Who said this?
Regarding Feingold:
“It’s an overreaching step by someone who is grandstanding and running for president at the expense of his own party and his own country.
“I think it’s a very dangerous territory for the democracy that we have in this country to be playing around with those kinds of resolutions, without any consultations from his colleagues. I think it was irresponsible.”
Answer: Democrat Senator Mark Dayton of Minnesota




2 Comments:
You mean this Mark Dayton? He must have moved out of the glass house, eh?
Senator Dayton: NORAD Lied About 9/11
Sunday, August 1, 2004
By Nicholas Levis
Mark Dayton has become the first U.S. senator to challenge the rush to consensus that "The 9/11 Commission Report" settles the open questions of Sept. 11, 2001.
In hearings last Friday, Sen. Dayton (D-MN) raised an obvious point: if the timeline of air defense response as promoted in the Kean Commission's best-selling book is correct, then the timeline presented repeatedly by NORAD during the last two years was completely wrong. Yet now no one at NORAD is willing to comment on their own timeline!
When the official story of 9/11 can be changed repeatedly without anyone ever being held accountable, we have no right to ever again expect honest government. Please read the following story and do your part to support Sen. Dayton for highlighting the contradiction, and to encourage the media to follow up.
Dayton: Demanding Accountability
Now that the Kean Commission has published the new timeline in its final report, these contradictions cannot be swept under the rug. Either the Kean Commission is wrong, or else NORAD was pushing a flawed timeline for more than two years. Either way, the FAA story still differs from both.
There can be no excuses. Those responsible for dispensing false information must be held accountable, or else nothing in the behavior of government is likely ever to improve.
Instead of accountability, several of the key figures - Gens. Myers and Eberhard, FAA official Ben Sliney - have been promoted since Sept. 11! Yet one or more of them must be wrong about what happened on 9/11.
This is the simple point that Sen. Mark Dayton made yesterday at Senate hearings on the 9/11 Commission Report: now that it has accepted the Kean Commission findings, NORAD must explain its old timeline, and anyone responsible for pushing a false account, whether intentionally or not, must be held accountable.
http://www.911truth.org/article.php?story=20040731213239607
Brilliant post! Dissent within the Democratic party? How could that be?
Evidently, they're not in lock step, which at least sets them apart from right-wing bloggers who all seem to have a post very similar to this one.
I guess you can't spell Republican without re-pub.
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