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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (9306)10/10/2004 2:16:58 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
Voters' choice is clear: John Kerry for president


Sunday, October 10, 2004

SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER EDITORIAL BOARD

John Kerry should be the next president of the United
States. This endorsement is based not only on President
Bush's failings -- which are manifest -- but also on the
conclusion that Kerry can succeed where Bush has failed.

It's a conclusion built on a series of editorials offering an
"election framework" in which to judge Bush's record and
Kerry's potential for success.

Security: Three years after the horrors of 9/11, our
domestic defenses against terrorist attack remain
unconscionably weak, our international standing
demeaned by an unnecessary war. With the definitive
report debunking the weapons of mass destruction
allegations, the Iraq invasion is utterly exposed as the
"colossal error of judgment" Kerry described. It is Bush's
most profound failing, causing unnecessary bloodshed and
suffering, distracting our passion and resources from the
pursuit of those who attacked us.

There is no walking away from the war, but any hope for
success in Iraq lies in convincing the nations of the world to
share the burden of resolving our blunder. Kerry can
succeed at what Bush has refused to attempt.

The economy: The administration has managed the
federal treasury on a course that cannot be sustained.
Some federal spending was unplanned and unpredictable,
such as security costs after 9/11 or the war in Afghanistan.
But other spending was a matter of political choice. Then
there's the politics of tax cuts. Friday's tepid job growth
report underscored the modest hiring pace that dogs
Bush's claims of sound economic recovery.

Team Bush has been in place for nearly four years, with a
clear focus on more tax cuts. Team Kerry probably would
include the return of the welcome fiscal style of the Clinton
era and its economic team, Robert Rubin, Roger Altman or
Laura Tyson.

The environment: Bush came into office promising respect
for the environment, controls on global warming gases and
serious attention to science. In practice, he has proved
more divider than uniter. Energy proposals, conceived in
extraordinary secrecy with industry lobbyists, have led to a
stalled bill whose blatant sops to the oil, gas and nuclear
industries many Republicans can't support.

Kerry promises new environmental efforts for national
forests, clean water and clean air, including aggressive
action on acid rain, mercury emissions and global warming.
In the Pacific Northwest, the overall effect likely would be
more attention to ocean policy, salmon and forest
protection.

The nuclear peril: The 9/11 commission reported that
Osama bin Laden has been trying to make or acquire a
nuclear weapon, with the intent of creating a new
Hiroshima as a "religious obligation." A Harvard study says
the Bush administration effort to keep nuclear materials
out of the hands of terrorists "is more in line with the 0.5
percent growth rate the administration wants for
discretionary funding not related to defense and homeland
security."

Kerry shows a more legitimate grasp of the frightening
dimension of the rogue nuclear threat and offers a more
effective diplomatic portfolio for generating international
cooperation.

Civil liberties: The Bush administration is tipping the
balance away from civil liberties. Three Supreme Court
justices may retire in the next four years. Bush names
Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas as his judicial models.

The next generation of jurisprudence will be better served
by Kerry's intent to nominate justices "with a record of
respect" for constitutional rights, including a woman's right
to choose.

George W. Bush has failed America on the economy, civil
liberties, the environment, nuclear proliferation and, most
unforgivable, on national security by leading us into a
demonstrably unnecessary war in Iraq that has distracted
our attention from and diminished our capability to fight a
comprehensive global war on terror.

Kerry is intellectually and ideologically equipped to
succeed where Bush has failed. The obvious prospects for
that success lie in his military, congressional and
international experience, his superior intellectual curiosity
and willingness to consider dissenting opinions, his
commitment to protecting the civil liberties of all Americans
and his potential to surround himself with a broad coalition
of competent Cabinet members, staff and advisers.



To: Mephisto who wrote (9306)10/17/2004 10:11:20 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 

John Kerry for President

Editorial
The New York Times

October 17, 2004

Senator John Kerry goes toward the election
with a base that is built more on opposition
to George W. Bush than loyalty to his own
candidacy. But over the last year we have
come to know Mr. Kerry as more than just
an alternative to the status quo. We like
what we've seen. He has qualities that could
be the basis for a great chief executive,
not just a modest improvement on the incumbent.

