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


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (553227)3/18/2004 10:13:27 AM
From: Kenneth E. Phillipps  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Bush must admit that his VooDoo economic policies have caused the huge budget deficit and increase in t he national debt.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (553227)3/18/2004 10:44:36 AM
From: CYBERKEN  Respond to of 769667
 
Jobless Claim hit their lowest AVERAGE since Bush got into office and began shovelling us OUT of the Clinton/Rubin deflation.

We will know the long-term economic renaissance is confirmed when we see the best and brightest Americans aspiring again to be engineers-and finding success-while TORT LAWYERS are quitting in droves and filing record unemployment claims.

The unemployment we have seen is a phenomenon of the Blue Zone: People in denial of the fact that we are PURGING the anti-American Democrat enemy, and unwilling to LET GO of their archaic class-hatred Marxism.

Couldn't happen to a more DESERVING bunch of cockroaches...



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (553227)3/18/2004 11:34:27 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769667
 
The L-Word
03/15/2004 @ 8:28pm
E-mail this Post

Why is it that liberals are so afraid to take their own side in an argument?

"Look, labels are so silly in American politics," Senator Kerry replied evasively when asked during the New York debate, "Are you a liberal?" I agree that labels are too simplistic. But why allow the L-word to be defined--and turned into a negative--by thugs at the Republican National Committee who don't know their own history? Isn't it time, after more than twenty years of conservative ascendancy, for liberals to take the offensive, stop biting their tongues and declare forcefully--I'm a liberal and proud of it!

So, next time you're asked, Senator, why not stand firm (you're already tall) and tell Americans, crisply, sharply and with conviction, how liberal values have shaped the greatness of this country. It won't lose you the election. It might just help you win it.

I'm sure you don't need this, but here's a short list of some of the great triumphs of 20th century liberalism--all vigorously opposed by conservatives at the time: Women's suffrage; Social Security; unemployment compensation; the minimum wage; child labor laws; Head Start, food stamps; Medicare; federal housing laws barring discrimination; the Voting Rights Act; the Civil Rights Act; anti-pollution statutes, guaranteed student loan programs and the forty-hour work week.

Senator, these victories made America a more just and open society. These programs embody the civilizing and mainstream values of the past decades and they show how liberals have repeatedly fought for ordinary Americans. A fighting liberal would take on rightwing extremists who are determined to rollback the hard-earned rights and liberties of the 20th century. Why not stand on liberalism's proud heritage? It sure beats running away from a winning legacy.

thenation.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (553227)3/18/2004 11:38:06 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769667
 
What Have You Done for Us Lately?
Katrina vanden Heuvel, editor of The Nation (she's best known for being unable to name her congressman), is criticizing John Kerry for trying to evade the "liberal" label, which she thinks he should wear proudly:

Next time you're asked, Senator, why not stand firm (you're already tall) and tell Americans, crisply, sharply and with conviction, how liberal values have shaped the greatness of this country. It won't lose you the election. It might just help you win it.

I'm sure you don't need this, but here's a short list of some of the great triumphs of 20th century liberalism--all vigorously opposed by conservatives at the time: Women's suffrage; Social Security; unemployment compensation; the minimum wage; child labor laws; Head Start, food stamps; Medicare; federal housing laws barring discrimination; the Voting Rights Act; the Civil Rights Act; anti-pollution statutes, guaranteed student loan programs and the forty-hour work week.

Now, what do you notice about Katrina's list? None of the items she mentions are any more recent than the 1970s (era of that great liberal, Richard M. Nixon), and most of them are a good deal older than that. For crying out loud, is Kerry really going to run on women's suffrage, an issue that was resolved 84 years ago? While he's at it, maybe he can promise to finally join the League of Nations.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (553227)3/18/2004 11:40:14 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769667
 
That Dog Won't Hunt
Another reader, Dennis Gibb, disputes John Kerry's Vietnam account, which we noted Monday, of his pet dog being "catapulted from the deck of our boat and land[ing] confused, but unhurt, on the deck of another boat in our patrol":

I was an artillery officer in Vietnam in 1971 and 1972 and am therefore somewhat familiar with the various forces which effect the flight of a ballistic object. There are 280 separate factors effecting the flight of an artillery round from the time it is placed in the gun tube to the point of impact--things like wind direction, speed, air temperature and density, rotation of the earth during flight and the drift of the round due to the rifling action of the gun tube. Even with computers it is virtually impossible to control all the variables of flight to achieve first round accuracy. To be sure, the advent of GPS and other technology has made the job easier, but those were not available during Kerry's time.

In addition to my service in Vietnam, where I frequently had to try to hit targets moving on the ground from a moving helicopter, I participated in a test in which teams of experienced artillery officers were tasked to hit moving objects with artillery rounds. The best we could do with knowledge of the terrain and experience was a hit rate of 10%.

The idea of the launch of a canine projectile from a boat to another boat with perfect results is absurd on its face. It is complicated by the fact that in an artillery round there is the direct action of the expanding gas from the propellant on the forward obturated round, which has a perfect ballistic shape, whereas in this case the canine was driven by the concussive effect of an explosion and if my knowledge of Vietnamese dogs is correct the projectile was hardly ballistic.

Kerry is quickly becoming another Al Gore.

