SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : I Will Continue to Continue, to Pretend.... -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sully- who wrote (366)12/19/2003 4:18:17 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
<font size=4>The First Refuge of a Scoundrel<font size=3>

Tuesday's <font size=4>Krugman<font size=3> column, "Patriots and Profits," is another unfocused compilation of leftwing anti-war complaints disguised as a coherent argument. He cites Halliburton, war profiteering, and an unrelated scandal involving the president's younger brother Neil Bush. Then Krugman awkwardly works in this defense: <font size=4>"Some Americans still seem to feel that even suggesting the possibility of profiteering is somehow unpatriotic."

Krugman doesn't name any of these Americans making these scurrilous accusations. No surprise there. Accusing Republicans (without evidence) of slandering Democrats as unpatriotic is one of Krugman's favorite pieces of anti-Republican boilerplate, typically wedged into a column whenever his stock of inspired vitriol is running low. This latest example is just one particularly strained attempt by Krugman to seize imaginary high ground by suggesting people with his views are being slandered by Republicans as unpatriotic.

Paul Krugman, October 3: "Republicans have repeatedly impugned their opponents' patriotism. Last year Tom DeLay, the House majority leader, said Democrats "don't want to protect the American people….They will do anything, spend all the time and resources they can, to avoid confronting evil." On this occasion Krugman at least delivers a piece of evidence (albeit an unconvincing one) to back up his sanctimonious assertion.

Most of the times Krugman simply states his "Republicans impugn Democratic patriotism" idea as fact. Here's Krugman from September 5: "Mr. Bush seems to have a serious case of 'l'etat, c'est moi': he impugns the patriotism of anyone who questions his decisions." Krugman's documentation: Nothing.

And from April 25: "And claiming that those who don't support tax cuts are somehow unpatriotic is not an answer." Krugman's documentation: Nothing.

Krugman from Nov. 8, 2002: "Even criticizing the Bush administration's policies will become far more difficult. It will be hard even to find out what it's up to; the most secretive administration in the nation's history will now be even less forthcoming. And anyone who criticizes the administration, even on purely domestic issues, will be accused of lacking patriotism." Krugman's documentation: You guessed it.
<font size=3>
For more of Krugman and patriotism, click here......
nytimes.com

timeswatch.org



To: Sully- who wrote (366)12/26/2003 7:54:31 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Finally to the best of his ability our "Person of the
Year" has changed the climate in Washington as he
promised. He has not been guilty of the slurs, deceits,
and insults that characterized his predecessor. He has not
indulged in the vituperation and mendacity that the
mediocrities seeking the Democratic nomination regularly
practice against him. For the first time since post-Civil
War politicians sought election by "waving the bloody
shirt," Democrats have legitimatized anger against an
opponent as a campaign tactic. Some of the President's
opponents in the Democratic Party and in the soi-disant
intelligentsia actually boast of their hatred of the
President.

<font size=4>
Our "Person of the Year" has not responded in kind. This is because he is a gent. The President has cultivated the virtues of a gentleman, not the least of which is what New Frontiersmen once called "grace under pressure." Attendant with his gentlemanly behavior, he does not draw inordinate attention to himself. While his prospective opponents brag of their every quirk and vain-glorious achievement, the President displays a seemly modesty even though he is the most powerful man on earth. One of his traits that I have noted in reading his biographies is that he is reluctant to lay claim to achievements that are not his own. Not only will we not see him claiming to have given us the Internet, he is even reluctant to boast of clever turns of phrase written for him by his very capable speech writers. In one anecdote I read he joked about how someone else wrote something for him. Such candor is very refreshing in an era when political candidates are so frequently being caught stretching the truth and even plagiarizing.

Thus in an era of gas bags, George W. Bush has stood out as a gentleman. Like the quiet, undemonstrative men who captured the brutal Saddam Hussein he allows his actions to speak for him. The actions constitute a presidential record of historic import. Right now those actions place him on the presidential tier of Harry Truman, just below the lofty estate of Franklin Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan. Doubtless he has five more years to see if he can match those great leaders. Unfortunately the challenge of international terror might give him sufficient opportunities to do so.

Message 19630907



To: Sully- who wrote (366)12/26/2003 8:23:15 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
The Intolerant Left
By Patrick Hynes
Patrick Hynes is a senior account executive and lead copywriter for the Republican consulting firm Marsh Copsey + Scott and the former Political Director of the New Hampshire Republican State Committee.
<font size=4>
The Democrats' talking points of the hour say that President Bush and company are attempting to "stifle dissent" on matters relative to the war against terrorism, Iraq in particular. After the Republican National Committee released its first ad of the election cycle, the Dems started yapping in unison. Ted Kennedy called it an "attempt to stifle dissent." His colleague John Kerry called it a "reprehensible attempt to stifle dissent." The state party chair of New Hampshire, where the ad ran, went farther. As far as she was concerned it was "neo-McCarthyism." Democrat National Committee chair Terry McAuliffe deviated from the script a little. He just called the 30-second spot "insane."

There's no doubt America is experiencing a heightened level of intolerance for differences of opinion. But the stifling is coming from the political left, not the White House or the RNC. In fact, the chilling rise of political intolerance will, if left unfettered, make the PC language police and public school Nativity Nazis seem downright Jeffersonian.

