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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wharf Rat who wrote (44207)4/29/2004 11:44:30 AM
From: longnshort  Respond to of 89467
 
I've got a Maine Coon, great cat. Better behaved then my Labs



To: Wharf Rat who wrote (44207)4/29/2004 12:55:37 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 89467
 
Guns and Peanut Butter

April 29, 2004
By MAUREEN DOWD
So let's see. What's our swell choice here?

A guy who mimed being a fighter pilot on a carrier versus
a guy who mimed throwing his medals over a fence?

An incumbent who sticks with the wrong decisions based on
the wrong facts versus a challenger who seems unable to
stick to one side of any decision, right or wrong?

A Republican who's a world-class optimist, despite making
the world more dangerous and virulently anti-American,
versus a Democrat who looks like a world-weary loner, even
as he pledges to make the world safer and more
pro-American?

A president who can't go anywhere without his vice
president to give him the answers versus a candidate who
can't go anywhere without his campaign butler/buddy to give
him peanut butter and jelly sandwiches?

Bush campaign strategists don't seem worried that every
positive development the administration predicted would
happen if we invaded Iraq has soured into the opposite.

As an article on Monday in The Times noted about the
growing ranks of angry Muslims: "The call to jihad is
rising in the streets of Europe, and is being answered."

Communing with the Higher Father and the Almighty,
President Bush has either stumbled into a Holy War or
swaggered into one.

In their new book, "The Bushes," Peter and Rochelle
Schweizer, who interviewed many Bushes, including the
president's father and his brother Jeb, quote one unnamed
relative as saying that W. sees the war on terror "as a
religious war": "He doesn't have a P.C. view of this war.
His view of this is that they are trying to kill the
Christians. And we the Christians will strike back with
more force and more ferocity than they will ever know."

Bush strategists seem to believe that the worse Mr. Bush
makes things, the better off he is, because nervous
Americans will cling to the obstinate president they know
over the vacillating challenger they don't know.

Senator Kerry's talent for turning a winning proposition
into a losing one is disturbingly reminiscent of Al Gore,
who somehow managed to lose an election he won. So is Mr.
Kerry's sometimes supercilious manner, and his habit of
exacerbating a small thing with an answer that is not quite
straight.

When the senator was asked last week whether he owned a
gas-scarfing Chevy Suburban S.U.V., he replied, "I don't
own an S.U.V.," only to have to admit, when pressed further
by reporters, that his wife owns the S.U.V. "The family has
it," he said lamely. "I don't have it."

The White House pounds Mr. Kerry for not playing straight
on small-bore stuff, even as they don't play straight on
huge-bore stuff.

The House Democratic leader, Nancy Pelosi, pronounced the
administration "in denial" yesterday, after hearing Condi
Rice's briefing for House Democratic lawmakers.

"This is an administration that told us that our troops
would be welcomed with roses," Representative Pelosi said.
"Instead, it's rocket-propelled grenades. This is an
administration that told us that the Iraqi government would
be able to pay for its own reconstruction, and soon. And
now it's costing nearly $200 billion to the American
people."

She added: "And it was expressed by the national security
adviser now that yes, there was disappointment -
disappointment? - about the Iraqi security forces not being
able to secure the region that they were assigned to. And
this is the judgment that the American people have placed
their confidence in?"

Mr. Kerry errs on the side of giving the answer he thinks
people want to hear, even as Mr. Bush errs on the side of
giving the answer he expects people to accept as true.

When the president was asked yesterday by a reporter
whether it would take an all-out military offensive to put
down the violence in Falluja, and whether this would impede
the transfer of power on June 30, he was reassuring,
despite news of the aerial bombardment of Falluja by U.S.
gunships and the 70-ton battle tanks being rushed in to aid
marines in the escalating fight.

"Most of Falluja is returning to normal," the president
said, presumably defining normal as flattened.

Anyway, is that 10 minutes to normal, as Karen Hughes would
say? Or 10 years to normal? And what on earth is normal,
when you're talking about Iraq chaos theory?

nytimes.com