Gibb refers to Gore's discredited claim in 2000, which the late Bob Bartley noted at the time, that his mother-in-law paid $108 a month for a prescription drug that cost the family dog a mere $37.80.

Other readers questioned whether Kerry's dog even existed. "Would it be wise to have a dog on a swift boat?" asks Don Smart. "What if you needed to be quiet and the dog decided to bark?" Well, Kerry ought to be able to resolve that question easily enough. When will you show us the dog tags, Senator?



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (553227)3/18/2004 11:42:48 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769667
 
Socialist Appeasers for Kerry
Not long ago, John Kerry was boasting that unnamed foreign leaders were backing his presidential campaign. With a little assist from al Qaeda, Spain is about to get a leader who openly backs Kerry. "Prime Minister-elect Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero on Wednesday described the U.S. occupation of Iraq as 'a fiasco' and suggested American voters should follow the example set by Spain and change their leadership by supporting Sen. John F. Kerry of Massachusetts for president in November," the Washington Post reports:

"I said during the campaign I hoped Spain and the Spaniards would be ahead of the Americans for once," Zapatero said in an interview on Onda Cero radio. "First we win here, we change this government, and then the Americans will do it, if things continue as they are in Kerry's favor."

As the New York Times' Paris edition notes, however, "the Democratic presidential candidate, who voted to authorize the Iraq war, has said nothing yet about finding a potential soul mate in Zapatero." Kerry may well be embarrassed by the support of a leader who is vowing to abandon his alliance with America, but this raises an intriguing question: Are the unnamed foreign leaders whose backing Kerry claims less embarrassing to him than Zapatero, or more embarrassing?



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (553227)3/18/2004 11:43:43 AM
From: Johannes Pilch  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
Oh please Kenneth. Somehow, I get the impression you actually watch the market, praying to your heathen god that it will crash just so you can come here to whine in futility against Bush. I wasn't here yesterday, but I'd wager you were not terribly pleased.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (553227)3/18/2004 11:45:55 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769667
 
Oil for Scandal
Where's Jesse Helms when the U.N. really needs him?

Thursday, March 18, 2004 12:01 a.m.

The $100 billion Iraqi Oil for Food program was by far the largest relief operation in the history of the United Nations. By extension, it's rapidly becoming the U.N.'s largest-ever scandal.
After months of stonewalling, Secretary General Kofi Annan conceded Tuesday that the program was worthy of an internal investigation. It's a step forward, but it's not nearly enough for an organization that so far has shown it can't be trusted to police itself. That's why the April hearings by Henry Hyde's House Committee on International Relations will be so important. Oil for Food is a legitimate U.S. concern, for reasons that go well beyond the fact that U.S. taxpayers foot about a quarter of the U.N.'s bills.

A mountain of evidence has now accumulated to suggest the Iraqi people suffered from shortages of quality food and medicine not because international sanctions were too strict, but because lax or corrupt oversight at U.N. headquarters in New York allowed Saddam Hussein to exploit the system for his own purposes.

Those included rewarding friends and allies world-wide with oil allocations on very favorable terms, as well as extracting large kickbacks from oil traders and suppliers of humanitarian goods. Put more simply, Saddam was allowed to skim off revenue to which the relief program was entitled, while the program was forced to spend the remainder on suppliers chosen by Saddam for reasons that rarely had anything to do with the quality of their goods.

There can be little doubt that U.N. mismanagement contributed greatly to the negative perception of the anti-Saddam containment policy. There is also little doubt that the reward and kickback scheme--as well the possibility of exposure--was a factor as some countries weighed whether to back U.S.-led regime change in Iraq. There is even reason to suspect that some of the Saddam friends and allies who benefited may have been members of the U.N. Secretariat.

Among the names of alleged oil-voucher beneficiaries on the Iraqi Oil Ministry list released in late January is Oil for Food director Benon Sevan. As our Thérèse Raphael reported last week, the Journal has obtained Iraqi correspondence suggesting that at least one oil trade in favor of Mr. Sevan was in fact executed. (He has denied the charges.) Ms. Raphael also reported that the company in charge of inspecting goods destined for Iraq under the program was Cotecna, which employed Mr. Annan's son Kojo.
The prima facie evidence of mismanagement alone is strong enough to call into question the remainder of Mr. Annan's tenure, the credibility of the U.N. to advise on the transition to democracy in Iraq, and whether the organization can ever again be trusted with a relief and arms control operation of this scale. Michael Soussan, a former program coordinator with Oil for Food, noted in The Wall Street Journal recently that U.N. officials have not been truthful in their response to the developing scandal, claiming for example that they were unaware of allegations of fraudulent practices until after the war. Oh, really? A January 2001 article in the Times of London was one of a number reporting the "total anarchy" and "flagrant disregard of U.N. Security Council resolutions" that then characterized the program.

Another canard being advanced by the U.N. Secretariat is that there should be a new Security Council Resolution--which it would be conveniently difficult to get France and Russia to approve--to enable it to investigate activities beyond those of its own staff. The activities of the U.N.'s own staff are precisely what interests everyone here.

Why did they choose to keep most details of the program secret? Why did they never release the results of internal audits? Didn't Mr. Annan take seriously his obligation to approve the details of every six-month phase of the program? Halliburton's oil contracts with Kuwait were the picture of transparency by comparison.

