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


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (548363)3/4/2004 4:47:30 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 769667
 
"I Never Sail on Anything Less Than 135 Feet"
The John Kerry Experience
By HAL CRANMER

I would like to add my two cents about my John Kerry experience.

During my career as an Air Force pilot, I spent two years flying a small twin-engine prop plane around the Pacific from my base in Okinawa, Japan. On one trip we had to fly Senator Kerry, his congressional aide, and a Navy Captain (Vietnam, A-4 fighter pilot) was also in Kerry's party to various locations in Vietnam and Cambodia as part of the MIA/POW talks.

When I met him, he was wearing a shirt with a picture of his sailboat on it. I told him I had a small 27 feet sailboat in Okinawa, he remarked 'Oh I never sail on anything less than 135 feet'.

When we first flew him into Phnom Penh, he went to the back of the airplane and grabbed the pizza that was put aside for the crew and passed it around to his staff. He was never offered any pizza because they were supposed to have lunch with the Cambodian government once we landed. The pizza would have been our only meal that day.

Then when we picked him up in Cambodia, he was an hour late getting to the airport. We could not start the engines and therefore the air conditioning until he arrived. Phnom Penh at that time was over 100 degrees with 95% humidity and we were basically sitting in a greenhouse behind the cockpit windows.

When he finally did arrive, we were wringing out our clothes from the perspiration. He walks out of the air conditioned car, into the airplane and asks us 'Could you guys get the air conditioning running, I'm a little warm." The other pilot had to physically restrain me from going back there and picking a fight.

Then we took him into Noi Bai airfield in Hanoi. After we picked him up the next day (he stayed the night in Vietnam, we stayed in Bangkok) we taxied out, ran up the engines for takeoff, and noticed that our prop rpm was vibrating all over the place. We taxied off to the side to look at it, but there was a good possibility that there was an engine malfunction and the engine may fail if we took off with it.

Well, Mr. Senator sticks his head up in the cockpit and says 'this plane WILL take off, I have a press conference in Bangkok in three hours!" (Maybe this is an indication of how he will run the FAA). We ran the engines again, and did not have the problem, so we took off and made it back.

During the flight, he told everyone how he had taken a Cessna (a small General aviation plane) up with a fighter pilot, and the fighter pilot remarked that Kerry was one of the best pilots he had ever seen. I don't know about other pilots out there, but it's hard to imagine a little, single-engine prop plane pilot being able to show the 'right stuff'.

After Kerry left the plane, the Navy Captain came up to us, apologized and said basically that he knows Kerry is a jerk and that we should be glad we don't have to deal with him every day....

Or will we?

Hal Cranmer can be reached at: studioron@verizon.net



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (548363)3/4/2004 4:51:26 PM
From: PROLIFE  Respond to of 769667
 
THESE commercials are great!!!!

You know HOW I know?....because there is smoke coming out of you pinheads tinfoil hats and you are crying like a bunch of sissies!!! That makes me know that the ads are good!!

jokeawhenever.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (548363)3/4/2004 9:26:18 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
Statement from Kerry Spokesperson Stephanie Cutter on Bush’s Unsteady Leadership

johnkerry.com

March 03, 2004

For Immediate Release
Washington, DC –

Kerry Campaign Spokesperson Stephanie Cutter issued the following statement on George Bush’s unsteady leadership.

“George Bush talks about steady leadership in his new multi-million dollar, revisionist history ad campaign, but unfortunately you can’t provide ‘steady leadership’ without credibility. And George Bush has lost credibility with the American people. He said he would create 3.9 million jobs, but 3 million more people have lost their jobs. He said he would make health care more affordable, but 2.8 million more have lost their health insurance. He said he would cut the federal debt by $1 trillion, but his policies have added $1 trillion more, leaving the federal debt at over $7 trillion. Most astonishing, George Bush’s ad features a shot of the wreckage of that tragic September day almost 3 years ago, and the firefighters who so bravely worked to save lives. What he doesn’t tell you is that only 10 percent of fire departments across the nation have personnel and equipment to respond to a building collapse, only enough radios to equip half the firefighters on a shift, and breathing apparatus for only one-third. The only thing steady about this President is his steadily leading our country in the wrong direction. It’s time for a change in America, and time to get things back on track.”

