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


To: Krowbar who wrote (548428)3/4/2004 9:41:15 PM
From: sandintoes  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
The ad was attacked by the Bal Harbour, Fla., fire Fighters Union.
This is the same section of Florida that gave us the "I'm with stupid" voters."

Some 9/11 Relatives Angered by Bush Ads
By LIZ SIDOTI, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - President Bush (news - web sites)'s campaign commercials — on the air just one day — have angered several relatives of victims of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, and a firefighters union that has endorsed Democratic rival John Kerry (news - web sites) demanded the ads be pulled.

The White House defended the commercials, which show images of the skeletal remains of the World Trade Center and firefighters bearing a stretcher through the rubble.

"It makes me sick," said Colleen Kelly, who lost her brother Bill Kelly Jr., in the attacks and leads a victims families group called Peaceful Tomorrows. "Would you ever go to someone's grave site and use that as an instrument of politics? That truly is what Ground Zero represents to me."

In Bal Harbour, Fla., the International Association of Fire Fighters Union approved a resolution asking the Bush campaign to pull the ads, spokesman Jeff Zack said. The resolution also urges Bush to "apologize to the families of firefighters killed on 9/11 for demeaning the memory of their loved ones in an attempt to curry support for his re-election."

The union gave Kerry an early endorsement in the presidential race.

The controversy erupted as Bush's re-election campaign began airing the commercials nationally on cable television and on broadcast stations in about 80 media markets in 18 states.

The ads refer both to the terrorist attacks and to the recent recession, and are designed to project Bush as a candidate offering "steady leadership in times of change." The commercials do not mention Kerry.

One of the ads shows the charred wreckage of the twin towers with an American flag flying amid the debris. Another ad — and a Spanish-language version of it — use that image as well as firefighters carrying a flag-draped stretcher through the rubble as sirens are heard. Firefighters are shown in all the ads.

Bush had told House and Senate leaders in January 2002 that, "I have no ambition whatsoever to use this as a political issue" in that election year. His aides on Thursday defended the use of the images.

"Sept. 11 changed the equation in our public policy. It forever changed the world," said Scott McClellan, the White House press secretary. "The president's steady leadership is vital to how we wage war on terrorism."

The administration arranged for former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani and three others to appear on network and cable broadcasts to defend the ads. One Bush aide said the controversy gave the president's commercial priceless free publicity, with millions seeing clips of the ad.

Several relatives of victims also praised the ads.

"These images honor those whose lives were lost," said Debra Burlingame, whose brother Charles piloted the plane that crashed into the Pentagon (news - web sites) at the hands of hijackers.

Deena Burnett, a Little Rock, Ark., resident whose husband Tom was one of the passengers on United Flight 93, which crashed into a Pennsylvania field, said the ads were "a perfect reminder of what happened that day."

And Bernard Kerik, the former New York police commissioner who lost 23 officers that day, said Bush has every right to use the images to show his leadership abilities just as Kerry has used footage of his military service in Vietnam in his ads.


"It's comparable. It's about the president's history. It's about his leadership ability," said Kerik, who is on a roughly $140,000-a-year contract with the Defense Department to help establish security and stability in Iraq (news - web sites).

Bush is not the first politician to cite the terrorist attacks in campaign ads. In 2002, New York Gov. George Pataki mentioned the tragedy in an ad that was shown to victims' families for approval before it was broadcast.

But the images in the Bush ads have sparked a furor.

Kristen Breitweiser, of Middletown Township, N.J., whose husband, Ronald Breitweiser, died in the World Trade Center, said Bush should not use the tragedy as "political propaganda."

"Three thousand people were murdered on President Bush's watch," Breitweiser said. "He has not cooperated with the investigation to find out why that happened," a reference to the effort the Bush administration has made in working with the Sept. 11 commission investigating the intelligence failures.

Harold Schaitberger, the firefighter union's president, said: "We're not going to stand for him to put his arm around one of our members on top of a pile of rubble at Ground Zero during a tragedy and then stand by and watch him cut money for first responders."

Terry Holt, a Bush-Cheney spokesman, defended Bush's support for homeland security, saying spending has tripled in the three years since the attacks.

story.news.yahoo.com.



To: Krowbar who wrote (548428)3/4/2004 10:59:16 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769670
 
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.