It's also worth noting, finally, that there is no obligation for members of the U.N. Secretariat to wait for an investigation. Mr. Sevan has been on vacation pending his retirement next month. If he cares at all for his reputation or the U.N.'s, one would expect him to rush to clear things up. Ditto for Mr. Annan.

Assuming the stonewalling continues, the Sevan and Annan issues will be important topics for Mr. Hyde's committee. Congress will also want to explore to what extent, if any, Oil for Food corruption penetrated America. One person to subpoena is Shakir al-Khafaji, an Iraqi-American businessman who appears on the list of alleged oil-voucher recipients and who traded goods extensively with Saddam under Oil for Food via his South African-based Falcon Trading Group.
We regret to say that a notable absence from U.N. oversight has been the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, which was an effective advocate of U.N. transparency under Jesse Helms. We hope current Chairman Richard Lugar will hold his own hearings now, not least because we'd love to hear committee Member John Kerry's thoughts on the matter.

The Oil for Food scandal has obvious implications for the policy he's been advocating of subjecting U.S. interests to a Security Council veto. GOP Senator Chuck Hagel is another U.N. booster. If they mean what they say about enhancing the power of the U.N., in Iraq and elsewhere, then they in particular have an obligation to ensure that the world body is both effective and free of corruption.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (553227)3/18/2004 11:58:16 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769667
 
A Clear Choice
John Kerry "speaks as if only those who openly oppose America's objectives have a chance of earning his respect."

BY DICK CHENEY
Thursday, March 18, 2004 12:01 a.m.

(Editor's note: Vice President Cheney delivered this speech yesterday at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum in Simi Valley, Calif.)
Last fall, some people with short memories were asking why on earth California would want to put an actor in the governor's office. The question brought to mind images of 1966, and all the great events that were set in motion by the election of Gov. Ronald Reagan. From his first day in Sacramento to his last day in Washington, Ronald Reagan showed a certain kind of leadership. He had confidence in himself, and even deeper confidence in the United States and our place among nations. His principles were the product of a good heart, a sturdy Midwestern character, and years of disciplined preparation for the work that history gave him. He had a basic awareness of good and evil that made him a champion of human freedom, and the greatest foe of the greatest tyranny of his time. The Cold War ended as it did, not by chance, not by some inevitable progression of events: It ended because Ronald Reagan was president of the United States.

After the fall of Soviet communism, some observers confidently assumed that America would never again face such determined enemies, or an aggressive ideology, or the prospect of catastrophic violence. But standing here in 2004, we can see clearly how a new enemy was organizing and gathering strength over a period of years. And the struggle we are in today, against terrorist enemies intending violence on a massive scale, requires the same qualities of leadership that saw our nation to victory in the Cold War. We must build and maintain military strength capable of operating in different theaters of action with decisive force. We must not only have that power, but be willing to use it when required to defend our freedom and our security.

We must support those around the world who are taking risks to advance freedom, justice, and democracy, just as President Reagan did. American policy must be clear and consistent in its purposes. And American leaders--above all, the commander in chief--must be confident in our nation's cause, and unwavering until the danger to our people is fully and finally removed.

The attacks of September 11, 2001, signaled the arrival of an entirely different era. We suffered massive civilian casualties on our own soil. We awakened to dangers even more lethal--the possibility that terrorists could gain chemical, biological or even nuclear weapons from outlaw regimes, and turn those weapons against the United States and our friends. We came to understand that for all the destruction and grief we saw that day, September 11 gave only the merest glimpse of the threat that international terrorism poses to this and other nations. If terrorists ever do acquire weapons of mass destruction--on their own or with help from a terror regime--they will use those weapons without the slightest constraint of reason or morality. Instead of losing thousands of lives, we might lose tens or even hundreds of thousands of lives in a single day of horror. Remembering what we saw on the morning of 9/11, and knowing the nature of these enemies, we have as clear a responsibility as could ever fall to government: We must do everything in our power to protect our people from terrorist attack, and to keep terrorists from ever acquiring weapons of mass destruction.
This great and urgent responsibility has required a shift in national security policy. For many years prior to 9/11, we treated terror attacks against Americans as isolated incidents, and answered--if at all--on an ad hoc basis, and never in a systematic way. Even after an attack inside our own country--the 1993 bombing at the World Trade Center, in New York--there was a tendency to treat terrorist incidents as individual criminal acts, to be handled primarily through law enforcement. The man who perpetrated that attack in New York was tracked down, arrested, convicted and sent off to serve a 240-year sentence. Yet behind that one man was a growing network with operatives inside and outside the United States, waging war against our country.

For us, that war started on 9/11. For them, it started years before. After the World Trade Center attack in 1993 came the murders at the Saudi Arabia National Guard Training Center in Riyadh, in 1995; the simultaneous bombings of American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, in 1998; the attack on the USS Cole, in 2000. In 1996, Khalid Shaykh Muhammad--the mastermind of 9/11--first proposed to Osama bin Laden that they use hijacked airliners to attack targets in the U.S. During this period, thousands of terrorists were trained at al Qaeda camps in Afghanistan. And we have seen the work of terrorists in many attacks since 9/11--in Riyadh, Casablanca, Istanbul, Mombasa, Bali, Jakarta, Najaf, Baghdad and, most recently, Madrid.

