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AMERICA~LAND OF THE FREE~: Socialist Obama and Socialist Hugo Chavez shake hands in Spain

AMERICA~LAND OF THE FREE~

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Friday, April 17, 2009

Socialist Obama and Socialist Hugo Chavez shake hands in Spain

OH, HOW SWEET....MAYBE THEY WILL HAVE A SLOW DANCE TOGETHER LATER. Maybe they will even do a little teabaging together. I bet Obama got a tingle down his leg when Chavez took him by the hand and Chavez did as well. LMAO.
Once a socialist, always a socialist. Birds of a feather flock together.
OBAMA...WORST PRESIDENT EVER !! A true socialist that has been takign notes from this nut case and takign over companies in America. How sad is that ?


The Obama and Chavez Hand Shake















April 17, 2009: President Obama greets Venezuela's Hugo Chavez before the opening ceremony of the fifth Summit of the Americas in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago.

Photos released by the Venezuelan government show Obama clasping Chavez's hand and smiling broadly, and Venezuela quoted Chavez as saying, "I'd like to be your friend," while noting that he shook President Bush's eight years ago.

Obama, Chavez Shake Hands at Summit of the Americas
Venezuela quoted Chavez as saying, "I'd like to be your friend," while Obama reportedly expressed thanks, though this couldn't immediately be confirmed with the Obama administration.




















President Obama shook hands with Venezuela's Hugo Chavez on Friday at the opening of the Summit of the Americas being held this weekend in Trinidad and Tobago.

Obama reportedly expressed thanks, though this couldn't immediately be confirmed with the Obama administration.

Earlier Friday, Dan Restrepo, the president's top Western Hemisphere adviser on the National Security Council, had told FOX News Obama might cross paths with Chavez.

"A chance encounter if it occurs," Restrepo said, in describing such a meeting. "Let's put the animosities behind us. Let's not have old arguments.

"Let's not have tired ideological arguments. Let's get down to figuring out how we can advance things that are in our national interest. Things that matter to the United States that should matter to Venezuela. Putting the arguments and ideologies of the past aside and working on pragmatic solutions to real problems that face our countries today," he said.

Chavez, the Venezuelan president, has been an outspoken critic of the United States, and in particular former President George W. Bush. Since Obama's election, Chavez has varied from insult to optimism in his assessment of the new U.S. president.

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