kristol in A Sentence

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    Kristol: Is that the right term?

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    Maybe you could object to that last if you were, say, Bill Kristol.

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    The resolution has appeared, not coincidentally, at the same time as major articles by leading neoconservatives Reuel Marc Gerecht and Bill Kristol calling for military action.

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    Coulter makes the distinction that Palin and her adviser, Kristol, ignore- that there is a difference between support for a strong national defense and support for nonsensical permanent war.

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    Kristol freely admits that he would prefer a pro-war president John Kerry, or Obama, than a figure like Buchanan, Paul or any traditional conservative who might question American foreign policy.

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    Ann Coulter asks, rightly,“Bill Kristol and Liz Cheney have demanded that Steele resign as head of the RNC for saying Afghanistan is now Obama's war- and a badly thought-out one at that.

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    The substance of Kristol's beef, however, was that peace could not be secured the Obama way- by talking to bad guys like the Iranians- but only by spreading“liberal democracy” and encouraging“responsible regimes.”.

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    I have made my view of Chaffetz's“antiwar” position pretty clear already, so I won't rehearse that again, but I do find it a little odd that Dan gives Coulter any credit for her column bashing Kristol.

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    As an illustration of the significant difference between traditional and neo-conservatives, during the 2004 election, the New York Times‘ David Kirkpatrick reported that Kristol said he would take“(John) Kerry over(Pat) Buchanan or any of the lesser Buchananites on the right.

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    When Kristol called for Michael Steele's resignation after the Republican National Committee Chairman dared to raise questions about the wisdom of our war in Afghanistan, it reminded me of just how much influence- and damage- neoconservatives have exerted on the larger conservative movement.

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    Kristol, whose magazine once ran a cover story on the supposed“connection” between Saddam and Osama, likely considers the so-called“9-11 Truth” movement a collection of conspiracy-minded kooks, but in the mid-2000s the same could be said of the Weekly Standard, which perpetuated its own conspiracy myth to promote a war that Americans likely would not have supported otherwise.

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