Against this kind of determined, organized, ruthless enemy, America requires a new strategy--not merely to prosecute a series of crimes, but to fight and win a global campaign against the terror network. Our strategy has several key elements. We have strengthened our defenses here at home, organizing the government to protect the homeland. But a good defense is not enough. The terrorist enemy holds no territory, defends no population, is unconstrained by rules of warfare, and respects no law of morality. Such an enemy cannot be deterred, contained, appeased or negotiated with. It can only be destroyed--and that, ladies and gentlemen, is the business at hand.
We are dismantling the financial networks that have funded terror; we are going after the terrorists themselves wherever they plot and plan. Of those known to be directly involved in organizing the attacks of 9/11, most are now in custody or confirmed dead. The leadership of al Qaeda has sustained heavy losses, and they will sustain more.

America is also working closely with intelligence services all over the globe. The best intelligence is necessary--not just to win the war on terror, but also to stop the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. So we have enhanced our intelligence capabilities, in order to trace dangerous weapons activity. We have organized a proliferation security initiative, to interdict lethal materials and technologies in transit. We are aggressively pursuing another dangerous source of proliferation: black-market operatives who sell equipment and expertise related to weapons of mass destruction. The world recently learned of the network led by A.Q. Khan, the former head of Pakistan's nuclear weapons program. Khan and his associates sold nuclear technology and know-how to outlaw regimes around the world, including Iran and North Korea. Thanks to the tireless work of intelligence officers from the United States, the U.K., Pakistan, and other nations, the Khan network is now being dismantled piece by piece.

And we are applying the Bush doctrine: Any person or government that supports, protects, or harbors terrorists is complicit in the murder of the innocent, and will be held to account.

The first to see this application were the Taliban, who ruled Afghanistan by violence while turning that country into a training camp for terrorists. America and our coalition took down the regime in a matter of weeks because of our superior technology, the unmatched skill of our armed forces, and, above all, because we came not as conquerors but as liberators. The Taliban are gone from the scene. The terrorist camps are closed. And our coalition's work there continues--confronting terrorist remnants, training a new Afghan army, and providing security as the new government takes shape. Under President Karzai's leadership, and with a new constitution, the Afghan people are reclaiming their own country and building a nation that is secure, independent, and free.

In Iraq, we took another essential step in the war on terror. Before using force, we tried every possible option to address the threat from Saddam Hussein. Despite 12 years of diplomacy, more than a dozen U.N. Security Council resolutions, hundreds of U.N. weapons inspectors, thousands of flights to enforce the no-fly zones, and even strikes against military targets in Iraq--Saddam Hussein refused to comply with the terms of the 1991 Gulf War cease-fire. All of these measures failed. In October of 2002, the United States Congress voted overwhelmingly to authorize the use of force in Iraq. The next month, the U.N. Security Council passed a unanimous resolution finding Iraq in material breach of its obligations, and vowing serious consequences in the event Saddam Hussein did not fully and immediately comply. When Saddam failed even then to comply, President Bush gave an ultimatum to the dictator--to leave Iraq or be forcibly removed from power.
That ultimatum came one year ago today--twelve months in which Saddam went from palace, to bunker, to spider hole, to jail. A year ago, he was the all-powerful dictator of Iraq, controlling the lives and the future of almost 25 million people. Today, the people of Iraq know that the dictator and his sons will never torment them again. And we can be certain that they will never again threaten Iraq's neighbors or the United States of America.

From the beginning, America has sought--and received--international support for our operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. In the war on terror, we will always seek cooperation from our allies around the world. But as the president has made very clear, there is a difference between leading a coalition of many nations and submitting to the objections of a few. The United States will never seek a permission slip to defend the security of our country.

We still have work to do in Iraq, and we will see it through. Our forces are conducting swift, precision raids against the terrorists and regime holdouts who still remain. The thugs and assassins in Iraq are desperately trying to shake our will. Just this morning, they conducted a murderous attack on a hotel in Baghdad. Their goal is to prevent the rise of a democracy--but they will fail. Just last week, the Iraqi Governing Council approved a new fundamental law, an essential step toward building a free constitutional democracy in the heart of the Middle East. This great work is part of a forward strategy of freedom that we are pursuing throughout the greater Middle East. By helping nations to build the institutions of freedom, and turning the energies of men and women away from violence, we not only make that region more peaceful, we add to the security of our own region.

The recent bombing in Spain may well be evidence of how fearful the terrorists are of a free and democratic Iraq. But if the murderers of Madrid intended to undermine the transition to democracy in Iraq, they will ultimately fail. Our determination is unshakable. We will stand with the people of Iraq as they build a government based on democracy, tolerance and freedom.

Our steady course has not escaped the attention of the leaders in other countries. Three months ago, after initiating talks with America and Britain, and five days after the capture of Saddam Hussein, the leader of Libya voluntarily committed to disclose and dismantle all of his weapons of mass destruction programs. As we meet today, the dismantling of those programs is underway. I do not believe that Col. Gadhafi just happened to make this very wise decision after many years of pursuing secretive, intensive efforts to develop the world's most dangerous weapons. He was responding to the new realities of the world. Leaders elsewhere are learning that weapons of mass destruction do not bring influence, or prestige, or security--they only invite isolation, and carry other costs. In the post-9/11 world, the United States and our allies will not live at the mercy of terrorists or regimes that could arm them with chemical, biological, or nuclear weapons. By whatever means are necessary--whether diplomatic or military--we will act to protect the lives and security of the American people.