We have been impressed with Mr. Kerry's wide
knowledge and clear thinking - something
that became more apparent once he was reined in
by that two-minute debate light. He is blessedly
willing to re-evaluate decisions when conditions
change. And while Mr. Kerry's service in
Vietnam was first over-promoted and then
over-pilloried, his entire life has been
devoted to public service, from the war
to a series of elected offices. He strikes us,
above all, as a man with a strong moral core.


There is no denying that this race is mainly
about Mr. Bush's disastrous tenure.
Nearly
four years ago, after the Supreme Court awarded
him the presidency, Mr. Bush came into office
amid popular expectation that he would acknowledge
his lack of a mandate by sticking close
to the center. Instead, he turned the government
over to the radical right.

Mr. Bush installed John Ashcroft, a
favorite of the far right with a history of
insensitivity to civil liberties, as attorney
general. He sent the Senate one ideological,
activist judicial nominee after another.
He moved quickly to implement a far-reaching
anti-choice agenda including
censorship of government Web sites and a
clampdown on embryonic stem cell research.
He threw the government's weight against efforts by
the University of Michigan to give minority
students an edge in admission, as it did for
students from rural areas or the offspring of alumni.

When the nation fell into recession, the president
remained fixated not on generating jobs but rather
on fighting the right wing's war
against taxing the wealthy.
As a result,
money that could have been used to strengthen
Social Security evaporated, as did the chance to
provide adequate funding for programs the
president himself had backed. No Child
Left Behind,
his signature domestic
program, imposed higher standards on local
school systems without providing enough
money to meet them.

If Mr. Bush had wanted to make a mark on
an issue on which Republicans and Democrats
have long made common cause, he could have
picked the environment. Christie Whitman,
the former New Jersey governor chosen to run
the Environmental Protection Agency, came from
that bipartisan tradition. Yet she left
after three years of futile struggle against
the ideologues and industry lobbyists Mr. Bush and Vice
President Dick Cheney had installed in every
other important environmental post. The result
has been a systematic weakening of regulatory
safeguards across the entire spectrum of
environmental issues, from clean air to wilderness
protection.



The president who lost the popular vote got
a real mandate on Sept. 11, 2001. With the
grieving country united behind him, Mr. Bush had
an unparalleled opportunity to ask for almost
any shared sacrifice. The only limit was his
imagination.

He asked for another tax cut and the war
against Iraq.

The president's refusal to drop his tax-cutting
agenda when the nation was gearing up for war
is perhaps the most shocking example of his
inability to change his priorities in the face
of drastically altered circumstances. Mr. Bush
did not just starve the government of the money it
needed for his own education initiative or the
Medicare drug bill. He also made tax cuts a
higher priority than doing what was needed for
America's security; 90 percent of the cargo
unloaded every day in the nation's ports still goes uninspected.


Along with the invasion of Afghanistan, which had near unanimous international and domestic support,
Mr. Bush and his attorney general put in place
a strategy for a domestic antiterror war that had all the hallmarks of the administration's normal method of doing business: a Nixonian obsession with secrecy,
disrespect for civil liberties and inept management.

American citizens were detained for long periods
without access to lawyers or family members.

Immigrants were rounded up and forced to
languish in what the Justice Department's
own inspector general found were often "unduly harsh" conditions. Men captured in the Afghan
war were held incommunicado with no right
to challenge their confinement. The Justice
Department became a cheerleader for skirting
decades-old international laws and treaties forbidding the brutal treatment of prisoners taken during wartime.

Mr. Ashcroft
appeared on TV time and
again to announce sensational arrests of
people who turned out to be either innocent,
harmless braggarts or extremely low-level
sympathizers of Osama bin Laden who, while
perhaps wishing to do something terrible,
lacked the means. The Justice Department
cannot claim one major successful terrorism
prosecution, and has squandered much of the
trust and patience the American people freely
gave in 2001. Other nations, perceiving that
the vast bulk of the prisoners held for so
long at Guantánamo Bay came from the same line
of ineffectual incompetents or unlucky innocents,
and seeing the awful photographs from the
Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad, were shocked
that the nation that was supposed to be setting
the world standard for human rights could
behave that way.


