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Friday, June 22, 2007

Two Presidents

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While the protests continued outside the White House, Presidents Bush and Vietnamese President Nguyen Minh Triet made brief comments to the press after their Oval Office meeting and before their lunch in the old family dining room.

Bush sandwiched a human rights comment in with happy talk about his recent trip to Vietnam and the burgeoning trade relations between the two nations. The two presidents had engaged in the proverbial “frank and candid discussion,” said the American one.

“I also made it very clear that in order for relations to grow deeper that it’s important for our friends to have a strong commitment to human rights and freedom and democracy,” Bush said. “I explained my strong belief that societies are enriched when people are allowed to express themselves freely or worship freely.”

Said Triet, through a translator: “Mr. President and I also had direct and open exchange of views on a matter that we may (differ), especially on matters related to religion and human rights. And our approach is that we would increase our dialogue in order to have a better understanding of each other. And we are also determined not to let those differences afflict our overall, larger interest.”

And he wants Americans to know that Vietnam is “a stable, peaceful and friendly country.”

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Bush: Human Rights Hero

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Here’s a sentiment not often expressed in protests outside the White House. The kind words came during a demonstration by Vietnamese-Americans protesting as Bush met with President Nguyen Minh Triet of Vietnam. The protesters share Bush’s concerns about human rights violations in Vietnam.

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A ‘Cheney’ Branch of Goverment?

In view of Vice President Dick Cheney’s claim that he is not subject to executive orders on handling classified information because he’s actually a legislative official, a liberal watchdog group Friday suggested he was setting up a fourth branch of government.

If the vice president, who is the constiutionally designated president of the Senate, is actually in the legislature, then he should be subject to Senate rules of conduct, argued Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington.

Only problem is, the Senate ethics manual on page 25 states that the vice president “is not a Member, officer, or employee of the Senate” and thus not subject to Senate ethics codes—making the Cheney branch of government an oversight-free zone.

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