What a story history tells. In a 7/29/03 Senate hearing on Iraq, former Sen. Lincoln Chafee (R-RI), with substantial foresight, asks then Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, unequivocally, "What are we doing there?" Wolfowitz's testimony is at best a joke, if not perjury.
On MSNBC, Ann Coulter fervently supports attacking and killing of Islamic society in all countries where Islamic fundamentalism exists. Says civilian collateral damage is OK and parallels Islamic fanaticism with Nazism.
On 7/29/03 Paul Wolfowitz makes substantial misstatements on Iraq funding, troop levels, and civilian security. Wolfowitz testimony is at best a joke when viewed from an historical perspective.
Rep. Bruce Braley (D-IA) questions Lurita Doan, GSA Administrator. The Committee on Oversight and Government Reform holds hearings on allegations of misconduct in GSA. Lurita Doan is questioned on many allegations, which include using GSA facilities for partisan, Republican activities and improperly awarding federal contracts.
Keith Olbermann calls President Bush a liar in his special comment on Bush's photo-op trip to Iraq on Labor Day and the revelation in Robert Draper's recently released authorized biography on George Bush, Dead Certain, that Bush's intention is to continue prosecuting the war in Iraq until his successor assumes the presidency.
FOX News pundit-wannabe Chris Wallace, proving he is anything but a journalist, literally deprecated Rep. Ron Paul over an answer Paul gave on troop withdrawals from Iraq.
Although put in the form of a question, Wallace said Paul would take his "marching orders from al-Qaeda" to get the U.S. "off the Arabian peninsula."
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales may have committed perjury when he testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee on July 24, 2006. Gonzales contradicted prior testimony when Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY) questioned him about illegal wiretapping and the late night arm twisting then Attorney General John Ashcroft from Ashcroft's hospital bed.
On Meet the Press (6/10/07), former Secretary of State and Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Colin Powell expresses his unambiguous opinion of Guantanamo Bay.