Roasting Joe Wilson

My close personal friend Glenn Reynolds is having fun with lying Joe Wilson today: LIKE MILLI VANILLI’S GRAMMY AWARD, this “Restore Honesty” website by the now-discredited Joe Wilson is mostly of comedic value now. But wait, there’s more — scroll to the bottom and you’ll see that it’s “Paid for by John Kerry for President, … Continue reading “Roasting Joe Wilson”

My close personal friend Glenn Reynolds is having fun with lying Joe Wilson today:

LIKE MILLI VANILLI’S GRAMMY AWARD, this “Restore Honesty” website by the now-discredited Joe Wilson is mostly of comedic value now. But wait, there’s more — scroll to the bottom and you’ll see that it’s “Paid for by John Kerry for President, Inc.” Quite an embarrassment.

My advice to the Kerry campaign — say that Wilson is lying about that, too. It’ll be believable!

Heh.

H/t Roger Simon.

3 thoughts on “Roasting Joe Wilson”

  1. Your selective criticism really harms your case.

    Someone in the Bush junta apparently committed treason and/or a similar crime in outing Valerie Plame.

    Face it Richard. Game over.

    Get ready for Kerry.

  2. Whoops! Looks like you got caught up echoing phony right-wing bullshit again…

    link

    “In his letter to the committee, Wilson disputed the Republican senators’ characterization. “There is no suggestion or recommendation in that statement that I be sent on the trip,” he wrote. A CIA spokeswoman declined to comment. In an interview, Wilson said that his wife was stating facts about his background, not pushing that he go to Niger.

    The Washington Post story, meanwhile, took the disputed Senate report conclusions even further. It stated in its lead that Wilson was “specifically recommended for the mission by his wife … contrary to what he has said publicly.” In the interview, Wilson argued that the Post story failed to make clear that only the intelligence panel’s Republicans, and not its Democrats, came to that conclusion. He said he has written a letter of protest to the Post.

    The Post article also contained one acknowledged error: In trying to build a case that Wilson’s Niger trip had actually bolstered the administration’s claims, Schmidt wrote that Wilson had told the CIA that Iraq had tried to buy 400 tons of uranium from Niger in 1998. In fact, it was Iran that Wilson said had tried to make the purchase, as the Senate report states. The Post ran a correction. ”

    Your credulousness amazes me.

  3. Wilson’s busted, John – he *says* he didn’t lie about the nepotism, but that’s what you would expect from a liar, and he’s silent on the other issues.

    How gullible are you?

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