Like the tax cuts, Mr. Bush's obsession with
Saddam Hussein seemed closer to zealotry than
mere policy.
He sold the war to the American
people, and to Congress, as an antiterrorist
campaign even though Iraq had no known working
relationship with Al Qaeda. His most
frightening allegation was that Saddam Hussein
was close to getting nuclear weapons. It was
based on two pieces of evidence. One was a
story about attempts to purchase critical
materials from Niger, and it was the product
of rumor and forgery. The other evidence,
the purchase of aluminum tubes that the
administration said were meant for a nuclear
centrifuge, was concocted by one low-level
analyst and had been thoroughly debunked
by administration investigators and international
vetting. Top members of the administration knew
this, but the selling went on anyway. None
of the president's chief advisers have ever been held accountable for their misrepresentations to the American
people or for their mismanagement of the war that followed.

The international outrage over the American
invasion is now joined by a sense of disdain for the incompetence of the effort.
Moderate Arab
leaders who have attempted to introduce a modicum
of democracy are tainted by their connection to an administration that is now radioactive in the
Muslim world. Heads of rogue states, including
Iran and North Korea, have been taught decisively
that the best protection against a pre-emptive
American strike is to acquire nuclear weapons
themselves.


We have specific fears about what would happen
in a second Bush term, particularly regarding
the Supreme Court. The record so far gives
us plenty of cause for worry. Thanks to Mr. Bush,
Jay Bybee, the author of an infamous Justice
Department memo justifying the use of
torture as an interrogation technique,
is now a federal appeals court judge.
Another Bush selection, J. Leon Holmes,
a federal judge in Arkansas, has written
that wives must be subordinate to their husbands
and compared abortion rights activists to Nazis.


Mr. Bush remains enamored of tax cuts but
he has never stopped Republican lawmakers
from passing massive spending, even for projects
he dislikes, like increased farm aid.

If he wins re-election, domestic and foreign
financial markets will know the fiscal
recklessness will continue.
Along with
record trade imbalances, that increases the
chances of a financial crisis, like an uncontrolled
decline of the dollar, and higher long-term
interest rates.

The Bush White House has always given us the
worst aspects of the American right without any of the advantages.
We get the radical goals
but not the efficient management. The Department
of Education's handling of the No Child Left
Behind Act has been heavily politicized and
inept. The Department of Homeland Security
is famous for its useless alerts and its inability to distribute antiterrorism aid according to
actual threats. Without providing enough troops
to properly secure Iraq, the administration
has managed to so strain the resources of our
armed forces that the nation is unprepared
to respond to a crisis anywhere else in the world.

o

Mr. Kerry has the capacity to do far, far
better.
He has a willingness - sorely missing
in Washington these days - to reach across the aisle.
We are relieved that he is a strong defender
of civil rights, that he would remove unnecessary
restrictions on stem cell research and that he
understands the concept of separation of church
and state. We appreciate his sensible plan
to provide health coverage for most of the people
who currently do without.

Mr. Kerry has an aggressive and in some cases
innovative package of ideas about energy, aimed
at addressing global warming and oil
dependency.
He is a longtime advocate
of deficit reduction. In the Senate, he worked
with John McCain in restoring relations between the
United States and Vietnam, and led investigations
of the way the international financial system
has been gamed to permit the laundering of
drug and terror money. He has always understood
that America's appropriate role in world affairs
is as leader of a willing community of
nations, not in my-way-or-the-highway domination.

We look back on the past four years with hearts
nearly breaking, both for the lives unnecessarily
lost and for the opportunities so casually
wasted. Time and again, history invited
George W. Bush to play a heroic role,
and time and again he chose the wrong course.
We believe that with John Kerry as president,
the nation will do better.

Voting for president is a leap of faith.
A candidate can explain his positions in minute
detail and wind up governing with a hostile Congress
that refuses to let him deliver. A disaster
can upend the best-laid plans. All citizens
can do is mix guesswork and hope, examining what the
candidates have done in the past, their apparent
priorities and their general character.
It's on those three grounds that we enthusiastically
endorse John Kerry for president.


Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company
nytimes.com



To: Mephisto who wrote (9306)10/25/2004 7:57:29 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
Kerry for President

The Washington Post
Sunday, October 24, 2004; Page B06

EXPERTS TELL US that most voters have had no difficulty making up their minds in this year's presidential election. Half the nation is passionately for George W. Bush, the pollsters say, and half passionately for John F. Kerry -- or, at least, passionately against Mr. Bush. We have not been able to share in this passion, nor in the certainty. As readers of this page know, we find much to criticize in Mr. Bush's term but also more than a few things to admire. We find much to admire in Mr. Kerry's life of service, knowledge of the world and positions on a range of issues -- but also some things that give us pause. On balance, though, we believe Mr. Kerry, with his promise of resoluteness tempered by wisdom and open-mindedness, has staked a stronger claim on the nation's trust to lead for the next four years.

