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Politics : Impeach George W. Bush -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TigerPaw who wrote (1858)2/18/2001 11:14:44 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
My big toe can do a better job than George W.

-John Kelso, Austin American Statesman

Mr. Bush is always on tour. You see only what is handlers want you to see. He never
gives press interviews. For press coverage, you'd think he's in competition with Madonna or The Rolling
Stones.

In a nanosecond, he'll roll from one topic to another, and if you are unlucky,
the military might drop a bomb onto the stage. I can't keep up with it all,
but at least, the military hasn't accidentally bombed Seattle. Yet!

I hear Mr. Bush snoozed at his Texas ranch this weekend while he was on tour in Mexico.
He reminds me of a high school friend. She would never spend a night away from home.
(She couldn't even attend the traditional slumber party.) One day she got married.
And all zinga broke loose. She cried on her wedding night and many other nights
It took years b4 her big toe could adjust.

I don't think the US has that kind of patience. We can't afford to wait for "W" to grow up
So, if you are a praying man, TP, you'll pray that Poppy Bush's health remains excellent over the next four years.

JMOP

Mephisto



To: TigerPaw who wrote (1858)2/21/2001 4:53:17 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
Fowl Play

" There's no mystery about why the administration is so eager to
pronounce the economy flat on its back — Mr. Bush wants to
use fear of recession to bully Congress into rushing through his tax cut, without
worrying about little details like whether it would actually help, or
whether we can actually afford it. But it's still a remarkable departure
from the usual principles of economic policy.


By PAUL KRUGMAN
from his column RECKONING

From The New York Times
February 21, 2001

One hears that George W. Bush likes to
give people nicknames. So I hereby
propose that he himself be known as Chicken
Little
. After all, he has been running around
saying "The sky is falling! Hurry up and pass
my tax cut!" And that of course means that we
should dub Dick Cheney, who has been the
administration's point man for economic pessimism, Chicken Big Time.

With one exception, the economic data don't support such gloomy views.
The unemployment rate has ticked up slightly, but it is still lower than
anyone would have thought possible only a few years ago — and in
much of the country labor markets remain tight. Business payrolls actually
expanded faster from November through January than they did in the
previous three months.

Meanwhile, though the growth in consumer spending and business
investment has slowed, there has been no collapse. Housing starts are
actually up. Manufacturing output did fall sharply in the last few months of
2000, but this was mainly the result of inventory effects: companies
produced too much in the face of slowing demand, found that they had
accumulated excess inventories, and temporarily slashed production in
order to clear their warehouses. Production of most manufactures
stabilized last month, and unless demand takes another fall should soon
recover.

The one really negative piece of economic news is that consumer
confidence has plunged, to an extent that is hard to understand given the
still relatively good news about jobs. Why should consumers suddenly
have become so pessimistic?


One answer is that people are worried because of the fall in tech stocks
— even though broader stock indices like the S.&P. 500 have not fallen
by anything like as much.

Another answer is that the headlines have been much worse than the
reality. In today's greed-is-good business world, companies announcing
layoffs don't try to soften the blow; they exaggerate the damage to
impress financial markets with their tough-mindedness. As this
newspaper pointed out on Monday, behind those huge announced job
cuts you often find quite modest actual job losses.

There is also, arguably, the CNBC effect. The media, and especially
news channels that have to keep people watching all day, thrive on hype.
Whatever is happening, good or bad, gets blown out of proportion.
Remember the panic a few years ago about downsizing? I didn't think so.
When the economy was on its way up, the media hyped its successes;
now they hype the alleged recession.

Last but perhaps not least among causes of the consumer funk is the administration's own determined pessimism. Mr. Bush has a bully pulpit,
and he is using it to preach economic alarm. This adds powerfully to the
chorus of doomsaying. And when it comes to short-term economics,
believing can sometimes make it so.


There's no mystery about why the administration is so eager to
pronounce the economy flat on its back — Mr. Bush wants to use fear of recession
to bully Congress into rushing through his tax cut, without
worrying about little details like whether it would actually help, or
whether we can actually afford it. But it's still a remarkable departure
from the usual principles of economic policy. Has there ever before been
a case of a U.S. administration deliberately undermining confidence for
the sake of political advantage?

The closest parallel I can think of is the policy, early in the last
administration, of talking down the dollar in order to put pressure on
Japan. That policy was widely condemned — though few would go as
far as Lawrence Lindsey, Mr. Bush's chief economic adviser, who has
suggested that the weak-dollar rhetoric of 1993- 1994 was a major
cause of the Asian crisis that began in 1997. Still, I agree that a policy of
talking down the dollar to put pressure on a foreign government was
irresponsible. How much worse, then, is a policy of talking down the
U.S. economy to put pressure on our own legislature?

And turnabout is surely fair play. Having blamed efforts by his
predecessors to "manipulate the dollar for domestic political purposes"
for a global financial crisis, Mr. Lindsey surely cannot complain if the
efforts of his own colleagues to worsen economic perceptions come in
for criticism — especially if this administration succeeds in getting the
recession it apparently wants.

nytimes.com



To: TigerPaw who wrote (1858)2/22/2001 9:31:56 PM
From: jlallen  Respond to of 93284
 
LOL!! Yeah imagine those evil Republicans getting upset over a few pardons being sold!!! Or $400,000.00 earned by a scumbag lawyer on a contingecy in a criminal matter influencing pardons and commutations by virtue of a familial tie to the former Worst Lady. LOL!! BTW, I didn't know Henry Waxman was part of the Repub. leadership. When did he jump the demolib ship?

Doesn't it get a little stuffy having your head stuck up your #ss all the time?

JLA