BUSH’S CREDIBILITY GAP: “UNSTEADY LEADERSHIP”

Bush says the economic conditions are out of his control. But since he took office, he and his administration have PROMISED millions of new jobs and better lives for working Americans. Instead 3 million more people have lost jobs, millions have lost health insurance, and Bush continues to only provide empty rhetoric.

“They had their moment. They have not led. We will. Now they come asking for another chance, another shot. Our answer? Not this time. Not this year. This is not a time for third chances; it is a time for new beginnings." – George W. Bush running in 2000. [Baltimore Sun, 8/4/00]

BUSH PROMISED MILLIONS OF NEW JOBS

Bush promised his 2001 tax cut would create 800,000 new jobs. Then he said his 2003 tax cut would create 1 million new jobs. This year he said he would create 2.6 million jobs by the end of this year, but took it back after his economic advisors said that was an impossible claim. Instead, under Bush:

Nationally, 2.9 Million Jobs Lost; Unemployment Rate Up 33 Percent. The national unemployment rate in January 2004 was 5.6 percent, up from 4.2 percent when Bush took office in January 2001 - a 33 percent increase. Nationally, the economy has lost 2.9 million private sector jobs under Bush. [Bureau of Labor Statistics, bls.gov]

Nationally, Nearly 2.8 Million Manufacturing Jobs Lost Under Bush. The manufacturing industry has lost 2,787,000 jobs nationwide since Bush took office in January 2001. Employment for this key sector of the American economy is at its lowest level since October 1958. Of the 2.9 million private sector jobs lost under Bush, manufacturing losses account for 95 percent. [Bureau of Labor Statistics, bls.gov]

Nationally, Workers’ Wages and Salaries Are Stagnant. In the third quarter of 2003, America's gross domestic product surged at a rate of 8.2 percent and corporate profits grew at an annual rate above 40 percent. But during this same period, wages and salaries grew by less than 1 percent. Furthermore, in the six months that ended in November 2003, income from wages rose just 0.65 percent after inflation. [Department of Commerce, 12/23/03; New York Times, 12/31/03; Charleston Gazette (West Virginia), 1/2/04]

Nationally, 3.5 Million More Americans Have Fallen Into Poverty Under Bush. In 2002, the number of Americans living in poverty increased to 34.6 million. Three-and-a-half million more Americans live in poverty under Bush. For 2002, a family with two parents and two children lives in poverty if their total household income is below $18,244. [Census Bureau, Poverty in the United States: 2002, Table 4, www.census.gov/hhes/www/poverty.html;Bureau of Labor Statistics, bls.gov]

White House Report Celebrated Loss of U.S. Jobs to Outsourcing. Under the headline “Bush Supports Shift of U.S. Jobs Overseas” the LA Times reported that the Bush Administration “embraced foreign outsourcing, an accelerating trend that has contributed to U.S. job losses in recent years.” The Administration made the announcement even as analysts predict “as many as 2 million more U.S. white-collar jobs” will be exported at a time when eight million are already out of work. When asked whether the White House’s top economic advisor who touted outsourcing should resign, the Administration said the mere suggestion was “laughable.” [Source: LA Times, 2/10/04; Reuters, 12/30/03; Hastert release, 2/11/04; CNN, 2/11/04]

BUSH SAID THE DEFICIT WOULD BE SMALL AND SHORT TERM

CBPP Uses CBO Data To Show Ten Deficits of More Than $400 Billion a Year. “The new CBO report projects deficits totaling $1.9 trillion over the ten-year period from 2005 through 2014. A more realistic assessment — one that uses CBO estimates but incorporates likely or inevitable costs, following the same methodology that was used in the September 2003 report by the Committee on Economic Development, Concord Coalition, and the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities — shows a ten-year deficit of $5.2 trillion. … Under the more realistic assessment, the deficit exceeds $400 billion in every year and stands at about $477 billion in 2009, the year in which the President has said that the deficit would be cut in half. The $477 billion figure is essentially identical to the projected 2004 deficit, indicating little progress toward the Administration’s goal of halving the deficit. Furthermore, by 2014, under these more realistic assumptions, the deficit reaches $708 billion.” [CBPP, “Deficit Picture Grimmer Than New CBO Projections Suggest,” 2/1/04]