The balancing process begins, as reelection campaigns must, with the incumbent. His record, particularly in foreign affairs, can't be judged with a simple aye or nay. President Bush rallied the nation after Sept. 11, 2001, and reshaped his own world view. His commitment to a long-term struggle to promote freedom in the Arab world reflects an understanding of the deep threat posed by radical Islamic fundamentalism. His actions have not always matched his stirring rhetoric on the subject, and setbacks to democracy in other parts of the world (notably Russia) appear not to have troubled him much.

But Mr. Bush has accomplished more than his critics acknowledge, both in the practical business of forming alliances to track terrorists and in beginning to reshape a Middle East policy too long centered on accommodating friendly dictators. He has promised the large increases in foreign aid, to help poor nations cope with AIDS and for other purposes, that we believe are essential.

The campaign that Mr. Bush led to oust the Taliban from Afghanistan seems easy and obvious in retrospect, but at the time many people warned of imminent quagmire. Mr. Bush wasted valuable time with his initial determination to avoid nation-building after Kabul fell and his drawdown of U.S. forces. But even so, Afghanistan today is far from the failure that Mr. Kerry portrays. Afghans and U.S. security alike are better off thanks to the intervention.

In Iraq, we do not fault Mr. Bush for believing, as President Clinton before him believed, that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction. We supported the war and believed that the Iraqi dictator posed a challenge that had to be faced; we continue to believe that the U.S. mission to promote a representative government in Iraq has a chance to leave the United States safer and the Iraqis far better off than they were under their murderous dictator.

We do, however, fault Mr. Bush for exaggerating to the public the intelligence given him privately and for alienating allies unnecessarily. Above all, we fault him for ignoring advice to better prepare for postwar reconstruction. The damage caused by that willful indifference is incalculable. There is no guarantee that Iraq would be more peaceful today if U.S. forces had prevented postwar looting, secured arms depots, welcomed international involvement and transferred authority to Iraqis more quickly. But the chances of success would have been higher. Yet the administration repeatedly rebuffed advice to commit sufficient troops. Its disregard for the Geneva Conventions led to a prison-torture scandal in both Iraq and Afghanistan that has diminished for years, if not decades, the United States' image and influence abroad. In much of the world, in fact, U.S. prestige is at a historic low, partly because of the president's high-handed approach to allies on issues ranging far beyond Iraq.

These failings have a common source in Mr. Bush's
cocksureness, his failure to seek advice from
anyone outside a narrow circle and his unwillingness
to expect the unexpected or adapt to new facts.
These are dangerous traits in any president but
especially in a wartime leader. They are matched
by his failure to admit his errors or to hold senior
officials accountable for theirs.


ON THE DOMESTIC side, Mr. Bush and his Republican allies in the House have governed as heavy-handed partisans. We applaud Mr. Bush's campaign to promote accountability in elementary and secondary schools, and some of his other ideas may sound attractive as well: a degree of privatization to give people more control over their retirement funds, individual health accounts that might better match the mobile 21st-century world of work, market incentives to reduce pollution. But he has failed to do the hard work to turn such ideas from slogans into fair and balanced programs, and he has never said how he would pay for them, as in the case of Social Security private accounts.

Which brings us to his reckless fiscal policy. Mr. Bush inherited a budget in surplus but facing strains in the long run as retiring baby boomers intensify their claims on the nation's resources for pensions and health care. A recession that was gathering as he took office, and the economic blow delivered by the Sept. 11 attacks, would have turned surplus into deficit under the best of circumstances.

But Mr. Bush aggravated those circumstances and drove the deficit to record levels with tax cuts that were inefficient in providing economic stimulus and that were tilted toward the wealthy. Despite the drains on the Treasury from the war in Iraq, he insisted that all the cuts be made permanent; no one, no matter how rich, was asked to sacrifice. Mr. Bush's rationales have shifted, but his prescription -- tax cuts -- has remained constant, no matter what the cost to future generations. The resulting fiscal deficit has dragged down the national savings rate, leaving the country dependent upon foreigners for capital in an unsustainable way. Mr. Bush says the answer lies in spending discipline, but he has shown none himself; see, for example, the disgusting farm subsidies he signed into law.

