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Lv 5
? asked in Politics & GovernmentGovernment · 9 years ago

Sectary of state Clinton drunk in Columbia?

What do the Colombians thing of the USA sec. service chasing whores and a drunk Hillary

Update:

Ajewuoj didnt answer my question, but i assume your a member of Wrights church.

3 Answers

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  • Anonymous
    9 years ago
    Favorite Answer

    I do not concern myself with a person taking a break from protocol, but I am reminded of the rumor that Hillary may be one of the girls that prefer other girls over men, but then "Who gives a damn"

  • Anonymous
    9 years ago

    Meet the man who inspired Reverend Jeremiah Wright's now famous tirade about America's foreign policy inciting the terrorist attacks of September 11.

    His name is Ambassador Edward Peck. And he is a retired, white, career U.S. diplomat who served 32-years in the U.S. Foreign Service and was chief of the U.S. mission to Iraq under Jimmy Carter -- hardly the black-rage image with which Wright has been stigmatized.

    In fact, when Wright took the pulpit to give his post-9/11 address -- which has since become boiled down to a five second sound bite about "America's chickens coming home to roost" -- he prefaced his remarks as a "faith footnote," an indication that he was deviating from his sermon.

    "I heard Ambassador Peck on an interview yesterday," Wright declared. "He was on Fox News. This is a white man and he was upsetting the Fox News commentators to no end. He pointed out, a white man, an ambassador, that what Malcolm X said when he got silenced by Elijah Muhammad was in fact true: America's chickens are coming home to roost."

    Wright then went on to list more than a few U.S. foreign policy endeavors that, by the tone of his voice and manner of his expression, he viewed as more or less deplorable. This included, as has been demonstrated in the endless loop of clips from his sermon, bombing Hiroshima and Nagasaki and nuking "far more than the thousands in New York and the Pentagon and we never batted an eye."

    "Violence begets violence," Wright said, "hatred begets hatred, and terrorism begets terrorism."

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