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  1. #1
    Senior Member ShockedinCalifornia's Avatar
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    BUSH Trip to Latin America

    It's going to be fun watching what the American news media WILL COVER OR NOT COVER on Bush's trip to Latin America. The stories are just now coming in online....protests, Hugo Chavez organized rally, etc.

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    Senior Member LegalUSCitizen's Avatar
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  3. #3
    Senior Member gofer's Avatar
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    "Bush is beginning a trip to Latin American and his first stop is Los Angeles."___Jay Leno

  4. #4
    Senior Member moosetracks's Avatar
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    Yeah, but the still will take OUR money he's offering them!@!
    Do not vote for Party this year, vote for America and American workers!

  5. #5
    Senior Member ShockedinCalifornia's Avatar
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    Police in Brazil, Colombia Clash with Bush Protesters

    http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent ... 6b6f3.html

    Police in Brazil, Colombia clash with Bush protesters

    07:48 PM CST on Thursday, March 8, 2007
    Associated Press

    SAO PAULO, Brazil – Police clashed Thursday with students, environmentalists and left-leaning Brazilians protesting a visit by President Bush and his push for an ethanol energy alliance with Latin America's largest nation.

    Protesting students also lobbed rocks and homemade explosives called potato bombs at riot police on a university campus in the Colombian capital of Bogota, where Bush is scheduled to visit Sunday as part of his five-nation tour of Latin America.

    In Sao Paulo, officers fired tear gas at protesters and beat them with batons after more than 6,000 people held a largely peaceful march through the financial heart of South America's largest city, sending hundreds of demonstrators fleeing and ducking into businesses to avoid the mayhem.

    Authorities did not immediately report any injuries, but Brazilian media said at least six people were hurt and photographers took pictures of injured people being carried away.

    Protesters said scuffles broke out when some radical demonstrators provoked officers and threw sticks at them – but said police overreacted. A police officer who declined to give his name in keeping with department policy confirmed that extremists appeared to cause the confrontations.

    After the clash, the protest continued peacefully but with far fewer people. The marchers waved communist flags and railed against Bush, the war in Iraq and the ethanol proposal. Almost all had departed by sundown, just as the U.S. president was to arrive in Sao Paulo.

    And in the southern Brazilian city of Porto Alegre, more than 500 people yelled "Get Out, Imperialist!" as they marched to a Citigroup Inc. bank branch and burned an effigy of Bush.

    In Colombia, about 200 masked students at Bogota's National University clashed with 300 anti-riot police carrying shields and helmets, spray-painting anti-U.S. slogans on walls and shouting "Out Bush!"

    Police fired water cannons and tear gas, and the students hurled back rocks, fireworks, a few Molotov cocktails and dozens of "potato bombs" – small explosives made of gunpowder wrapped in foil. There were no immediate reports of injuries or arrests.

    Some protesters in Brazil carried stalks of sugarcane – which is used to make ethanol – and a banner reading: "For every liter of ethanol produced, 4 liters of fresh water are consumed, monoculture is destroying the nation's greatest asset."

    "Bush and the United States go to war to control oil reserves, and now Bush and his pals are trying to control the production of ethanol in Brazil. And that has to be stopped," said Suzanne Pereira dos Santos of Brazil's Landless Workers Movement.

    Activists from the environmental group Greenpeace warned that increased ethanol production could lead to further clearing of the Amazon rain forest as well as cause social unrest, since most sugarcane-ethanol operations are run by wealthy families or corporations that reap most of the benefits while the poor are left to cut the cane with machetes.

    Bush has spoken approvingly of Brazil's ethanol program, which powers eight out of every 10 new cars. The proposed accord is meant to help turn ethanol into an internationally traded commodity and to promote sugarcane-based ethanol production in Central America and the Caribbean.

    In Mexico, which Bush is scheduled to visit Tuesday, about two dozen demonstrators gathered in front of the U.S. Embassy in the capital chanting slogans against the U.S. project to construct border fences and Bush's visit.

    Carmelo Ramirez Reyes showed up in a devil's mask, carrying a placard reading "My name is George Bush, killer of Mexicans."

  6. #6
    Senior Member BearFlagRepublic's Avatar
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    Any way we can keep him down there?
    Serve Bush with his letter of resignation.

    See you at the signing!!

  7. #7
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    I don't understand what does he want, ethanol in brazil is made of sugar cane, here in America we have enough land to grow it .
    This is an excuse to sell out this country a little more.
    He will only get this demonstrations,
    South America is not friendly to America
    They like America's wealth but not America..

  8. #8
    Senior Member CountFloyd's Avatar
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    Bush being greeted in Brazil as he tries to give away hundreds of millions of US taxpayer dollars.
    It's like hell vomited and the Bush administration appeared.

  9. #9
    Senior Member LegalUSCitizen's Avatar
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    He won't pay any attention to the protests. He'll return and say it was a positive and good trip. If any reporter asks about the protests he'll say that it's because we don't pay enough attention to them and that we must do more so that they will like us....and him.

    We've been through this before.
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  10. #10
    Senior Member LegalUSCitizen's Avatar
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    http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/americas/ ... index.html

    Here's another story tonight. Now they are blaming the war in Iraq as the reason for the demonstrations while he blames it on being because we have "neglected" Latin America.
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