use it because it would mean we didn’t need them anymore.
Blue - Guarded: This rarely used setting on the Stoplight ‘O Terror could indicate things like an undocumented worker within 3 square miles of the president.
Yellow - Elevated: This is the standard level of fear. Don’t expect to see anything lower than this as long as the Regressives are in office. Be scared, but not too scared to vote Republican.
Orange - High: Chertoff heard that someone in the CIA’s brother’s boss’ nephew’s sister-in-law heard about a plan to blow up Amish Country Popcorn Factory in Berne Indiana. It’s ok to pee your pants at this level.
Red - Severe: A terror attack was recently narrowly averted. We can’t release any details but just be thankful we saved your asses. Used frequently before midterm elections. See October Surprise. (Oh My God, Take Away My Freedoms and Protect Me From Them There Terrorists, Like Osama Hussein!!!)
Welcome to my Blog, enjoy your stay!
Congressman Ron Paul, MD - We've Been NeoConned

1984 radio broadcast:
Karl Rove, President George W. Bush's long-standing political adviser, has announced he is to resign at the end of this month.
The decision to step down comes as poll ratings for Mr Bush remain at the lowest level since his election in 2000.
Mr Rove, a long time political ally of the president, was the architect of Mr Bush's controversial victory in 2000 and his re-election three years ago.
But in an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Mr Rove said he was resigning to return to his home state of Texas and spend more time with his family.
Mr Rove said he first floated the idea of leaving the White House a year ago but delayed his departure because of the Democrats victory in Congressional elections at the end of last year.
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He also said developments in Iraq, where more than 3,600 US soldiers have lost their lives, and growing unease about the level of immigration in the US delayed his decision to go.
But in Monday's interview he said: ”There's always something that can keep you here, and as much as I'd like to be here, I've got to do this for the sake of my family.”
Mr Rove played a key role in one of the biggest controversies to hit the Bush presidency after the identity Valerie Plame, a CIA operative, was leaked to the press. Ms Plame implicated Mr Rove as a factor in the leak and White House involvement.
Although critics called for Mr Rove's resignation over the case, the White House and Dick Cheney, the vice president, backed his decision to stay.
In the interview in which he indicated his desire to step down after 7 years in Washington, Mr Rove predicted that Hillary Clinton would win the Democratic presidential nomination and called her ”a tough, tenacious, fatally flawed candidate”.
Mr Rove has been a political adviser to Mr Bush for more than a decade. He worked with him closely before he became governor of Texas in 1993.
Before joining the White House, Mr Rove was president of Karl Rove & Company, the Austin, Texas-based public affairs firm he founded.