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Politics : WHO IS RUNNING FOR PRESIDENT IN 2004 -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (10560)2/29/2004 8:39:47 AM
From: John Carragher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10965
 
Kerry's handler's (Kennedy machine) I bet they have a very tight grip on what he says , where he goes. It appears the program is to attack bush and win votes but he is only talking to his democrat party right now. Shorty , he will have to define what he is going to do to improve the economy and provide safety that he says is not here. Where is he going to get the money to hire more police, fire department personal, custom agents, secure ports, trains, subways, nuclear plants, pay for national guard alerts.

I would love to hear how he is not going to cut soc sec benefits, improve security and provide health care for us all.. Will the top 10% increase in taxes do all that.?

oops forgot he is going to have no child left behind. so we lots of more money for education programs.



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (10560)2/29/2004 10:47:06 AM
From: American Spirit  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10965
 
Bush's Lack Of Courage (see awolbush.com)
You tell me Kerry doesn't have courage. The man fought back when everyone was saying he was out of it and Dean was a shoe-in. That's the kind of fighter we need in th White House. Bush has never had to show courage in his entire life, and hasn't.



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (10560)3/7/2004 7:55:42 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 10965
 
In Illinois poll, Kerry's cruising

suntimes.com

BY KRISTEN MCQUEARY AND STEVE SCHMADEKE
Chicago Sun-Times
March 7, 2004

If Illinois is a good indicator, President Bush must convince more voters they're better off than they were four years ago to win a second term.

In a survey conducted by the Daily Southtown, the Chicago Sun-Times' sister newspaper, 50 percent of likely primary voters said they are not better off today -- a direct correlation to their presidential preference. Three out of four voters who feel they're worse off picked U.S. Sen. John Kerry over Bush.

Overall, Kerry -- who is expected to visit Chicago on Tuesday -- continues to lead Bush in Illinois 52 percent to 39 percent.



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (10560)3/10/2004 10:28:00 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 10965
 
We must work to defeat the reckless Bush / Cheney regime that is dragging our country down...we need a higher standard of leadership...

A hypocritical Bush uses 9/11 images but resists an accounting of the truth.
_____________________________

The Worst Form of Exploitation
By Robert Scheer
COMMENTARY
The Los Angeles Times
March 9, 2004

How perfect the irony, how sordid the scam. The president, who ignored the Al Qaeda threat before Sept. 11, 2001, who diverted public attention in that horror's aftermath to the nonexistent threat from Iraq and who has stonewalled the investigation of 9/11, now seeks to exploit that tragedy as a reelection gimmick.

George W. Bush avoids being photographed with the dead and injured from his folly in Iraq, but hey, those flag-draped coffins of 9/11 victims make great TV ads. What a grisly low in political exploitation.

That's why the ads were condemned by a firefighters union and many of the 9/11 victims' relatives, whose various websites contain an impressive list of the unanswered questions concerning the tragedy. As Bob McIlvaine, whose son was killed in the Twin Towers disaster, put it: "Instead of playing on people's emotions with images of that day, the president would do right to cooperate more with the independent commission investigating the 9/11 attacks so we can learn the truth about what happened on that day and why."

But uncovering the truth about 9/11 has never been Bush's intention. Instead, the president has used that tragedy for his own political ambitions — to draw attention away from his lies about Iraq, the unprecedented national debt, the disappointing jobless recovery and the attacks on civil liberty. What's mind-boggling is the cynicism of Bush's electoral ploy when one considers that he never showed any interest in terrorism before 9/11. He had focused instead on the war on drugs and trying to one-up his father on Iraq. His abysmal failure to heed the Clinton administration's warnings regarding the threat posed by Osama bin Laden may be one reason for Bush's extreme reluctance to permit an unimpeded, bipartisan public investigation of 9/11.

Never before in our national history has such a major event been so unexamined by the government while being so effectively hyped for political advantage. The obfuscation has been deliberate and executed with a passion that suggests Bush may have some dreadful truth to hide. Why else would he initially oppose the formation of a bipartisan commission to investigate the origins and lessons of 9/11?

Bush allowed the commission to form only after enormous public pressure led by the families of victims, who demanded an accounting of what led to the loss of their loved ones. Bush then sought to undermine an honest investigation by appointing Henry Kissinger, international grand master of mendacity, to be chairman. That gambit failed when Kissinger refused to make public his murky financial entanglements with the very regimes most likely to have links to the 9/11 terrorists.

After a more independent commission finally was allowed to form, Bush set about to systematically undermine its work by refusing to turn over documents essential to the investigation or to permit the full committee to interview the top officials in his administration, from himself on down.

This is a president whose immediate response to 9/11 was to protect the Al Qaeda terrorists' known sponsors in Saudi Arabia and Pakistan while planning a sideshow war against Bin Laden's sworn enemy in Baghdad, Saddam Hussein. In the immediate aftermath of the World Trade Center disaster, a Saudi plane was allowed to land in the United States and whisk Bin Laden relatives and certain Saudis out of the country before intelligence agencies could fully question them, despite the fact that 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudi nationals who had been allowed to enter the U.S. under suspicious circumstances, suggesting the connivance of the Saudi government.

Bush turned his sights on Iraq's illusory weapons of mass destruction while lifting the sanctions imposed on Pakistan, a known possessor and proliferator of nuclear weapons. Nor have any of those sanctions been restored even now, when Pakistan admits that its top scientific institute was the source of nuclear weapons technology sold to North Korea, Libya and Iran.

Bush defends his exploitation of 9/11 with these words: "How this administration handled that day, as well as the war on terror, is worthy of discussion." Yes indeed, but it is an administration that delights in discussions in which it monopolizes all of the crucial information and cherry-picks, fabricates and otherwise distorts evidence, mocking the sacred notion of representative democracy.

_________________________________

Robert Scheer writes a weekly column for The Times and is coauthor of "The Five Biggest Lies Bush Told Us About Iraq" (Seven Stories Press/Akashic Books, 2003).

latimes.com