Some recent examples illustrate my point:

On the December 1 Hardball, host Chris Matthew's asked Howard Dean if he would "break up Fox" if he were elected president.<font size=3> It wasn't really a controversial question. Many liberals want to prohibit news organizations from getting too large, and Fox (actually News Corp.) is really, really big. <font size=4>The real surprise was Dean's answer: "On ideological grounds, absolutely yes."
<font size=3>
Apparently Dean swiftly realized he had just offended the First Amendment, to say nothing of common decency. He immediately equivocated, "I don't want to answer whether I would break up Fox or not." Except that he just had.
<font size=4>
On December 8, Dean's rival John Kerry tried to kill another media outlet before it could even get started.<font size=3> The National Rifle Association wants to start a cable station to take advantage of the media exemption in the new campaign finance laws. <font size=4>So Kerry filed a complaint with the Federal Elections Commission to block it. "We urge you to prevent the NRA from hijacking America's airwaves with the gun lobby's money," Kerry wrote.<font size=3> That is to say he doesn't want the NRA to use its own money to talk about the issues that matter most to its members.
<font size=4>
So, the probable nominee for president from one of America's major parties and a powerful U.S. Senator want to limit free speech on ideological and political grounds.

Kerry's letter to the FEC explained, "If the NRA has something to say, it can play by the rules, just like the millions of people in America who do every day." Except that the Supreme Court's decision in McConnell v. Federal Election Commission makes those rules for regular Americans a lot less, um, liberal.

In the name of getting regular people involved in politics again, every branch of government has now officially signed on to this truly stifling law. Essentially, a bunch of politicians passed a law to make it harder for the American people to criticize them and the U.S. Supreme Court endorsed it.

And let's not forget the Clintons. In office, Bill flirted with bringing back the Fairness Doctrine to silence talk radio, and his IRS often audited the White House's political enemies. Hillary, the early odds-on-favorite for the Democrats' nomination in 2008, has spoken of the need to have a new "gate keeping" mechanism to filter Internet content to protect the reputations of public persons such as…herself.

The political left is playing a dangerous game; for conservatives, for America, for anyone with an honest gripe about their government or politicians. If Americans remain lax against their advances on the First Amendment, it may leave us all, literally, speechless.
<font size=3>
spectator.org



To: Sully- who wrote (366)12/29/2003 2:11:37 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
No war for oil:
Is John Kerry serious?

New Hampshire Union Leader Editorial
<font size=4>
FOR THE SECOND time, John Kerry is running an ad in New Hampshire in which he says that no American should have to "go to war for oil." Is he saying what it sounds like he's saying?

The great canard about the first Gulf War was that it was a "war for oil." Only the lunatic fringe of the radical left believes that the latest war in Iraq was about oil. But there is John Kerry, plainly suggesting that America has gone to "war for oil" because it is too dependent on oil from the Middle East.

Is he irresponsibly playing to that lunatic fringe in the same way Howard Dean did when he repeated the slander that President Bush knew about the 9/11 attacks and did nothing to prevent them? Is Kerry subtly — wink, wink; nudge, nudge — suggesting that President Bush went to war in Iraq — a war the senator voted to authorize — because of oil?

Is he saying that the United States should not have defended Kuwait against the aggression of Saddam Hussein? Is he saying that oil is not a vital component of our national security — a component valuable enough to defend? For that matter, are there other things America is dependent upon, but for which John Kerry would not fight?
<font size=3>
It is evident from his bullet-pointed proposal to make the United States energy-independent that John Kerry has devoted some time thinking about energy issues. Some of his ideas, such as providing tax incentives for Americans to buy more fuel-efficient vehicles, are rather pie-in-the-sky. But others, such as cutting the energy costs of the federal government, are potentially achievable.
<font size=4>
From someone who has thought seriously about these issues, such a vague and inflammatory statement can only be seen as calculated. So, out with it, senator: What wars has America fought "for oil," and why is a substance vital to our way of life and our security not worth defending?
<font size=3>
theunionleader.com



To: Sully- who wrote (366)1/23/2004 3:36:30 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Should we believe the gloom of the Democrats?

Better or Worse?
Victor Davis Hanson - NRO

Thematic in the Democratic primary campaign is that the United States is worse off now than it was before the invasion of Iraq. The harangues from some of the candidates have been quite unbelievable: Saddam Hussein's capture did little to improve our security; we cannot prejudge bin Laden's guilt; we are less safe than ever before and hated to boot; and so on.

The proposed alternatives from those who either once voted for or supported the war are equally surreal. We should have just indicted and arrested Saddam Hussein (via the FBI or Interpol?); or withdrawn from Iraq at the end of the year (Vietnam-style with helicopters on the embassy roof?); or allowed the U.N. to take over (along the lines of its 1993-99 triumph in the Balkans?); or involved the Europeans (who announce they may send troops in the future after the U.S. has won both the war and peace — and oil concessions need to be re-allotted).

Elder statesmen like Ted Kennedy and Al Gore are perhaps even more strident in their calumny. They swear the Iraq campaign was "cooked up" in Texas and that it ranks among the "worst" foreign policy disasters in American history. Indeed, poor former Vice President Gore has transmogrified in just a few months from a senior statesman who once took apart Ross Perot on live television into a caricature of a hand-waving, out-of-control Perot himself. Senator Kennedy's fuming is simply more Chomskyite than Democratic.

And what has happened to General Clark? His once judicious observations of two years ago have become unhinged, and now make Curtis Le May seem circumspect by comparison. Democrats wanted a sober George Marshall on the campaign trail; instead Americans are beginning to witness an embittered, conspiracy-obsessed Maj. General Smedley Butler come alive — endorsed by the slander-spouting Michael Moore instead of respected peers like General Schwarzkopf.

Nothing comes cheaply in Iraq, and 500 Americans tragically are dead, a fatality rate as great as those murdered in either Chicago or Los Angeles last year. Perhaps over $100 billion has been spent already. Bombing and sniping continue. Yet is it really true, as the Democrats allege, that the United States is in a worse situation than before the March invasion? Indeed, if we look at the situation empirically, the very opposite seems the case. Consider first the map itself.

