Thursday, July 2, 2009

Why Obama supported the illegal attempt by the ex-President of Honduras

I think this link tells us why Obamie supported the guy wanting to be President for life in Honduras.

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I am not providing a link because I refuse to provide advertising for Obamie's Minions.

And I still remember this.

Obama's Civiilain Security Force/

And don't forget that he got the mndatory voluntary law he wanted passed.

Congressional Commission on Civic Service Act - Establishes a Congressional Commission on Civic Service to provide recommendations to Congress on improving opportunities for individuals to volunteer or perform national service.


Let's look at the end phrase


on improving opportunities for individuals to volunteer or perform national service


Link

1 comment:

  1. I'm not surprised to find you in favor of a coup to replace a head of state who has an opinion you don't like.

    Try finding out more about what happened in Honduras:

    The real issue in most of the region's past military coups has been the failure of the political system that led to them. The dirty secret about the region's history since at least World War II is that most coups were popular, carried out not by an avaricious military seeking power but by civilians banging on the barracks doors demanding intervention to halt political or economic chaos.

    Kirchner, for example, conveniently ignores that the coups that overthrew Juan Peron in the 1950s and Isabel Peron in 1976 were met with millions of Argentines celebrating in the streets. What gives a coup a bad name is the abuses that usually follow once the military is in power.

    Which brings us back to Honduras. As Brodi Kemp, a researcher at Harvard's Safra Foundation Center for Ethics, says: "You could argue that Zelaya gave up his claim to moral legitimacy when he went outside the constitution. If you accept that, then what do the other political actors do then? ... Sometimes an act is legitimate even though it proceeded illegitimately."

    Polls and the tepid demonstrations in his favor indicate that Zelaya has little popular support. That is not reason enough for a coup, but the many factors suggest that while his removal should have been better handled, some humility is called for in helping Honduras work through a constitutional crisis.

    President Obama was correct in calling Zelaya's ouster illegal, while Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton declined to call the action a coup - in hopes of bringing Zelaya back into government but with wings clipped. In this instance, the U.S. government played the morally right hand.

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