These past three years, as our country experienced war and national emergency, I have watched our commander in chief make the decisions and set the strategy. I have seen a man who is calm and deliberate--comfortable with responsibility--consistent in his objectives and resolute in his actions. These times have tested the character of our nation, and they have tested the character of our nation's leader. When he makes a commitment, there is no doubt he will follow through. As a result, America's friends know they can trust--and America's enemies know they can fear--the decisive leadership of President George W. Bush.
The president's conduct in leading America through a time of unprecedented danger--his ability to make decisions and stand by them--is a measure that must be applied to the candidate who now opposes him in the election of 2004.

In one of Sen. Kerry's recent observations about foreign policy, he informed his listeners that his ideas have gained strong support, at least among unnamed foreigners he's been spending time with. Sen. Kerry said that he has met with foreign leaders, and I quote, " who can't go out and say this publicly, but boy they look at you and say, 'You've got to win this, you've got to beat this guy, we need a new policy,' things like that.

A few days ago in Pennsylvania, a voter asked Sen. Kerry directly who these foreign leaders are. Sen. Kerry said, "That's none of your business. But it is our business when a candidate for president claims the political endorsement of foreign leaders. At the very least, we have a right to know what he is saying to foreign leaders that makes them so supportive of his candidacy. American voters are the ones charged with determining the outcome of this election--not unnamed foreign leaders.

Sen. Kerry's voting record on national security raises some important questions all by itself. Let's begin with the matter of how Iraq and Saddam Hussein should have been dealt with. Sen. Kerry was in the minority of senators who voted against the Persian Gulf War in 1991. At the time, he expressed the view that our international coalition consisted of "shadow battlefield allies who barely carry a burden." Last year, as we prepared to liberate Iraq, he recalled the Persian Gulf coalition a little differently. He said it was a "strong coalition," and a model to be followed.

Six years after the Gulf War, in 1997, Saddam Hussein was still defying the terms of the cease-fire. And as President Bill Clinton considered military action against Iraq, he found a true believer in John Kerry. The senator from Massachusetts said, "Should the resolve of our allies wane, the United States must not lose its resolve to take action." He further warned that if Saddam Hussein were not held to account for violation of U.N. resolutions, some future conflict would have " greater consequence." In 1998, Sen. Kerry indicated his support for regime change, with ground troops if necessary. And, of course, when Congress voted in October of 2002, Sen. Kerry voted to authorize military action if Saddam refused to comply with U.N. demands.

A neutral observer, looking at these elements of Sen. Kerry's record, would assume that Sen. Kerry supported military action against Saddam Hussein. The senator himself now tells us otherwise. In January he was asked on TV if he was, "one of the antiwar candidates." He replied, "I am." He now says he was voting only to "threaten the use of force," not actually to use force.

Even if we set aside these inconsistencies and changing rationales, at least this much is clear: Had the decision belonged to Sen. Kerry, Saddam Hussein would still be in power, today, in Iraq. In fact, Saddam Hussein would almost certainly still be in control of Kuwait.
Sen. Kerry speaks often about the need for international cooperation, and has vowed to usher in a "golden age of American diplomacy." He is fond of mentioning that some countries did not support America's actions in Iraq. Yet of the many nations that have joined our coalition--allies and friends of the United States--Sen. Kerry speaks with open contempt. Great Britain, Australia, Italy, Spain, Poland and more than 20 other nations have contributed and sacrificed for the freedom of the Iraqi people. Sen. Kerry calls these countries, quote, "window dressing." They are, in his words, "a coalition of the coerced and the bribed."

Many questions come to mind, but the first is this: How would Sen. Kerry describe Great Britain--coerced, or bribed? Or Italy--which recently lost 19 citizens, killed by terrorists in Najaf--was Italy's contribution just window dressing? If such dismissive terms are the vernacular of the golden age of diplomacy Sen. Kerry promises, we are left to wonder which nations would care to join any future coalition. He speaks as if only those who openly oppose America's objectives have a chance of earning his respect. Sen. Kerry's characterization of our good allies is ungrateful to nations that have withstood danger, hardship, and insult for standing with America in the cause of freedom.

Sen. Kerry has also had a few things to say about support for our troops now on the ground in Iraq. Among other criticisms, he has asserted that those troops are not receiving the materiel support they need. Just this morning, he again gave the example of body armor, which he said our administration failed to supply. May I remind the senator that last November, at the president's request, Congress passed an $87 billion supplemental appropriation. This legislation was essential to our ongoing operations in Iraq and Afghanistan--providing funding for body armor and other vital equipment; hazard pay; health benefits; ammunition; fuel, and spare parts for our military. The legislation passed overwhelmingly, with a vote in the Senate of 87-12. Sen. Kerry voted "no." I note that yesterday, attempting to clarify the matter, Sen. Kerry said, quote, "I actually did vote for the $87 billion before I voted against it." It's a true fact.

On national security, the senator has shown at least one measure of consistency. Over the years, he has repeatedly voted against weapons systems for the military. He voted against the Apache helicopter, against the Tomahawk cruise missile, against even the Bradley Fighting Vehicle. He has also been a reliable vote against military pay increases--opposing them no fewer than 12 times.