We were warned that "preemption" in Iraq would give the green light to Pakistan and India to go to war. In fact, India's economy and culture are more America-oriented than ever before, and Pakistan seems more afraid that such new ties with the United States will leave it odd man out. Both sides are seeking to cool down the crisis. Whatever the wisdom of supporting President Musharraf, at least his country is no longer an unexamined sanctuary for the world's worst terrorists, and a growing democratic opposition there is rivaling the Islamicists. In fact, Pakistan is in internal foment, as fundamentalists for the first time in a decade are under scrutiny and are unsure whether their full theocratic agenda will ever be enacted. Even the madrassas sense that Mr. Karzai and the Iraqi Democratic Council are openly above ground, while Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden have not been for the last six months.

Perhaps Howard Dean was referring to nearby Saudi Arabia as an example of how things have gotten worse since the conquest of Saddam Hussein. While there have been bombings there, what is new is that many members of the royal family realize that the world is changing, and that they may well be dragged by al Qaedists into an 11th-century abyss.

Surely the scheduled withdrawal of American troops from the kingdom, the curtailment in Saudi funds sent abroad to fuel the madrassas, the reexamination of Saudi-sponsored charities, and the beginning of some democratic awakening among vocal elites, all suggest that the tough approach of the United States toward the sponsors of terror and the victory in Iraq made things far better. In contrast, what was truly pathological was our relationship over the last decade — when we winked as Saudis openly subsidized terrorists, promulgated Wahhabism the world over, and demanded that our female soldiers protecting the sheiks not come into town.

I'll pass on Libya — unless Messrs. Dean, Clark, and Kerry wish to make the argument that Colonel Khaddafi's road-to-Damascus epiphany was the dividend of years of State Department diplomacy. We all wish that Democratic canard were so, but in fact his apoplexy followed the sight of a kindred Arab dictator scrambling out at gunpoint from an abandoned septic tank.

Iran is once more witnessing democratic demonstrations and calls for radical reform. Its spooky theocracy is no longer talking of the joys of an Islamic bomb that might take out Israel at the economical price of a few million fried Muslims. Indeed, as Iraqi reactionaries demand gender apartheid in the new democracy in Baghdad, Iranian dissidents next door cry "Been there, done that." Mullocracy in Iran, remember, is a sick, sick system. It dreams of billion-dollar nukes while it cannot even implement a primitive building code — one basic enough to ensure that 30,000 don't perish in a blink of an eye from the type of earthquake that shakes a few high-rises and breaks dishes inside the Great Satan's realm.

Syria suddenly claims that it wants to discuss peace with Israel. But more importantly after the events of the last year, Assad's big talk about Lebanon, the Zionists, and the United States has mysteriously become muted. Rather than threatening the U.S., promising a new war with Israel, or bragging to Arab newspapers that his country is a hotel for extremists, he now whines about American unwillingness to compromise, Israeli intransigence over the Golan, and paranoia over what is going on in the Gulf.

And what about the locus of our purported catastrophe in Iraq? We cannot even compare the sniping, however wretched, to missiles raining across borders, no-fly zones, broken armistices, ignored U.N. mandates, U.N.-introduced food embargoes, massive foreign invasions, bounties awarded for suicide killings, genocide, destruction of the environment, and looting of oil revenues to buy imported weaponry. For all the chaos we supposedly created, we no longer have mass graves, but instead Shiites demonstrating for democratic elections and Kurds hammering out plans for a federal state. Instead of Baathists slaughtering students, the current controversy is whether to depose Saddamites from university faculties. And the full effect of the war remains to be seen, when the neighbors of Iraq will watch in horror at free elections and debates. It isn't easy there, but when or where has the creation of civilization in place of barbarism ever been effortless?

What is strange about our new European relationship is not that it has deteriorated, but that its Orwellian premises had not been questioned long ago. The Iraq war woke us from a deep, dangerous coma, and raised questions unasked for decades: Why defend a continent larger and more populous than our own? Why consider the German and French governments staunch allies, when, by any measure of their rhetorical and diplomatic anti-Americanism, they appear no different from — and indeed, far worse than — what emanates from a China, Brazil, or Middle Eastern "moderate" nations?

Europe, not America, has proved most interested in Iraqi oil over the last decade. Europe, not America, is apt to tolerate massacres in the Balkans or Iraq. Indeed, the victory in Iraq emphasized that our greatest sin is in being cumbersome and often acting belatedly to stop autocratic killing — but this is a far different moral quandary than never acting at all. When you look at Iranian fascists being wined and dined in Paris, count up all the corpses from the August heat wave, and contemplate the explosive issue of school scarves, France, not the United States, is the real sick puppy.

Much is made about the security alerts here at home and the new bogeyman Attorney General Ashcroft. But apart from the (necessary) inconvenience at airports, it is hard for Americans to agree with the Democrats that we are living in a police state — or that after September 11 we have been at the mercy of al Qaeda while President Bush was purportedly asleep at the wheel.

There is even a positive change in the perennial Israeli conflict. Until the United States began seriously to hunt down terrorists and take out fascists like Saddam and Mullah Omar, the world pretty much had become accustomed to the Islamic rules of the intifada. Palestinians blew up Jews, then seethed and shrieked when Israelis targeted their leaders. Yasser Arafat orchestrated the murderous farce from his opulent, European-subsidized lair in Ramallah, while the international media searched desperately for a rock-throwing 12-year-old to be shot at by an Israeli tank for the worldwide evening news.

Of course, that burlesque continues, but Arafat is increasingly irrelevant if not pathetic. The international community is looking closely at the billions it gave groups like the PLO and Hamas. And in the face of cries of "apartheid" and "don't fence us out of the Zionist entity," the barrier, whose initial course has all but ended suicide murdering in its wake, inches on. Whether we like it or not, Israel will probably wall itself off from the West Bank; the final borders and the wall itself will be adjudicated when and if the Palestinians decide to leave the barbarian world and join the family of democratic nations.

