Jim Borgman has been the Enquirer's editorial cartoonist since 1976. Borgman has won every major award in his field, including the 1991 Pulitzer Prize, the National Cartoonists Society's Reuben Award for Outstanding Cartoonist of the Year in 1993, and most recently, the Adamson Award in 2005 as International Cartoonist of the Year. His award-winning daily comic strip Zits, co-created with Jerry Scott, chronicles the life of 15-year-old Jeremy Duncan, his family and friends through the glories and challenges of the teenage years. Since debuting in July 1997, Zits has regularly finished #1 in reader comics polls across America and is syndicated in more than 1300 newspapers around the world.
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11 Comments:
4,000 of our own
Dead serious subject told perfectly -- with even an aspect of humor (finger nail file). Easy to appreciate and hard as blazes to accomplish.
I guess a retraction is out of the question...
Eloquent!
Powerful... our leaders need to start thinking about the men and women in those coffins before they keep playing political games.
In my heart of hearts, I really believe that if the Bush girls were in the trenches in Iraq, things would be different. I'd like not to believe it - someone correct me - does anyone in the small power circle have a personal stake? (not counting their "legacy").
What is our foreign policy? our domestic policy? I guess the american/bush way to put it would be, do we really need one?
one of them will be teaching in Washington, DC; that will be punishment enough
By MIKE GLOVER, Associated Press Writer
1 hour, 38 minutes ago
CLINTON, Iowa - Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama is calling for the immediate withdrawal of all U.S. combat brigades from Iraq, with the pullout being completed by the end of next year.
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"Let me be clear: There is no military solution in Iraq and there never was," Obama said in excerpts of the speech provided to The Associated Press.
this war is not my responsibility
Huh....it seems like comments of this type always leave out one important person; the Iraqi, who's suffered more than all of our troops put together, and still recognizes the necessity of our being there. If I could express this as a comic, it would be something like this; First panel; a picture of a Democratic leader, saying that the American sacrifice has been too great. Then, in the second panel, a picture of a small Iraqi child, sitting under a crumbling building, held up by a lone American soldier, with the bodies of his fellows around him. The caption: "Tell me about it."
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