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Politics : John Kerry for President? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: American Spirit who wrote (2999)10/24/2004 8:03:30 PM
From: PROLIFE  Respond to of 3515
 
John Kerry's Life Of Wasted Opportunities!

Unlike the average American, John Forbes Kerry was born into a family of wealth and privilege. His mother Rosemary Forbes, was a French national, and heiress to the Forbes family fortune. Her father James Grant Forbes was born in Shanghai, China. Family members, including her father were leading opium dealers in China during the Opium War accumulating a considerable fortune.

With support of the Forbes wealth John Kerry had the opportunity of the finest education being trained at boarding schools in Switzerland and Massachusetts, including the prestigious St. Paul school in New Hampshire. He relished the advantages of wealth spending his summers in Europe, especially the posh Forbes estate in France. After preparatory school the Forbes wealth enabled John Kerry to attend Yale University.

Then John Kerry went to Vietnam to, in his words, serve his country, though only after being turned down for a requested deferment. He had the opportunity to become a respected leader and though he gained recognition with heroic decorations he was the only Swift sailor ever to leave Vietnam without completing the standard one-year tour of duty, other than those who were seriously wounded or killed. His departure was described as reassignment following the receipt of three (questionable) Purple Hearts under Naval regulations. However the Officer- in –Charge Thomas Wright states that he requested Kerry be removed from his boat group because he had trouble getting Kerry to follow orders. Thousands of true Vietnam heroes not only fulfilled their year assignments, but also signed up two or more tours.

On return from Vietnam Kerry had the opportunity to use his hero status to foster an end to the war, but he chose to denigrate his fellow soldiers with false claims probably extending the war with additional deaths and continued persecution of POW’s.

Married in 1970, John Kerry and his wife Julia had two daughters. He had the opportunity to be a devoted husband and father. However, when Julia was suffering from severe depression and suicidal John decided that she stood in the way of his political ambitions and he moved out. Then when he married Theresa he petitioned the church to have his 18-year marriage annulled as if it never existed and the children illegitimate.

Elected to the Senate in 1984 John Kerry had the opportunity to introduce and fight for legislation to benefit the people of Massachusetts and the nation. Yet after 20 years he can only point to 11 bills that became law and carry his name. How significant was this legislative effort. He can only claim action on bills to:
Grant a visa and admission to Kil Joon Yu Callahan. (1987)
To make the week of Oct. 22 – Oct. 28, 1989 “World Population Awareness Week.” (1989)
Fund the National Sea Grant College Program, (1991)
To renew “World Population Awareness Week” for 1991, (1991)
To make Nov. 13, 1992 “Vietnam Veterans Memorial 10th Anniversary Day.” (1992)
To make Sept. 18, 1992 “National POW/MIA Recognition Day." (1992)
Name a federal building in Waltham, Massachusetts (1994)
A save-the-dolphins measure (1994)
Provide grants to woman-owned small businesses (1999)
Award a congressional gold medal to Jackie Robinson (2003)
Increase the maximum research grants for small businesses (2001)
In 1991 John Kerry, a decorated veteran, had the opportunity to resolve the fate of POW’s and Mia’s in Vietnam as Chairman of the Senate Select Committee on P.O.W./ M.I.A. Affair’s. Yet reports are that he carried out a subterfuge shredding documents, suppressing testimony, and sanitizing the committee's final report in an effort to normalize relations with Vietnam.

And, finally as a dedicated man of the Middle Class, John Kerry had the opportunity to improve their lives over the past 20 years. Yet he voted a total of 22 times not to reduce the marriage penalty. He voted 18 times against expanding the child tax credit, and a total of 350 times he voted to increase the taxes or to keep taxes from being reduced on the Middle Class.

Given a life of privilege John Kerry could have used this opportunity to improve the lives of those less fortunate in this country and around the world. However, driven more by ego than personal sacrifice John Kerry has wasted this life of opportunity.

Michael Ashbury

Michael Ashbury, a noted researcher and author, is the author of ''Who is the REAL John Kerry?'' (Booksurge.com 2004). His website is at www.whoistherealjohnkerry.com.



To: American Spirit who wrote (2999)10/25/2004 6:53:50 AM
From: tonto  Respond to of 3515
 
Wrong. Kerry gave up the fight a s soon as possible and ditched Nam and the fighting.



To: American Spirit who wrote (2999)10/25/2004 8:43:25 AM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3515
 
Security Council members deny meeting Kerry
By Joel Mowbray
SPECIAL TO THE WASHINGTON TIMES

U.N. ambassadors from several nations are disputing assertions by Democratic presidential candidate Sen. John Kerry that he met for hours with all members of the U.N. Security Council just a week before voting in October 2002 to authorize the use of force in Iraq.
An investigation by The Washington Times reveals that while the candidate did talk for an unspecified period to at least a few members of the panel, no such meeting, as described by Mr. Kerry on a number of occasions over the past year, ever occurred.