With all this in mind, it is hard to understand the Democrats' logic of disaster. True, we are in an election year — the stuff of predictable hysteria. Politics, of course, is an arena in which there are no laws — a gladiatorial free-for-all that (unless you are Howard Dean) you don't enter demanding the retiarius leave behind his net or the Thracian dull his scimitar. But still, both history and reason offer no support for the calculus of the candidates' current invective. The party of Harry Truman has somehow boxed itself into the corner of seeing bad news from the Iraqi theater as good news for them.

In contrast, encouraging developments — from the capture of Saddam Hussein to a return of services and gradual stability in Iraq — are embraced as antithetical to the Democrats' own election hopes. But do they grasp that very few presidential hopefuls — remember McClellan, McCarthy, and McGovern — have ever been elected during a period of turmoil through calls for a cessation of effort, which the American electorate always interprets as defeatist rather than rational? During wars the more successful candidates usually campaign from the right on matters of tactics, arguing perhaps — as an Eisenhower in 1952 or a 1968 Nixon — that the war is mismanaged and conducted haphazardly, rather than intrinsically immoral and futile.

To be fair, the Democrats do not have a large range of options. After September 11, the United States conducted two brilliant military campaigns when conventional antebellum wisdom predicted doom and quagmire. Al Qaeda has not duplicated 9/11. Saddam Hussein was apprehended far more quickly than the Balkan outlaws still on the lam. Democracy in the Middle East is becoming at least as revolutionary a movement as Islamic fundamentalism.

Here in the U.S., the economy is growing briskly. Interest rates are low, and the stock market is on the rise. In fact, these would-be presidents have one and only one real issue that might resonate with the American people: The combination of domestic-security expenditures, increased defense outlays, waging wars, cutting taxes, proposed new space exploration, and promised sweeping new entitlements is simply too much. Even with massive new revenues from economic growth, America probably will require either a budget freeze or tax hikes after the election. And while we run up deficits (both budget and trade), watch a falling dollar, and ensure the world's nuts are corralled, ever-opportunistic Europe and China enjoy the fruits of our labors. In the place of gratitude, they hide their good fortune either under silence or by whining about American hegemony and imperium.

If the Democrats would stick to fiscal propriety — along the lines of Walter Mondale's cries about Reaganomics and soaring deficits — they, like Mondale, would probably still lose, given strong Reagan-like incumbent leadership on national security. But they would lose without destroying the Democratic party for a generation, which may well be the case should they continue to be on the wrong side of history about Iraq.

nationalreview.com



To: Sully- who wrote (366)1/29/2004 6:35:58 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Kay frustrates Democrats

Posted: January 29, 2004
1:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2004 WorldNetDaily.com

Following a giddy weekend of "I told you so" and "We got him" and a lot of "high-fiveing" by Democrats and the liberal media, former United Nations Special Commission and later U.S. weapons inspector David Kay testified before the Congress yesterday.
<font size=4>
For several days, headlines screamed: "Demolishing the WMD Theory" (Hartford Courant), "Iraq Posed No WMD Threat" (Seattle Post-Intelligencer), "Weasel Wording To Justify War" (Palm Beach Post) and my personal favorite, "Kay Report Makes French Look Good" (Dayton Daily News).
<font size=3>
A survey of the top 20 newspapers by circulation found that as of Wednesday, 13 had run editorials on Kay's resignation as chief U.S. weapons inspector in Iraq last Friday. They all featured his statement that no WMDs exist in Iraq and likely did not exist in Iraq during the U.S. run-up to war.
<font size=4>
Nearly all of those papers blamed intelligence failures for the miscalculation and called for a full probe. But eight of the 13 also raised the issue of White House deceit and its possibly blind pursuit of intelligence that fit its plan for war.

Yesterday, David Kay got the chance to explain what he was
selectively quoted as having said, plus what he actually
did say and what it meant. A lot of the "high-fives" were
apparently somewhat premature.

Kay remained composed, professional and fair despite the best efforts of Democratic senators – most notably Ted Kennedy and Carl Levin. They all tried to get Kay to agree with their carefully tuned agenda to blame the president for deliberately distorting the intelligence reports in order to start a war with Iraq.

Ted Kennedy and Levin began their "questions" with the equivalent of courtroom indictments of the Bush administration. They charged that it deliberately misled the country into falsely believing Iraq posed an imminent threat.

Kay answered by saying he spoke to many analysts who
prepared the intelligence and "not in a single case was
the explanation that I was pressured to this."

Instead, Kay stressed the danger posed by Saddam and said
that Iraqi documents, physical evidence and interviews
with Iraqi scientists revealed that Iraq was engaged in
weapons programs prohibited by U.N. resolutions.

That little tidbit didn't make it into the editorial pages
and news coverage about how the "Kay Report Makes the
French Look Good" or any of the other "Gotcha" stories
over the weekend.

Kay assigned most of the responsibility on the intelligence gathering agencies, which he said relied mostly on U.N. inspectors' reports instead of developing their own intelligence sources.

Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan pointed to repeated statements by top administration officials flatly stating that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction. He pressed Kay to acknowledge that there is no evidence Iraq even had small stockpiles as of 2002. Kay pointed out that Saddam was working on developing a stockpile of the deadly poison, Ricin, which Sen. John McCain reminded the committee is a weapon of mass destruction.

Kay told the committee that, now that Saddam is gone and we have more or less unfettered access, we know a lot more than the U.N. inspectors did, which makes any accusations valid only in hindsight.

Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Pat Roberts said it
appears the problem is with some intelligence agencies and
not the policymakers. "Anyone who believes otherwise has
not done his homework and certainly was not listening to
Dr. Kay," he said.

The Democrats have hung their hopes for capturing the White House on the allegation that the administration was so gung-ho to go to war (for reasons that change almost daily) that it pressured the intelligence services to lie to support their conclusion.