BUSH SAID HE WOULD MAKE HEALTH CARE MORE AFFORDABLE AND AVAILABLE

3.8 Million More Uninsured Under Bush. According to Table H1 on the census web page, in 2000, there were 39.8 million uninsured Americans. By 2002, that number had increased to 43.6 million. [Census Bureau, Historic Health Insurance Tables, Table H1, updated 9/03]

Rising Health Care Costs Prohibit Coverage For Many Families. President Bush has no plan to deal with runaway health care costs that “soared at double-digit rates in 2002 for the third straight year” and are considered the primary cause for the lack of insurance today. The average cost of employer-based health care costs increased $1,100 (14 percent) to $9,068 last year. “Affordability remains the number one reason people lack health coverage today,” said Dr. Donald Young, president of the Health Insurance Association of America. [Los Angeles Times, 9/30/03]

BUSH SAID HE WOULD PROTECT OUR CITIES

Bush’s FY05 budget slashes $1 billion in funding for homeland security and bioterrorism grants. The Bush budget cuts $937 million from homeland security formula grants nationwide. These grants provide police, firefighters and emergency management teams with the training and equipment they need to keep communities safe. It also cuts $105 million from the Centers on Disease Control’s state and local capacity bioterrorism grants, which fund needed improvements in public health and medical infrastructure statewide. [FFIS, 2/04]

Bush is Letting Many Homeland Security Needs Fall Through the Cracks. More than two years after the 9/11 attacks, serious gaps exist in the Bush administration’s attempts to defend America against terrorism:

· Emergency Response to Public Health Threats: The Department of Homeland Security is cutting by 80 percent ($40 million) funds for its program to ready local emergency responses to public health crises. The program, the Metropolitan Medical Response System run by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, plays a “significant role in [federal] mass casualty planning.” [CQ, 1/2/04]
· Cargo Containers: Only 2% of the 7 million cargo containers arriving at the nation’s 361 commercial ports each year are screened. [Sarasota Herald-Tribune, 7/10/03; Portland Press Herald, 7/5/03]

· Airline Screeners: The Transportation Security Administration’s airport screening force will be cut by 6,000 screeners, about 11%, because GOP says TSA “over hired.” [AP, 4/30/03]

· Chemical Plants: The Government Accounting Office report found that even though US chemical facilities were “attractive targets for terrorists,” there was no government oversight to assure that plants are safe from terrorist attack. In addition, Bush has declined to push for accountability from chemical companies. According to the Richmond Times Dispatch, the EPA “backed down” from using its regulatory power to oversee plant security “after the industry balked.” [GAO, Voluntary Initiatives Are Under Way at Chemical Facilities, but the Extent of Security Preparedness Is Unknown, March 2003]

· Police Equipment: The non-partisan Council on Foreign Relations criticized homeland security preparedness in a 2003 report, stating, “Many police departments lack adequate detection and personal protective equipment and training for responding to chemical, biological, or radiological incidents.” [Independent Task Force, Council on Foreign Relations, 7/29/03]



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (548363)3/4/2004 10:56:58 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769667
 
kennyboy: when the downer was found, you and a bunch of democraps made comments on the cattle industry hoping for the more negative developments in this sector. The foot in demohacks mouth desease now proves to be a kick knocked out all demohack front teeth:
Lifted Ban Boosts Cattle
LIVE CATTLE RECAP

3/4/2004

April cattle closed 1.00 higher at 79.32, 1.12 off the high of the day at
80.45 and 0.32 better than the day's low of 79.00. The market opened sharply
higher on euphoria over the announcement last night that Mexico was lifting
it ban on most imports of US beef and was supported by strong cash markets
for cattle and beef. A representative from the USDA has stated they will
soon propose new rules to allow imports of Canadian cattle younger than 30
months. (Younger cattle are considered less susceptible to mad cow.) This is
expected to meet stiff opposition from the cattle industry. It doesn't
appear that any animals would be allowed in before 2005. Cash cattle markets
were mostly quiet today after seeing active trade yesterday at $85, which
was up $3 from the week prior. There were some light bids today at $85 and
the few that had cattle left to sell were asking $87. Today's estimated
slaughter came in at 123,000 head versus guesses ranging from 124,000 to
129,000. The total for so far this week is 485,000 head versus 465,000 last
week and 499,000 a year ago. At noon, boxed beef cutout values were up $.88
to $140.21 and up $6.74 from $133.47 a week ago.

