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Politics : The TRUTH About John Kerry -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: American Spirit who wrote (38)2/26/2004 2:58:48 PM
From: JakeStraw  Respond to of 1483
 
>>and some like Jakestraw call Kerry a "murderer".

You are a shameless liar AS. Prove where I said that or retract!! BTW, it will be fun exposing you shortly...



To: American Spirit who wrote (38)2/26/2004 3:02:49 PM
From: JakeStraw  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1483
 
Kerry's tax plan may not be solution for creating jobs

by Caroline Baum
February 26, 2004


It's one thing to admit Kerry's specific proposals take a back seat to beating President George W. Bush in November. It's another not to have specific proposals.

For example, jobs are a high priority for Kerry. How he proposes to create them is a mystery. The senator is offering up the seemingly incongruous initiatives of raising taxes and creating jobs.

"When I am president, we will put jobs back on the top of the national agenda and return prosperity to America," Kerry Feb. 16 told a town hall meeting in Wausau, Wis. "I will start by repealing the Bush tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans and instead invest in education and affordable health care for all."

How exactly would Kerry's job-creation campaign, which begins by repealing the Bush tax cuts for Americans earning more than $200,000 a year, work?

"A tax increase in the short run acts as a near-term drag on aggregate demand and slows the rate of increase in jobs," said Chris Varvares, president of Macroeconomic Advisers, a St. Louis-based consulting firm.

In the long run, Varvares said, "it may be the right thing to do in the face of large fiscal deficits and a reduction in national saving, which ultimately will raise real rates, retard investment and reduce capital formation and our standard of living."

The Kerry plan provides no timeline for creating jobs - and even fewer details on which tax cuts he wants to roll back.

Material provided by the Kerry campaign says he supports "sensible tax cuts for the middle class, such as repealing the marriage penalty, keeping the child tax credit, tax relief for small businesses and providing a payroll tax holiday."

Kerry has been mum on what he'd do about the reduction in the top tax rate on dividends and capital gains to 15 percent last year. Does he want to raise all taxes for those earning over $200,000, or just marginal tax rates from the current 35 percent back to 39.6 percent?

Assuming all the taxes on top wage earners revert to 2001 levels, it would mean an increase in the top tax rate of 13.1 percent on income, 33 percent on capital gains and 164 percent on dividends, according to Michael Darda, chief economist at MKM Partners in Greenwich, Connecticut.

Lowering the return on work and investing means less of both and slower economic growth.

Kerry supports some targeted initiatives to prevent manufacturing jobs from leaving the United States (a lower corporate tax bracket for domestic manufacturing operations) and to create new ones (a two-year payroll tax credit for new hires).

Jerry Jasinowski, president of the National Association of Manufacturers, said proposals to stanch the flow of jobs overseas were "foolhardy." A more productive avenue would be to address the "impediments to U.S. competitiveness," including health care costs, government and environmental regulation and corporate governance," Jasinowski said at the National Manufacturing Week conference in Chicago.

Manufacturing has always chased the cheapest source of labor. Subsidies may delay the process of outsourcing jobs overseas; they won't prevent it.

That won't stop politicians from trying. The temptation to tinker with market forces to produce short-term results for the election cycle is just too great.

Caroline Baum is a columnist for Bloomberg News.

nashvillecitypaper.com



To: American Spirit who wrote (38)2/26/2004 3:10:37 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 1483
 
Kerryboy: liar, murderer, puppet of interest groups, contradicted fouled mouth .....



To: American Spirit who wrote (38)2/26/2004 3:27:33 PM
From: JakeStraw  Respond to of 1483
 
John Kerry, the anti-war antihero

Brent Bozell

February 25, 2004

The venerable Associated Press would not wish itself to be seen as a silly institution of stenographers, forwarding whatever hilarious charges politicians can concoct. But then how do you explain their Sunday report that John Kerry sent a letter to President George W. Bush, accusing him of using the painful topic of Vietnam for his "personal political gain"?

Will someone please cue the laugh track and a full orchestra playing the "Looney Tunes" theme song? Is there anyone in presidential politics who's tried to use his Vietnam experience for political gain more than John Forbes Kerry? Is there no end to Kerry fending off every examination of his decades-long contempt for seemingly each and every new weapon in the American arsenal by suggesting, as AP reported, that Republicans who didn't serve in Vietnam are fighting a war against war heroes like him?

When liberal journalists are asked why the American people were subjected to three weeks of "news" about Bush's honorable National Guard record, they quickly respond that Bush brought it on himself by landing a plane and walking around in a flight suit on the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln.

If that is a provocation for three weeks of intense scrutiny (not to mention wild "AWOL" hearsay to boot), then what about Kerry? For weeks, he's marched from state to state with a phalanx of Vietnam veterans suggesting he, not Bush, knows something about veterans and about fighting for his country. And yet, he's also the one who returned home to America and wrote vicious books and gave vicious testimony before the United States Senate defaming his fellow American soldiers as raping, slaughtering beasts.

Investigative reporter Marc Morano of CNSNews.com unearthed a copy of Kerry's 1971 book "The New Soldier," in which Kerry proclaimed, "We were sent to Vietnam to kill Communism. But we found instead that we were killing women and children." He also wrote, "in the process we created a nation of refugees, bomb craters, amputees, orphans, widows and prostitutes, and we gave new meaning to the words of the Roman historian Tacitus: 'Where they made a desert they called it peace.'"

That's on top of his Senate testimony, in which Kerry claimed -- without citing any evidence -- that on a daily basis, and with the assent of their superiors, soldiers "raped, cut off ears, cut off heads, taped wires from portable telephones to human genitals and turned up the power, cut off limbs, blown up bodies (sic), randomly shot at civilians, razed villages in fashion reminiscent of Genghis Khan, shot cattle and dogs for fun, poisoned food stocks, and generally ravaged the countryside" of South Vietnam.

Where, oh where, is our truth-loving press now?

The truth is the media only want Kerry portrayed as a war hero, and not as an anti-war antihero. The dictionary defines antihero as a character in a story who is characterized by a lack of heroic qualities, such as idealism and courage. Kerry's anti-war record suggests not high idealism but crass calculation. It takes courage to come home and fight against the slander of your fellow soldiers in a hostile political environment. He did not use courage. Instead, he cynically led a radical America-hating parade of protest, and let his Viet Cong-loving protester buddies use him for sport. The clean-cut soldier changed teams to build a political career in the People's Republic of Massachusetts.

The media are letting Kerry redefine the story in the most positive light, and the truth be damned. On CNN's "Inside Politics" Feb. 19, Judy Woodruff asked vaguely about how some veterans "are saying, in effect, you were accusing American troops of war crimes." He brazenly denied – no, let's just say it, he lied about -- what's on the public record. "I never said that. I've always fought for the soldiers." Instead of pressing further, instead of challenging this dishonesty, instead of showing viewers a clip or snippet of Kerry's actual remarks, Woodruff quietly witnessed this lie, and in a moment of blatant favoritism or sheer ignorance, responded by changing the subject. How about that John Edwards?

Ronald Reagan never had to dodge bullets in a combat zone. But he called fighting communism in Vietnam a "noble cause," and in 1980, that was considered a grave political gaffe. In 2004, after decades of communist dictatorship in Vietnam and the collapse of despotic communism in most of the world, shouldn't Kerry's radical-left trashing of that war be today's grave political gaffe? After three weeks of sleazy "AWOL" heavy breathing after Bush, if the media fail to spend three weeks delving into John Kerry's half of the Vietnam War, then they cannot be defended as having the slightest care for fairness, balance, or the truth.

townhall.com