They ignore the salient fact that it was a Clinton appointee, George Tenet, held over by the administration, who briefed both Presidents Clinton and Bush, and that both presidents cited that intelligence as sufficient cause for war. Clinton bombed the fleas out of Iraq in 1998 – the Bush administration merely finished the job in 2003.

The intelligence information regarding Saddam's WMD
program had not substantially changed between 1998 and
2003. It was only after we actually got into Iraq that the
assessments were proven wrong.

Kay was emphatic when he said that everybody, including himself, was wrong, based on the sum total of all the intelligence about Saddam gathered from the mid 1990s right up until the March 2003 invasion of Iraq.

As I noted in a previous column, everybody in the Clinton
administration and most leading Democrats – including Ted
Kennedy, Carl Levin and Nancy Pelosi – made public
statements prior to the invasion that intelligence
indicated Saddam possessed weapons of mass destruction.

It is only with the benefit of hindsight that they
confidently proclaim that the Bush administration lied.
<font size=5>
But if we follow their line of logic in the light of the
true fact, it leads to only one conclusion: "If Bush lied,
so did they."
<font size=3>
worldnetdaily.com



To: Sully- who wrote (366)2/9/2004 10:18:13 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
AL GORE TO THE RESCUE: Thank God for Al Gore. No, really. Yesterday amid all the chatter and punditizing over Bush's Meet the Press interview - much of which was not very complimentary, by the way, but we'll get to more of that in a minute - here comes Big Al, screeching that George W. Bush "betrayed" the country.
<font size=4>
Chris Suellentrop of Slate described Gore's speech to Tennessee Democrats last night as one "angry, sweaty shout "and another example of Gore trying to "convince the world that Bush is one of history's worst presidents."

According to Suellentrop, here is what Gore said:

"I think there were millions just like me, who genuinely, in spite of whatever partisanship they may have felt prior to that time, genuinely felt like they wanted George W. Bush to lead all of us in America wisely and well.

And the reason I'm recalling those feelings now is because those are the feelings that were betrayed by this president! He betrayed this country! He played on our fears! He took America, he took America on an ill-conceived foreign adventure dangerous to our troops, an adventure that was preordained and planned before 9/11 ever took place!

And so I say to you in closing my friends, in the year of 2004, the truth shall rise again!"

I'm afraid the truth is going to have a pretty hard time finding its way out of such ridiculous partisan crap.

But back to the good news for George W. Bush. In many
ways, the arc of Al Gore's career perfectly mirrors the
transformation of the Democratic party over the last two
decades: Gore started as a conservative member of the
House, moved a little to the left during his tenure in the
Senate, a little bit further to the left as Bill Clinton's
vice-president, went way left as a presidential candidate
in 2000 and in the last two years since 9/11 Gore's proven
himself to be a far left fever swamp dweller.

All I can say is, "keep it up." Please. The Democratic party looks increasingly like a junkie strung out on Bush-hating drugs. They have no vision for the future, are unable to articulate any serious policy alternatives, and now live only for the next high, which usually comes in the form of slanderous, ad hominem attacks on the President like the one Al Gore delivered last night. Or the ones channeled through groups like MoveOn.org.

Hence the base's utter indifference to John Kerry as a person, as a candidate, and to his current and past positions on the issues. The party's hollowness is summed up neatly by the breathtaking banality of their current call to arms: "Anybody but Bush."

This is the first presidential election in America since three thousand of our fellow citizens were killed by terrorists on our own soil and Democrats are coming to the country with the message "anybody but Bush." Um, okay.

Such a blatantly shallow message may work if Iraq goes badly and the economy stops producing jobs. But if not, this November John Kerry and his fellow Democrats could find themselves standing in the middle of a gunfight holding a pocketknife.

THE GUARD: The main reason Terry McAuliffe, John Kerry, and many liberal blogs have taken to regurgitating the "Bush was AWOL" charge with such verve is because they know they can't beat the president arguing national security policy so they have to try discredit him personally. Frankly, I find it to be a bit on the scummy side.

As I've written before, I'm not such a Kool-Aid drinking Bush supporter to be completely closed off to the idea that Bush may have missed a few meetings in Alabama while serving in the National Guard.

But as things stand now - and as they've stood for the past three years - the facts don't support an AWOL charge against the President, no matter how much you may love or hate him.

Because if you take a step back and think about this for a second, even if you grant Kevin Drum and Josh Marshall their worst case scenario against Bush - that he blew off Guard duty for an entire year and then crammed at the end to fulfill his requirement before heading off to business school - there really is no getting around the fact that Bush did indeed fulfill his service obligation and received an honorable discharge from the National Guard. That fact alone makes the AWOL charge a scurrilous one.

Let's assume for the sake of argument the truth lies somewhere in the middle; that Bush reported to duty in Alabama a couple of times and the records got lost along the way, but also that he did miss some service during that year.

Unless you're willing to challenge the veracity of Bush's discharge then Kevin, Josh and the rest are left trying to prove the unprovable, all the while ignoring the only salient fact (Bush's honorable discharge) in order to trade in speculation and innuendo that casts aspersions on Bush's character.

I hate to say it but, I'm sorry, this seems like Vince Foster territory to me: "I know we've got the police report, the note, and the independent investigation saying it was a suicide, but you know the press hasn't been doing their job and if they would just look at Hillary's phone records or......"

Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe there is something in Bush's service record and the bloggers I've mentioned are performing an invaluable service by helping bring it to light. If so, then even though I'm uncomfortable with how they've gone about it, I may have to say the ends justify the means.

But if they can't produce proof or come up with anything more than endless streams speculation over the next 8 months then they will have performed a great injustice to the President and to their readers. And they may also help reinforce the notion among some that the blogosphere is nothing more than an online rumor mill. That would be most unfortunate.

