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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: CYBERKEN who wrote (404841)5/10/2003 2:39:02 PM
From: Thomas A Watson  Respond to of 769670
 
LOL.. do you really think vulgar anus has 1/10 the gray matter required to even know what a Leninist is. There are many who are just stupid angry demoloons. And I believe many will find the future extremely painful.

The Will article is really quite amusing to read when you realize this is the scum that has risen to the top of the demoloon party.

And humor is a far more searing tool than illuminating skanks.

George F. Will: Democrats, the dreamers
sacbee.com
By George F. Will
Published 2:15 a.m. PDT Wednesday, May 7, 2003

COLUMBIA, South Carolina -- It could have been worse.

Saturday night's tossed salad of nine Democratic presidential candidates and their
60-second thoughts on war, peace and other things might have occurred in a
state that a Democratic presidential candidate has a prayer of winning.
Fortunately, the event of dueling sound bites will not affect next year's outcome
here, where the last successful Democratic presidential candidate was Jimmy
Carter, seven elections ago.

The six serious candidates must endure these events until caucuses and
primaries weed out the unserious. Carol Moseley Braun is trying to use as a
stepping stone to the presidency the ambassadorship to New Zealand, where she
went after failing to be re-elected to the U.S. Senate from a state, Illinois, that has
elected only one Republican -- her 1998 opponent -- to the Senate in the last eight
elections. The Rev. Al Sharpton, theologian and thespian, offers his career in the
street theater of perpetual New York City protest as his claim to presidential
considerations. Rep. Dennis Kucinich is the answer to a trivia question: Who is
the only presidential candidate to have presided over the bankruptcy of a major
American city? (Cleveland, where he was mayor from 1977 to 1979.) His big idea
Saturday night was to "get the profit out of health care," which certainly would
change the incentives to provide health care.

Of the serious candidates, one certainty is that Howard Dean, former governor of
Vermont, will not be elected Mr. Congeniality by the other members of this
moveable feast of political maneuvering. Or Mr. Consistency.

It was perhaps severe for Sen. John Kerry's campaign to accuse Dean of
"pathological recklessness with the facts," but Dean has been wrong or tricky with
some accusations against fellow candidates, on matters ranging from the war to
taxes. And the day Baghdad fell, Dean said of Saddam's fate, "I suppose that's a
good thing." But Saturday night "suppose" had been supplanted by Dean's being
"delighted" that Saddam is gone.

Delighted, but he fears Iraq will now be more dangerous to the United States. He
also has said America "won't always have the strongest military." But here he said
"no commander in chief would ever, and I am no exception, willingly allow our
military to shrink." Got that?

Dean, who says he represents "the Democratic wing of the Democratic Party," may
have become inebriated by the rapturous reception he has received from his
party's left-wing and antiwar activist cadre. Florida Sen. Bob Graham introduced
himself as from "the electable wing of the Democratic Party."

Connecticut Sen. Joseph Lieberman also stressed the folly of nominating
someone who cannot pass the threshold test of strength on national security,
which Lieberman calls "the first goal of our government." But many -- probably
most -- Democratic activists have other first goals, including making the world safe
from America's military.

Lieberman -- supporter of the war and, like Sen. John Edwards, a critic of Rep. Dick
Gephardt's health care plan ("we can't afford" such "big-spending Democratic
ideas of the past") -- is remembering the general election. But you cannot steal
first base -- you must get nominated in order to win in November. Watch Gephardt.
He supported the war, but has red meat for the liberal incorrigibles who choose
Democratic nominees -- a health care plan financed by repealing the Bush tax
cuts.

Coming immediately after the Jan. 19 Iowa Caucuses and the Jan. 27 New
Hampshire primary, South Carolina's Feb. 3 primary will the be first time
African-American voters -- perhaps almost 40 percent of the turnout -- will be so
important so early in the nominating process. But Delaware, Missouri, Arizona,
New Mexico and Oklahoma also may vote that day, and Michigan votes four days
later. The nominee almost certainly will be known no later than the evening of
March 2, when California, New York, Maryland and perhaps Ohio will vote.

This is perilous. If such a compressed schedule had existed in 1984, when Gary
Hart acquired astonishing momentum by upsetting Walter Mondale in New
Hampshire, Hart would have won the nomination before Mondale had time to
regroup and grind him down. The potential for volatility among Democrats is
suggested by a poll conducted April 10-16 by the Pew Research Center showing
that 69 percent of Democrats cannot name any of the nine candidates. Kerry, the
most frequently named, is named by just 9 percent of respondents. Nine percent
think Al Gore is running.

The president has 71 percent job approval. Ronald Reagan had 58 percent in
1984, when he swept 49 states.