Many of these very weapons systems have been used by our forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, and are proving to be valuable assets in the war on terror. In his defense, of course, Sen. Kerry has questioned whether the war on terror is really a war at all. Recently he said, and I quote, "I don't want to use that terminology." In his view, opposing terrorism is far less of a military operation and far more of an intelligence-gathering, law enforcement operation. As we have seen, however, that approach was tried before, and proved entirely inadequate to protecting the American people from the terrorists who are quite certain they are at war with us--and are comfortable using that terminology.

I leave it for Sen. Kerry to explain, or explain away, his votes and his statements about the war on terror, our cause in Iraq, the allies who serve with us and the needs of our military. Whatever the explanation, whatever nuances he might fault us for neglecting, it is not an impressive record for someone who aspires to become commander in chief in this time of testing for our country. In his years in Washington, Sen. Kerry has been one vote of a hundred in the United States Senate--and fortunately on matters of national security, he was very often in the minority. But the presidency is an entirely different proposition. The president always casts the deciding vote. And the senator from Massachusetts has given us ample doubts about his judgment and the attitude he brings to bear on vital issues of national security.

The American people will have a clear choice in the election of 2004, at least as clear as any since the election of 1984. In more than three years as president, George W. Bush has built a national security record of his own. America has come to know the president after one of the worst days in our history. He saw America through tragedy. He has kept the nation's enemies in desperate flight, and under his leadership, our country has once again led the armies of liberation, freeing 50 million souls from tyranny, and making our nation and the world more secure.
All Americans, regardless of political party, can be proud of what our nation has achieved in this historic time, when so many depended on us, and all the world was watching. And I have been very proud to work with a president who--like other presidents we have known--has shown, in his own conduct, the optimism, and strength, and decency of the great nation he serves.

Mr. Cheney is vice president of the United States.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (553227)3/18/2004 12:06:57 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Kerry's Rising Star
"I say to you tonight: A new day is on the way," John Kerry told a crowd of cheering supporters last night in West Virginia. This is another example of Kerry's sophisticated, nuanced approach to the world, which makes him so popular among intellectuals and Frenchmen.

The brainy Massachusetts Democrat clearly has thought through what statisticians call the "sunrise problem." One can make estimates and issue pronouncements with high degrees of certainty, as the Rev. Thomas Bayes illustrated in his classic paper, "An Essay Towards Solving a Problem in the Doctrine of Chances." From the appendix by editor Richard Price (link in PDF, passage begins on page 18):

Let us imagine to ourselves the case of a person just brought forth into this world, and left to collect from his observations the order and course of events what powers an causes take place in it. The Sun would, probably, be the first object that would engage his attention; but after losing it the first night he would be entirely ignorant whether he should ever see it again. He would therefore be in the condition of a person making a first experiment about an event entirely unknown to him. But let him see a second appearance or one return of the Sun, and an expectation would be raised in him of a second return, and he might know that there was an odds of 3 to 1 for some probability of this. This odds would increase, as before represented, with the number of returns to which he was witness. But no finite number of returns would be sufficient to produce absolute or physical certainty.

The probability that one can "say to you tonight" that "a new day is on the way" is (x+1)/(y+2), where x is the number of observed sunrises and y is the number of days. Kerry was born on Dec. 11, 1943, and he announced his prediction of a new day 22,011 days later. Thus he spoke with 99.995457% certainty when he predicted that a new day was on the way--as indeed it turned out to be. (As we write, it's overcast where we are, but there's no doubt it's daytime.) With that level of confidence, even Kerry can take a clear position.

This is the kind of high-powered intellect John Kerry would bring to the White House. And President Bush? Well, as the New York Times sniffed in an editorial last September, "it is worrisome when one of the most incurious men ever to occupy the White House takes pains to insist that he gets his information on what the world is saying only in predigested bits from his appointees." Not like Kerry, who has carefully analyzed his personal observations of thousands of sunrises, including more than 100 in Vietnam.

Then again, Bush's supporters might counter that for their man, y>>1. Or, to put it in terms Joe Six-Pack can understand, he wasn't born yesterday.

Making Flippy Floppy
"I actually did vote for the $87 billion before I voted against it."--John Kerry on funding the efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan, quoted in the Boston Globe, March 17

If Only He'd Shut Up, He Could Get His Message Out
"Kerry Comment Detracts From Message"--headline, Associated Press, March 17

He Served Where?
John Kerry is promising to be a "veteran's veteran," according to a headline in USA Today. We're not quite sure what that means or what it has to do with being president, but we did learn one thing from the article: Kerry served in Vietnam. But USA Today buries its lead, not mentioning the Vietnam revelation until the seventh paragraph of the story. Isn't it just like the liberal media to try to downplay the Democrat's involvement in an unpopular war?

Meanwhile, blogger Steve Sturm doesn't believe Kerry's story, which we noted yesterday, about his pet dog in Vietnam. "One day as our swiftboat was heading up a river, a mine exploded hard under our boat," Kerry claimed. The crewmen discovered the mutt was "MIA," but it turned out to have been "catapulted from the deck of our boat and landed confused, but unhurt, on the deck of another boat in our patrol." Here's Sturm:

Kerry's boat was "heading up a river," which means the boat was moving. I assume Naval doctrine in those days called for ships to maintain a minimum distance from one another in order to minimize damage and casualties in the event one ship draws hostile fire, hits a mine, etc. How far away from Kerry's boat was this other boat--20 yards, 50 yards, 100 yards? Even if they weren't strictly adhering to doctrine, there ought to have been some separation; there's no reason I can think why one boat would be running upriver with another boat tied to its stern.