BUSH ON MTP: Some thought he did well, some not so well. I thought the President did a decent job, but I think he suffered yesterday from not being eloquent enough to make his case as well as it could have been made. During the interview I kept thinking to myself, "if Bill Clinton were in the same exact situation making the exact same argument, he'd be knocking it out of the park." Bush could only hit a single.
<font size=3>
My main gripe is that the President didn't make a strong enough case in defense of the nature of the intelligence he received. If I had been advising the President, I would have suggested he say something like this:

"Tim, you know, intelligence gathering is a difficult business. The United States government strives every single day to produce the best intelligence it can and every administration tries to make the best judgments it can based on that intelligence.

Is the intelligence business infallible? Of course not. Some of it is correct, some incorrect, and some in between. But we have to take it all together, as a body of evidence to make our decisions.

Let me give you an example. In the months prior to September 11 we picked up some very vague "chatter" from various places on possible terrorist activities. Looking back, we also see now that there were scraps of information floating around different agencies of the CIA and FBI regarding some of the hijackers.

Was all of the intelligence out there true? No. Some of it was and some of it wasn't. But looking back we know now that there was a grave threat to America gathering right within our own borders that resulted in the death of more than 3,000 of our fellow citizens.

My job as President is to work as hard as I can and take whatever steps are necessary to prevent such an event from happening again and to make America safer.

And let me say, sitting down to look at the intelligence reports on Iraq and Saddam Hussein after September 11 - years worth of evidence not only from our government but from other governments around the world as well as the United Nations - there was no question in my mind or the mind of any of the members of my administration that Saddam represented a serious threat to America the world. So we acted. And we did the right thing."

I just think using a pre-9/11 example makes the argument much more powerful and blunts one of the major criticisms coming from the left. I'd be willing to bet most Americans only wish now the administration had "cherry picked" intel from the FBI on the September 11 hijackers. - T. Bevan



To: Sully- who wrote (366)2/9/2004 1:48:56 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Responding to my flailing around for an appropriate word to describe Michael Moore's upcoming film, David writes:

Here's a non-four-letter word for the making of a deliberately dishonest film attacking one's own nation in a time of war for the survival of our civilization: "treason".

To publicly characterize it as treason would be wrong. It would also be libel.

Treason in the US has a very specific meaning, defined in the Constitution in Article III.

Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying War against them, or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid and Comfort.

This was included in the Constitution because in Europe at the time, the powers-that-be had routinely used charges of treason to eliminate political dissenters and critics. As a practical matter, in many places the act of criticizing government policy was de facto treasonous.

The Founders tried to establish a national system based on an entirely new idea: that the government worked for the people and belonged to them, not the other way around. They felt that it was vital for there to be as much protection as possible for expression of a very wide range of political viewpoints, especially those critical of the policies of the current administration. That's why the First Amendment was proposed; except for its clauses relating to religion, it is intended to protect the right of citizens to speak and write criticism of the government without legal peril. More broadly, and including the clauses relating to religion, the real point of the First Amendment is to protect what could be referred to as freedom of conscience, the freedom of each person to form opinions and to make moral decisions.

The reason that the Constitution contains a definition of treason is to make sure charges of treason would not get used in the US by any given administration to silence or destroy opponents, critics, and dissenters the way treason charges were being used in Europe at the time. (And still.)

Taliban John is a traitor. He levied war against the US. I think that if the US had wanted to pursue a charge of treason against him, he would have been convicted and might have been executed for it. But instead, he made a plea bargain (in exchange for opening up and telling the government everything he knew about al Qaeda and the Taliban), and was never formally charged with treason as such. Still, he is a traitor.

But even though what Moore is doing may well be detestable, it is not remotely close to being treasonous. Certainly he is not levying war against the US. Unlike Taliban John, he has not become a soldier for an enemy power and directly engaged in combat against American troops.

Nor is it the case that he is "adhering to enemies" or "providing aid and comfort" to them. "Aid and comfort" is much more than just rhetoric and moral support. It refers to things like giving significant amounts of money or military equipment to an enemy, or engaging in espionage on an enemy's behalf, or providing safe houses for enemy agents. Expressing opinions strongly critical of government policy, and advocating the idea that said policy is wrong and should be changed, is and must be protected political speech, not treason.

It would be highly dangerous to our system to try to claim that anyone who dissents against war is committing treason. That's exactly what the Founders were trying to prevent in Article III and with the First Amendment. We cannot and should not think of dissent as treasonous

Even if we think that the dissenters are lying.

We must permit such criticism, because we can't dismiss the possibility that the nation might end up in a war it shouldn't be fighting. The genius of the American political system is not that it guarantees to never make mistakes, but that it is more able to recognize and correct the mistakes it does make. Broad legal protection for public expression of dissent is a vital piece of that.

We can't dismiss the possibility that an administration might well lie to the nation in order to get the nation to go to war. I emphatically do not think that is the case now, but it could happen.

There have always been domestic opponents of every war this nation has ever fought. We protect their right to speak and to make their case, so that other citizens can listen to what they say and decide if their case is convincing. If not, they will not convince enough to be politically significant. But if they're actually correct, and make a good enough case, then enough citizens will eventually join them, and the nation will change course.

I do not feel any need to prevent my fellow citizens from hearing "dangerous ideas". I have enough faith in them to think that they will not be led astray, or at least that enough won't be that the system won't be imperiled.

There is a calculation some make when they see ideas with which they strongly disagree, more or less like this:

This argument is blatantly wrong; it is specious and its conclusions are profoundly dangerous. I in my knowledge and wisdom am not misled by it, but others are less intelligent and more gullible than I, and if they are exposed to it they might be gulled. Since the argument is wrong and the conclusions are dangerous, it would be disastrous if it began to influence public policy, and since it contributes nothing useful or positive to public discussion of the issues, no harm would be caused by suppressing it. But if it is not suppressed, it might well begin to affect public policy. Therefore this should be censored.