In 2000, Mr. Bush justifiably criticized his predecessor for failing to deal with the looming problems of Social Security and Medicare. In office, though, he has been equally delinquent, even as the day of reckoning drew closer. He championed a huge new entitlement for Medicare without insisting on the cost-cutting reforms that everyone knows are needed.

SO MR. BUSH HAS not earned a second term.
But there is a second question: Has the challenger
made his case? Here's why we say yes.


Mr. Kerry, like Mr. Bush, offers no plan to cope with retirement and health costs, but he promises more fiscal realism. He sensibly proposes to reverse Mr. Bush's tax cuts on the wealthiest and pledges to scale back his own spending proposals if funds don't suffice. He would seek to restore budget discipline rules that helped get deficits under control in the 1990s.

On many other issues, Mr. Kerry has the better approach. He has a workable plan to provide health insurance to more Americans; the 45 million uninsured represent a shameful abdication that appears not to have concerned Mr. Bush one whit. Where Mr. Bush ignored the dangers of climate change and favored industry at the expense of clean air and water, Mr. Kerry is a longtime and thoughtful champion of environmental protection. Mr. Bush played politics with the Constitution, as Mr. Kerry would not, by endorsing an amendment to ban gay marriage. Mr. Kerry has pledged to follow the Geneva Conventions abroad and respect civil liberties at home. A Kerry judiciary -- and the next president is likely to make a significant mark on the Supreme Court -- would be more hospitable to civil rights, abortion rights and the right to privacy.

None of these issues would bring us to vote for Mr. Kerry if he were less likely than Mr. Bush to keep the nation safe. But we believe the challenger is well equipped to guide the country in a time of danger. Mr. Kerry brings a résumé that unarguably has prepared him for high office. He understood early on the dangers of non-state actors such as al Qaeda. To pave the way for restored relations with Vietnam in the 1990s, he took on the thankless and politically risky task of convincing relatives that no American prisoners remained in Southeast Asia. While he wrongly opposed the first Persian Gulf War, he supported the use of American force in Bosnia and Kosovo.

As with Mr. Bush, some of Mr. Kerry's strengths strike us as potential weaknesses. The senator is far more likely than Mr. Bush to seek a range of opinions before making a decision -- but is he decisive enough? He understands the importance of allies and of burnishing America's image -- but would he be too reluctant to give offense? His Senate record suggests an understanding of the importance of open markets, but during the campaign he has retreated to protectionist rhetoric that is troubling in its own right and as a possible indicator of inconstancy.

We have been dismayed most of all by Mr. Kerry's zigzags on Iraq, such as his swervings on whether Saddam Hussein presented a threat. As Mr. Bush charges, Mr. Kerry's description of the war as a "diversion" does not inspire confidence in his determination to see it through. But Mr. Kerry has repeatedly pledged not to cut and run from Iraq, and we believe a Kerry administration would be better able to tackle the formidable nation-building tasks that remain there. Mr. Kerry echoes the Bush goals of an elected Iraqi government and a well-trained Iraqi force to defend it but argues that he could implement the strategy more effectively.

Mr. Kerry understands that the biggest threat to U.S. security comes from terrorists wielding nuclear or biological weapons. He pledges to add two divisions to the U.S. Army; try harder to secure nuclear weapons and materials around the world, and improve U.S. preparations for a bioterrorism attack. There is no way to know whether he would be more successful than Mr. Bush in slowing North Korea's and Iran's march toward becoming nuclear-armed states, but he attaches the right priority to both problems. He is correct that those challenges, like the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, call for the kind of sustained diplomacy that has been missing for four years. We hope he would be firmer than Mr. Bush in standing up to the genocide unfolding in Sudan.

We do not view a vote for Mr. Kerry as a vote without risks. But the risks on the other side are well known, and the strengths Mr. Kerry brings are considerable. He pledges both to fight in Iraq and to reach out to allies; to hunt down terrorists, and to engage without arrogance the Islamic world. These are the right goals, and we think Mr. Kerry is the better bet to achieve them.