So, we have Kerry claiming that his ship hit a mine that generated enough explosive energy to propel this dog . . . some 40 yards or so through the air, without hurting the dog? Unlikely.

Now, what are the odds of the dog being catapulted from Kerry's moving boat and landing on another moving boat? It must have been the perfect combination of launch angle, distance, explosive force, trajectory and the like for that to have happened. I know for a fact that this is no easy thing to do: think how hard it is to win that silly carnival frog game--and that's from a stationary platform. Maybe this happens in the movies, but not in real life. Wait a minute, in the remake of Starsky & Hutch, they tried launching a car into the air trying to land it on a moving boat. They failed miserably. So, I take it back, it doesn't even happen in the movies.

And, Kerry's account refers only to "picking ourselves up" after the explosion. There's an explosion so forceful that it launches the dog into near earth orbit and all Kerry and his crew have to do is "pick themselves up"? Again, I'm no physics major, but wouldn't it reasonable to think that an explosion with that much force wouldn't have seriously damaged the boat? What about his crew--granted they're all likely to have been bigger than the dog, and perhaps better able to absorb the shock, but none of them were hurt, knocked out, knocked overboard?

Is this a case of the tale wagging the dog? Stay tuned.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (553227)3/18/2004 12:09:05 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769667
 
Wedge Issue
AllRecipes.com has a recipe for "Kerry's French Toast":

A French toast sandwich with a cream cheese and brown sugar center. . . . It can be cut into wedges and served at brunch. Can be served with syrup or jam, or eaten without either. Dust with powdered sugar for prettier presentation!

You can have it with syrup! Or jam! Or neither! Or both! If you don't like French toast, you can have waffles instead! Whatever it takes to beat Bush's Best All American Chili!



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (553227)3/18/2004 12:11:41 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769667
 
Lost in Space
It was supposed to be Dennis Kucinich's big day, but like so much in the Ohio Democrat's campaign, it fell short. Al Sharpton's withdrawal Monday finally gave Kucinich what he's been hoping for: a straight-up, two-man race between him and John Kerry. The Illinois primary was the first test, and, at the risk of sounding harsh, Kucinich fell well short.

Kerry finished first, as many pundits had predicted, with 71.8% of the vote. Rounding out the top five were John Edwards, who withdrew two weeks ago; Carol Moseley Braun, who dropped out two months ago (but is a favorite son in Illinois); Howard Dean, who's essentially been out of the race for a month; and Sharpton. Kucinich's sixth-place finish did put him ahead of Joe Lieberman and Wesley Clark, whoever they are.

For Kucinich, this is do-or-die time. If he doesn't start gathering some momentum, John Kerry will win the nomination, as sure as the sun rises in the east. The Hill reports that Kucinich is attempting to mimic Kerry's tactic of dodging congressional votes:

Rep. Dennis Kucinich, the Democratic presidential candidate who has made his opposition to the war in Iraq the mainstay of his quixotic campaign, plans to skip today's House vote honoring the bravery of the U.S. troops who liberated Iraq.

Instead, the Ohio lawmaker will tend to the more parochial needs of his district and will play host to Bush-appointed NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe in the hope of bringing 500 space jobs to the Cleveland area.

Who knows, maybe they'll find Kucinich delegates on Mars. Meanwhile, the House held that vote, and the resolution passed, 228-195. Every Democrat who voted save two--Louisiana's Rodney Alexander and Tennessee's Lincoln Davis--voted not to honor the bravery of the troops.

(Editor's note: We're told we erred in characterizing this as a vote on the resolution; in fact, it was a vote on the rules for considering the resolution, and such votes typically are along party lines. The House is to vote on the actual resolution tonight, and we'll have an update tomorrow.)



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (553227)3/18/2004 12:16:05 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769667
 
Will Europe Learn?
Last week terrorists struck in Spain, and the Spanish responded by electing a government of Socialist appeasers? But what if terrorists strike in France, a country so cowardly that its boldest antiterror measure to date has been a ban on school girls wearing Muslim headscarves? Reuters reports that a French newspaper has received a threat from an Islamist organization, apparently of Chechen origin, "to plunge France into terror and remorse and spill blood outside its frontiers."

In fairness to the Europeans, America wasn't fully awake to the dangers of Islamist terror until Sept. 11, 2001, and there are signs that reality may be setting in over there too. The Washington Post's Jefferson Morley has a roundup of Continental commentary:

"Only a dreamer would believe that Germany will not be attacked," say the editors of Bild, Germany's best-selling tabloid. "Islamic terrorists are waging a war against the West, not just against individual countries."

Sociologist Emilio Lamo de Espinosa says Europeans have been dreaming. Writing in Le Monde (in French), Lamo says Europeans have thought they would be spared because they haven't supported the Bush administration's policies.