Technical Outlook

CATTLE (APR) 3/5/2004: Rising stochastics at overbought levels warrant some
caution for bulls. The next upside objective is 81.02. The market has a
slightly positive tilt with the close over the swing pivot. Support should
be encountered at 78.70 and below there at 78.12. Market resistance is at
80.15 and then again at 81.02. If yesterday's gap higher on the day session
chart holds, additional buying could develop this session. A positive signal
for trend short-term was given on a close over the 9-bar moving average. The
market is approaching overbought levels with an RSI over 70.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (548363)3/4/2004 11:17:18 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769667
 
What Goes Around . . .
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
BANGALORE, India

I've been in India for only a few days and I am already thinking about
reincarnation. In my next life, I want to be a demagogue.

Yes, I want to be able to huff and puff about complex issues - like
outsourcing of jobs to India - without any reference to reality.
Unfortunately, in this life, I'm stuck in the body of a reporter/columnist.
So when I came to the 24/7 Customer call center in Bangalore to observe
hundreds of Indian young people doing service jobs via long distance -
answering the phones for U.S. firms, providing technical support for U.S.

computer giants or selling credit cards for global banks - I was prepared to
denounce the whole thing. "How can it be good for America to have all these
Indians doing our white-collar jobs?" I asked 24/7's founder, S. Nagarajan.

Well, he answered patiently, "look around this office." All the computers
are from Compaq. The basic software is from Microsoft. The phones are from
Lucent. The air-conditioning is by Carrier, and even the bottled water is by
Coke, because when it comes to drinking water in India, people want a
trusted brand. On top of all this, says Mr. Nagarajan, 90 percent of the
shares in 24/7 are owned by U.S. investors. This explains why, although the
U.S. has lost some service jobs to India, total exports from U.S. companies
to India have grown from $2.5 billion in 1990 to $4.1 billion in 2002. What
goes around comes around, and also benefits Americans.

Consider one of the newest products to be outsourced to India: animation.
Yes, a lot of your Saturday morning cartoons are drawn by Indian animators
like JadooWorks, founded three years ago here in Bangalore. India, though,
did not take these basic animation jobs from Americans. For 20 years they
had been outsourced by U.S. movie companies, first to Japan and then to the
Philippines, Korea, Hong Kong and Taiwan. The sophisticated, and more
lucrative, preproduction, finishing and marketing of the animated films,
though, always remained in America. Indian animation companies took the
business away from the other Asians by proving to be more adept at both the
hand-drawing of characters and the digital painting of each frame by
computer - at a lower price.

Indian artists had two advantages, explained Ashish Kulkarni, C.O.O. of
JadooWorks. "They spoke English, so they could take instruction from the
American directors easily, and they were comfortable doing coloring
digitally." India has an abundance of traditional artists, who were able to
make the transition easily to computerized digital painting. Most of these
artists are the children of Hindu temple sculptors and painters.

Explained Mr. Kulkarni: "We train them to transform their traditional skills
to animation in a digital format." But to keep up their traditional Indian
painting skills, JadooWorks has a room set aside - because the two skills
reinforce each other. In short, thanks to globalization, a whole new
generation of Indian traditional artists can keep up their craft rather than
drive taxis to earn a living.

But here's where the story really gets interesting. JadooWorks has decided
to produce its own animated epic about the childhood of Krishna. To write
the script, though, it wanted the best storyteller it could find and
outsourced the project to an Emmy Award-winning U.S. animation writer,
Jeffrey Scott - for an Indian epic!

"We are also doing all the voices with American actors in Los Angeles," says
Mr. Kulkarni. And the music is being written in London. JadooWorks also
creates computer games for the global market but outsources all the design
concepts to U.S. and British game designers. All the computers and animation
software at JadooWorks have also been imported from America (H.P. and
I.B.M.) or Canada, and half the staff walk around in American-branded
clothing.

"It's unfair that you want all your products marketed globally," argues Mr.
Kulkarni, "but you don't want any jobs to go."

He's right. Which is why we must design the right public policies to keep
America competitive in an increasingly networked world, where every
company - Indian or American - will seek to assemble the best skills from
around the globe. And we must cushion those Americans hurt by the
outsourcing of their jobs. But let's not be stupid and just start throwing
up protectionist walls, in reaction to what seems to be happening on the
surface. Because beneath the surface, what's going around is also coming
around. Even an Indian cartoon company isn't just taking American jobs, it's
also making them.