At the second presidential debate earlier this month, Mr. Kerry said he was more attuned to international concerns on Iraq than President Bush, citing his meeting with the entire Security Council.
"This president hasn't listened. I went to meet with the members of the Security Council in the week before we voted. I went to New York. I talked to all of them, to find out how serious they were about really holding Saddam Hussein accountable," Mr. Kerry said of the Iraqi dictator.
Speaking before the Council on Foreign Relations in New York in December 2003, Mr. Kerry explained that he understood the "real readiness" of the United Nations to "take this seriously" because he met "with the entire Security Council, and we spent a couple of hours talking about what they saw as the path to a united front in order to be able to deal with Saddam Hussein."
But of the five ambassadors on the Security Council in 2002 who were reached directly for comment, four said they had never met Mr. Kerry. The four also said that no one who worked for their countries' U.N. missions had met with Mr. Kerry either.
The former ambassadors who said on the record they had never met Mr. Kerry included the representatives of Mexico, Colombia and Bulgaria. The ambassador of a fourth country gave a similar account on the condition that his country not be identified.
Ambassador Andres Franco, the permanent deputy representative from Colombia during its Security Council membership from 2001 to 2002, said, "I never heard of anything."
Although Mr. Franco was quick to note that Mr. Kerry could have met some members of the panel, he also said that "everything can be heard in the corridors."
Adolfo Aguilar Zinser, Mexico's then-ambassador to the United Nations, said: "There was no meeting with John Kerry before Resolution 1441, or at least not in my memory."
All had vivid recollections of the time frame when Mr. Kerry traveled to New York, as it was shortly before the Nov. 7, 2002, enactment of Resolution 1441, which said Iraq was in "material breach" of earlier disarmament resolutions and warned Baghdad of "serious consequences as a result of its continued violations."
Stefan Tafrov, Bulgaria's ambassador at the time, said he remembers the period well because it "was a very contentious time."
After conversations with ambassadors from five members of the Security Council in 2002 and calls to all the missions of the countries then on the panel, The Times was only able to confirm directly that Mr. Kerry had met with representatives of France, Singapore and Cameroon.
In addition, second-hand accounts have Mr. Kerry meeting with representatives of Britain.
When reached for comment last week, an official with the Kerry campaign stood by the candidate's previous claims that he had met with the entire Security Council.
But after being told late yesterday of the results of The Times investigation, the Kerry campaign issued a statement that read in part, "It was a closed meeting and a private discussion."
A Kerry aide refused to identify who participated in the meeting.
The statement did not repeat Mr. Kerry's claims of a lengthy meeting with the entire 15-member Security Council, instead saying the candidate "met with a group of representatives of countries sitting on the Security Council."

Asked whether the international body had any records of Mr. Kerry sitting down with the whole council, a U.N. spokesman said that "our office does not have any record of this meeting."
A U.S. official with intimate knowledge of the Security Council's actions in fall of 2002 said that he was not aware of any meeting Mr. Kerry had with members of the panel.
An official at the U.S. mission to the United Nations remarked: "We were as surprised as anyone when Kerry started talking about a meeting with the Security Council."
Jean-David Levitte, then France's chief U.N. representative and now his country's ambassador to the United States, said through a spokeswoman that Mr. Kerry did not have a single group meeting as the senator has described, but rather several one-on-one or small-group encounters.
He added that Mr. Kerry did not meet with every member of the Security Council, only "some" of them. Mr. Levitte could only name himself and Ambassador Jeremy Greenstock of Britain as the Security Council members with whom Mr. Kerry had met.
One diplomat who met with Mr. Kerry in 2002 said on the condition of anonymity that the candidate talked to "a few" ambassadors on the Security Council.
The revelation that Mr. Kerry never met with the entire U.N. Security Council could be problematic for the Massachusetts senator, as it clashes with one of his central foreign-policy campaign themes — honesty.
At a New Mexico rally last month, Mr. Kerry said Mr. Bush will "do anything he can to cover up the truth." At what campaign aides billed as a major foreign-policy address, Mr. Kerry said at New York University last month that "the first and most fundamental mistake was the president's failure to tell the truth to the American people."
In recent months, Mr. Kerry has faced numerous charges of dishonesty from Vietnam veterans over his war record, and his campaign has backtracked before from previous statements about Mr. Kerry's foreign diplomacy.
For example, in March, Mr. Kerry told reporters in Florida that he'd met with foreign leaders who privately endorsed him.
"I've met with foreign leaders who can't go out and say this publicly," he said. "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.' "
But the senator refused to document his claim and a review by The Times showed that Mr. Kerry had made no official foreign trips since the start of 2002, according to Senate records and his own published schedules. An extensive review of Mr. Kerry's domestic travel schedule revealed only one opportunity for him to have met foreign leaders here.
After a week of bad press, Kerry foreign-policy adviser Rand Beers said the candidate "does not seek, and will not accept, any such endorsements."
The Democrat has also made his own veracity a centerpiece of his campaign, calling truthfulness "the fundamental test of leadership."
Mr. Kerry closed the final debate by recounting what his mother told him from her hospital bed, "Remember: integrity, integrity, integrity."
In an interview published in the new issue of Rolling Stone magazine, Mr. Kerry was asked what he would want people to remember about his presidency. He responded, "That it always told the truth to the American people."

washingtontimes.com