There are some who would actually nod their heads and agree with this, even though I'm presenting it in rather unkind terms. But most people object to it on its face.

That said, in particularly egregious cases many will find themselves thinking something like this, rationalizing it thusly: "Ordinarily I oppose censorship, but this particular case is exceptional".

I emphatically disagree with that argument. I consider any censorship of expression of political ideas to be prima facie harmful irrespective of whether those ideas have any value or utility (or whether they even contain any truth). I also know that those who censor today may find themselves censored tomorrow.

Recently I put it this way:

You cannot defend freedom by taking it away from others. If you believe in freedom, you are forced to defend the freedom of those you despise, and defend their right to publicly deliver a message you hate. Suppression of dissent is tyranny, no matter who is doing the suppressing.

We demonstrate our true dedication to the idea of freedom of thought, freedom of conscience and freedom of expression when we defend that freedom for those whose ideas we detest.

I defend the right of the Nazis to speak. I defend the right of members of NAMBLA to speak. And I defend Michael Moore's right to speak. I detest them all equally, albeit for different reasons, but I am harmed just as much as they if they cannot say what they think.



To: Sully- who wrote (366)2/12/2004 4:43:36 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
A Little Fight Left in Powell

Very interesting exchange being reported by the AP today in regards to Colin Powell's testimony before the International Relations Committee. According to the Associated Press it starts off as you would expect:
Under questioning by House Democrats, Secretary of State Colin Powell said Wednesday he was surprised U.N. and American inspectors did not find storehouses of hidden weapons in Iraq.
<font size=4>
"I don't think anyone in America should think that President Bush cooked the books," Powell said.

"The reason we told you there were stockpiles there was because we believed it to be true," Powell said. "We were surprised when they did not turn up."
<font size=3>
But Reps. Gary Ackerman, D-N.Y., Robert Melendez, D-N.J., Rep. Robert I Wexler, D-Fla., and Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, challenged Powell about the administration's case, suggesting it may have been misleading from the outset.

"Truth is the first casualty of war," Ackerman said. "I would contend truth was murdered before a shot was fired."

"We went into this war under false premises," Melendez said.

Wexler told Powell he considered him to be "the credible voice in the administration."

"When you reached the conclusion that Iraq represented a clear and present danger to the United States, that meant a lot to me," Wexler said. "But the facts suggest there was a part of the story that was not true."
<font size=4>
Powell fielded the assertions calmly, defending the president's judgment and his own.

Then the confrontation took a very interesting turn:

But when Brown contrasted Powell's military experience to Bush's record with the National Guard, saying the president "may have been AWOL" from duty, Powell exploded.

"First of all, Mr. Brown, I won't dignify your comments
about the president because you don't know what you are
talking about," Powell snapped.

"I'm sorry I don't know what you mean, Mr. Secretary,"
Brown replied.

"You made reference to the president," Powell shot back.

Brown then repeated his understanding that Bush may have
been AWOL from guard duty.

"Mr. Brown, let's not go there," Powell retorted. "Let's
not go there in this hearing. If you want to have a
political fight on this matter, that is very
controversial, and I think it is being dealt with by the
White House, fine, but let's not go there."

Powell then went on to defend the Bush administration's
assertions on Iraq's pre-war weaponry. "We didn't make it
up," Powell said. "It was information that reflected the
views of analysts in all the various agencies."

Funny how this has not made the air on the mainstream
media since it happened. You would think this would turn
into great television, but then again it was someone
defending the president instead of smearing him.
<font size=3>

timothyperry.blogspot.com



To: Sully- who wrote (366)2/12/2004 7:23:50 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
ABC, CBS, NBC Pound Bush, But Protected Draft-Dodging Clinton from the “Willie Horton Crowd”

Partisan Tools, Not
Objective Observers
<font size=4>
Last night, ABC, CBS and NBC all led with the Democrat-concocted “AWOL” charges about George W. Bush’s National Guard service on their evening newscasts. Despite (or even because) the White House brought out evidence to refute the charges, the networks uniformly suggested their hectoring of Bush aides had only just begun. The sharks were seeing blood in the water.

“There are plenty of Democrats who are willing to stoke this. The issue is not going to go away,” promised ABC’s Terry Moran.

Who can believe it? The networks are devoting more
time and gravity to the Bush-Guard story than they did to
Bill Clinton’s draft scandal in 1992. Not only that, but
only Team Bush is on “the defensive,” not his liberal
accusers. Twelve years ago, the media were hostile only to
Clinton’s accusers:

• On February 6, 1992, The Wall Street Journal reported that to avoid the draft, Bill Clinton had promised to serve in the ROTC at the University of Arkansas, which he quickly ditched for studies at Oxford. CBS and NBC aired nothing. A bored ABC made it story number five, and did not promote the story at their show’s beginning. ABC chose instead to highlight Queen Elizabeth’s 40th anniversary on the throne.

• On February 12, 1992, the Clinton campaign released a 1969 letter from Clinton to ROTC commander Clinton Jones thanking him for “saving me from the draft.” The response was again protective. None of the evening newscasts began with it, and each aired only one story. CBS supinely allowed Clinton (and only Clinton) to speak, with four soundbites accusing the GOP and the Pentagon of smearing him. Rather began the show by sounding like James Carville: “Bill Clinton says President Bush’s 1988 Willie Horton crowd is smearing him with new campaign dirty tricks.” (The other networks noted that Jones had given the letter to ABC.)

The networks also avoided the story as it deepened. On
April 6, 1992, former Clinton friend Cliff Jackson
revealed that Clinton had received a draft notice in the
spring of 1969, which contradicted months of Clinton’s
claims that he had “never been called.” ABC, CBS, and NBC
never gave that revelation, exposing months of lying, one
complete story.

