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Politics : Why is Gore Trying to Steal the Presidency? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Ilaine who wrote (3432)12/7/2000 3:41:21 PM
From: Frank Griffin  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3887
 
America's Low Budget Movie
By Tom Bevan

He won't quit. He won't stop. He may NEVER go away. After a full
month of legal battles in which Al Gore has been almost
categorically rejected by the courts and the American public, he still
will not accept the fact that he lost this very close election.
Democrats, complicit in propping up "Fightin' Al" over the last thirty
days, keep telling us what a wonderful civics lesson this has been
watching the wheels of democracy turn. In truth, it has been more
like a low budget horror film where the bad guy just won't die.

Two days ago, Judge Sanders Sauls effectively put a stake through
the heart of Mr. Gore by ruling against his contest of the election on
every single count. But that didn't stop the Vice President from
continuing to stagger blindly forward, yesterday holding a delusional
press conference outside the White House where he asserted that
he still had a 50-50 chance of winning the Presidency. Gore even
went so far as to encourage the disqualification of ballots in
Seminole and Martin Counties while refusing to accept the Florida
Supreme Court's upcoming decision as the final word.

The Vice President should have conceded while he still had a
technical, legal chance to win in an attempt to salvage a shred of
dignity for himself. However it is clear that Gore, like his mentor
President Clinton, is incapable of putting the country's interests
ahead of his own.

And because of his selfishness - or more accurately his self
righteousness - the Vice President has insured a difficult end to this
horror movie. By waiting until his final appeal has been exhausted,
his last legal option extinguished, Gore's concession will carry no
grace or healing power at all. Instead, the country will know, even
as he stands before us and says the right words, that he fought with
every fiber and every breath against the final outcome. We will
know that the Vice President has not conceded, but has been
defeated - and there is a world of difference between the two.

Democrats will say George Bush stole the election.
African-American leaders like Jesse Jackson and Kweisi Mfume
will further divide our nation by promoting the falsehood that there
was a concerted effort by Republicans to stop blacks from voting in
Florida. As instructed (some would say begged) by the Democrats,
some liberal scholar will go to Florida next year and produce a
bogus study declaring Gore the true winner in Florida, further
undermining the legitimacy of the Bush Presidency.

Though we haven't seen this movie before, we certainly know how it
will end. It's a bad movie, and one that we can't get up and walk out
of. So until it's truly over, all we can do is sit and watch



To: Ilaine who wrote (3432)12/7/2000 4:11:36 PM
From: ThirdEye  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3887
 
"Where are the Democrats?" Speaking for one Democrat only, I will say this: First, we are exhausted. The pitch of rhetoric only increases; keeping up with the legal twists is ennervating; it is so apparent that the legal odds are heavily against Gore, who by the way I would be embarrassed to call my president at this point. (And frankly, I would still have been embarrassed even if he had won definitively on Nov. 7)

As for the Seminole and Martin cases, I'm not holding my breath to see votes tossed out(whereas Republicans have been all along). Maybe Al is, but the fact is that if he won the race on a technicality like this one and then had the audacity to actually take the presidency on the flimsiest of legal grounds, I would be out in the streets with the rest of you.

On the other hand, I don't know the law so I'm hangin back and hangin on every word.

If the FL legislature gets into the act I think they will discover in the firestorm of public reproach just how out of touch with the rest of the country they are.