"When the Americans declared war on terrorism, many of us thought they exaggerated. Many thought terrorism was not likely to occur on our premises, [inhabited by] peaceful and civilized Europeans who speak no evil of anybody, who dialogue, who are the first [to] send assistance and offer cooperation. We are pacifists, they are warmongers. . . . Don't we defend the Palestinians? Are we not pro-Arab and anti-Israeli?"

"Can we dialogue with those who desire only our death and nothing but our death?" Lamo asks. "Dialogue about what? The manner in which we will be assassinated?"

"The war against terrorism will be long and difficult," he concludes. "It was that cretin, President Bush, who said that."

German blogger David Kaspar has more, including this comment from Wolfgang Sofsky in the left-wing Frankfurter Rundschau:

The strategy of the terror war speculates not without good reason on the moral impotence of western Europe. The announcement of designated [Prime Minister] Zapatero that he will pull Spanish troops out of Iraq can be celebrated by the assassins as a (wohlfeilen) victory. Even if one would like to view the pull-out as justified by international law, it amounts to a capitulation in the present context that enjoys wide popularity.

Post-heroic societies have only very little with which they can fight terror. Their governments fear nothing more than the return home of dead soldiers. They are incapable of being offensive. In times of danger, they retreat within themselves. They can bear no losses, have no mission, indeed, not even a consciousness that they have something to defend. So they are easy to blackmail. A well-aimed bombing is enough to get them to retreat. And at some point, a credible threat is enough for them to submit to the will of a determined attacker.

On the other hand: CNN reports on a meeting between France's President Jacques Chirac and Germany's Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, at which the two trotted out the usual root-cause rationalizations:

Military force is not the only solution, Schroeder said. "One needs to look at the roots of it," including lack of development in the developing world.

Fox News quotes Chirac: "Let's be realistic: Together, we must also put an end to the conflict that breeds peoples' anger and frustration." What makes these people think appeasement is any more "realistic" an approach with al Qaeda than it was with the Nazis?

If the European left doesn't understand al Qaeda, it doesn't seem to understand America either, as evidenced by this e-mail blogress Virginia Postrel received from a France-based reader:

You cannot believe how many people in France do not believe me when I say that an attack on the US would favor Bush. They say, an attack by Al Qaeda would show that Dean is right, Bush lied, etc. And I go, HUH???!?

They think that an attack before the election would help Kerry win. The fact that so many bozos on the left in Europe think this, is probably a sign that Al Qaeda is gonna try real real hard to hit the US before November.

True, America has its appeasers and terrorist sympathizers. Today's San Francisco Chronicle has a letter (the third one) from one Vernon S. Burton of San Leandro, Calif.:

It was very encouraging to see how the people in Spain responded this past weekend to the devastating terrorist attack they suffered last week. Instead of whining about being innocent victims and listening to a lot of jingoistic nonsense, the people of Spain accepted that they were targeted because their leaders sided with the United States and the Israelis in the Middle East. Congratulations to the Spanish people for sending their misleaders packing. Too bad Americans aren't that smart.

But as Burton acknowledges, the typical American is far from "smart" enough to blame Jews and Americans when Islamists perpetrate mass murder.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (553227)3/18/2004 12:18:39 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769667
 
The Kerry Doctrine in Action
John Kerry, as we've noted before, thinks terrorism is primarily a "law enforcement" problem and not a war. NBC News suggests it was the Kerry Doctrine that gave us Sept. 11. In the fall of 2000, the network reports, CIA Predator planes spotted "a tall figure in flowing white robes" in Afghanistan. "Many intelligence analysts believed then and now it is [Osama] bin Laden."



A Democratic member of the 9/11 commission says there was a larger issue: The Clinton administration treated bin Laden as a law enforcement problem.

Bob [Kerrey], a former senator and current 9/11 commission member, said, "The most important thing the Clinton administration could have done would have been for the president, either himself or by going to Congress, asking for a congressional declaration to declare war on al-Qaida, a military-political organization that had declared war on us."

Alas, it took Sept. 11 to awaken the U.S. government. Now John Kerry wants to go back to the approach that served us so well--or at least seemed to, in the period that ended Sept. 10, 2001.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (553227)3/18/2004 12:20:55 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769667
 
The World's Smallest Violin
"Washington offended Libya with its display of the north African nation's dismantled nuclear weapons, an official close to the United Nations nuclear watchdog said on Tuesday," Reuters reports:

"Libya was quite unhappy with this dog-and-pony show because it hurts them domestically (and) in the Arab world," said the senior official close to the U.N. watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency.

"It looks like unilateral U.S. disarmament of Libya and Libya wants it recognized as disarmament under the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and IAEA auspices," the Vienna-based official added.

Well, boo hoo. The U.N. has no business claiming credit for destroying Libya's weapons of mass destruction, which America found by liberating Iraq.

What'll They Do Next, Pull the Wings Off Flies?
"Caterpillar Targeted in Memory of Rachel Corrie"--headline, IndyMedia.org.uk, March 16



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (553227)3/18/2004 5:39:17 PM
From: GROUND ZERO™  Respond to of 769667
 
I am so glad you brought that up... the market topped out in March, 2000, during clinton's watch, when the Recession began... these markets have rallied significantly over the past year while the economy improved after the Bush tax reimbursement... don't you think a little correction here is over due? You're not being honest, and everyone can see it... a shame on you if that's the best you can muster on behalf of flipflop kerry...<g>

GZ