On September 2, 1992, the Los Angeles Times discovered
Clinton’s Uncle Raymond, who manipulated an almost year-
long delay in Clinton’s draft physical, and secured a
Naval Reserve slot that Clinton didn’t ultimately use. ABC
and CBS aired one story. NBC aired nothing.

True to their promise, this morning, the network shows continued the story-not-ending line. On top of news rehashes from their correspondents, ABC, CBS, and NBC all questioned Condoleezza Rice about the Guard story. “In a hot political season, the questions just won’t stop,” declared ABC’s Claire Shipman.

But all three networks have exposed themselves as
eager purveyors of a shameless double standard in campaign
coverage. Twelve years ago, the Clinton draft story was
treated as a partisan dirty trick and an unfortunate
distraction voters didn’t care about (see box). Now, the
networks have done nothing to question why the Democrats
led with “AWOL” charges without any proof, and have not
suggested in any way that this story is a distraction.
They look like partisan tools, not objective observers.
<font size=3>

— Tim Graham

mediaresearch.org



To: Sully- who wrote (366)2/12/2004 7:49:30 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Natl. Guard Queries Fair Game for "Posturing" Bush

The White House on Tuesday released payroll records from Bush's stint in the National Guard, showing what it regards as proof Bush completed his service. But a Wednesday editorial tries to keep the controversy alive: "Mr. Bush himself also made the issue of military service fair game by posturing as a swashbuckling pilot when welcoming a carrier home from Iraq. Now, the president needs to make a fuller explanation of how he spent his last two years in the Guard."

Democratic President Bill Clinton (who avoided the Vietnam draft and lied about receiving a draft induction notice, yet sent U.S troops to Haiti, Somalia, and the Balkans) was also photographed in military garb. Four years into Clinton's presidency, did the Times consider his avoidance of Vietnam “fair game” as well?

timeswatch.org



To: Sully- who wrote (366)2/12/2004 8:13:32 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
When those in the press corps behave like partisan
attack dogs, the public suffers.

<font size=4>
AWOL attack off target
<font size=3>
Linda Chavez
February 11, 2004
<font size=4>
Any hopes that the press would give President George W. Bush a fair shake in the coming election were dashed this week when the White House press corps reacted to the release of the president's National Guard records like raw meat thrown into a tank of barracudas.
<font size=3>
The controversy surrounding the president's service in the National Guard from 1968 to 1973 surfaced briefly during the 2000 election but quickly disappeared. It became a hot topic again during the 2004 campaign when Leftist filmmaker Michael Moore endorsed General Wesley Clark for the Democratic nomination (Clark quit the race on Wednesday), saying the election would come down to a face-off between the general and "a deserter."

Not content to let Moore's libelous accusation sink into the cesspool of oblivion where it belongs, Democratic National Committee Chairman Terry McAuliffe then revived it -- this time on behalf of another Democratic candidate. On ABC's "This Week" on Feb. 1, McAuliffe said: "I look forward to that debate when John Kerry, a war hero with a chest full of medals, is standing next to George Bush, a man who was AWOL in the Alabama National Guard. George Bush never served in our military in our country" -- a claim that is patently untrue.

And Sen. Kerry didn't do much better two days later, when he responded to criticisms about the McAuliffe canard by saying on Fox News Channel's "Hannity and Colmes": "I've never made any judgments about any choice somebody made about avoiding the draft, about going to Canada, going to jail, being a conscientious objector, going into the National Guard. Those are choices people make."
<font size=4>
On Tuesday, the White House released records that show Bush put in the requisite number of hours in the period in question when he was assigned to the Alabama National Guard, while he worked on a political campaign, in 1972 and 1973.<font size=3> What's more, Bush didn't sit around "with nothing to do ... (taking) turns delivering antiwar lectures," as columnist Richard Cohen described his own time in the Guard during the Vietnam War. "The National Guard and the Reserves were something of a joke. Everyone knew it. Books have been written about it," claims Cohen.

Bush, on the other hand, learned to fly one of the most difficult fighter jets of the era, an F-102 -- an exercise fraught with danger. Two men from Bush's unit crashed during the period he was flying these aircraft, according to William Campenni, a retired Guard pilot who served with Bush. Nor did enlisting in the National Guard guarantee that a soldier would not be sent to Vietnam. National Guard units were sent to Vietnam, and certainly Bush had no way of knowing before he enlisted whether his unit would be one of them.
<font size=4>
But the White House press corps wasn't interested in these details. No, they were hungry for blood. In one of the more acrimonious press conferences in recent memory, reporters lashed out at press secretary Scott McLellan, repeatedly questioning the president's veracity and the factual record presented at the press conference.
<font size=3>
"You keep saying he served -- he fulfilled his duty, he met his requirements. You're not saying he drilled, he showed up, he attended. Is that intentional?" one reporter asked accusingly.

To which, McLellan responded. "No, he recalls performing his duties, both in Alabama and Texas. I said that in response to (another) question."

"Define that," pushed the reporter. And so it went -- for 15 pages of official transcript.

This tempest in a teapot is all about undermining the president's credibility. It is being waged not only by Democrats, whose tactics are questionable but also whose motive -- regaining the White House -- is legitimate, but by the press as well. And that is not acceptable. When those in the press corps behave like partisan attack dogs, the public suffers.
<font size=4>
The Boston Globe, which raised questions during the 2000 election about the president's service in the National Guard, now admits that its source of information is a man named Bob Fertig, a founder of Democrats.com. This vitriolic Web site accuses the president of everything from drug use while in the National Guard to current insanity -- for which it recommends invoking the 25th Amendment to remove him from office and actually offers a petition that visitors can sign to that effect.

No wonder Americans increasingly do not trust the news media.
<font size=3>

Linda Chavez is President of the Center for Equal Opportunity, a Townhall.com member organization.

townhall.com