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


To: JBTFD who wrote (653563)10/29/2004 6:29:14 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769670
 
Barney Frank Valentino
By Shawn Macomber
Published 10/29/2004 12:06:24 AM


BOSTON -- During this final week before the election the art house theater a couple blocks down from me has been running a series entitled, "Films to See Before You Vote." A sampling of the titles of these "documentaries" should give a pretty good hint as to which way the wind blows here in the People's Republic: Bush's Brain (Karl Rove is evil); Bushwhacked (George W. Bush is evil); Orwell Rolls in His Grave (John Ashcroft is evil); Hijacking Catastrophe (Donald Rumsfeld is evil); Weapons of Mass Deception (George Tenet is evil); A Day's Work for A Day's Pay (capitalism is evil); and, finally, Preventative Warriors (America is evil). Sorry, Colin. Sorry, Condoleezza. If you want a movie, you're going to have to be more evil.

Although most of these films are static as white noise, there is an odd bird smack dab in the middle of the line-up: Let's Get Frank, a recently completed paean to the infamously wacky Massachusetts Congressman. Really, is there any better proof that every bored lefty in America has begun trying to become the next Michael Moore? Such a film begs the question: Has the left really run so low on heroes that the best an ambitious young liberal filmmaker can come up with is to follow Barney Frank around for two years?

It's not that Frank isn't an interesting character. But his story seems an odd choice to get the base fired up. After all, Frank is certainly well known, but mostly for the fact that a young man ran a male prostitution ring out of the Congressman's D.C. residence in the late eighties. Explanation? Frank openly admitted to paying the young man for sex, but vehemently denied knowing about the prostitution ring. Not exactly the sort of standard-bearer you want to trot out to swing voters.

But, then again, no one actually has to worry about it because Let's Be Frank is hardly about Barney Frank at all. Basically, it's one long reel of Frank's one-liners during the Clinton impeachment hearings, complete with out-of-context pictures of Republicans looking chastened. These jokes might be funny if you think all conservatives are bigoted, simple-minded creatures who are destroying the country. Otherwise, not so funny. There is almost no back story, no "Here's how he got his start." The film begins with an interview with Frank where he explains how he was particularly well suited to defend Clinton because he had been through his own sex scandal.

Actually, Let's Be Frank sort of resembles an outtakes reel from The Hunting of the President. There is no end to the Democratic Party's obsession with viewing everything and everyone through a Clintonian lens. Case in point: A film purportedly about a Massachusetts Congressman who was first elected in 1981 focuses on his actions defending Bill Clinton for two years.

Later, the film spends all of three minutes or so delving into this having a live-in-prostitute business, with Frank dismissing the whole scandal, thusly: "Last time I checked, being stupid wasn't a violation of the rules." That line actually got applause. And when Frank said the lesson of his experience, as well as Clinton's, was that a sex scandal should not and does not "limit" or "disqualify" someone from climbing the ladder of political success, the crowd cheered like it was 1999 all over again. At one point in the film, Frank accuses Republicans and the Washington Times of "plotting to ruin my social life."

Readers may be surprised to know that, according to Frank, what he and Bill Clinton were actually doing during those dark days was fighting a "fundamental battle for the soul of America." And, better yet, they won! Rejoice, ye solicitors of prostitution! Praise be to adulterers! Barney Frank has called the culture war in your favor! The hundred or so people I watched it with could hardly have been happier.

On a side note, one of the major targets of the movie is the Spectator's own Bob Barr, who is basically derided for not sinking to Frank's level. This essentially means that Barr speaks in measured tones about the letter of the law and Constitutional responsibility while Frank petulantly interrupts to mock him every 30 seconds or so. If one can judge a man by his enemies, then Bob Barr is doing all right in my book.

THE FILM FADES OUT with a grainy black and white montage of Frank and his partner (24 years his junior) frolicking on a beach together. Moments later, the Congressman himself bounded on stage to take questions to thunderous applause. Candid and upbeat, Frank had the glow of a politician who knows beyond the shadow of a reasonable doubt that he is about to crush his token opposition. His television spots here in Boston have been fun stuff. "I'm Barney Frank and I authorized this message," he says smiling at the end of each one. "I can't imagine who else would." It probably didn't hurt that everyone kept referring to him as, "Massachusetts' next senator," either. Senator Frank --yet another benefit of a Kerry victory next week.

Frank then proceeded to make the crowd giggle with delight as he offered up some red meat liberalism. He told the crowd, for example, that things have gotten so tense politically that escorting voters to the polls today was like "escorting women into abortion clinics" ten years ago -- not a particularly pleasant image. They nodded sagely. He talked about how much fun he had using the "weapon" of "ridicule" against those incorrigible Republicans.

And then he told them what they all desperately wanted to believe:

"The momentum is on the liberal side," Frank said. "We were set back by September 11, but we just have to keep clawing away."

Then again, if the momentum was really on their side would it really have to be said so explicitly? Republicans are showing similar symptoms of fatigue and worry. That's the byproduct of living in the 50/50 nation: With no clear majority partisans on both sides are always looking for positive reinforcement. When in retreat, adrenaline kicks in and you fight hard to gain ground, and victory, no matter how fleeting, allows breathing room and plans for expansion of gains. But stalemate? Just barely holding power or just barely out of power? That is demoralizing and exhausting.

Frank didn't stay long. The ball game was calling, he said. As the audience filed out, I stayed in my seat and waited for the crowd to clear. They were all pleased as punch with what had just transpired. People were greeting Frank's mother with the sort of deference normally reserved for a foreign dignitary. I thought of the late great men buried in this city: Samuel Adams, Paul Revere, John Hancock, and all the many others. No theater is showing documentaries on these men as we gear up for next Tuesday's election. I wonder what they might think of what passes for a hero in America, circa 2004?

Shawn Macomber is a reporter for The American Spectator. He runs the website Return of the Primitive.



To: JBTFD who wrote (653563)10/29/2004 6:30:29 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769670
 
They Can’t Be Serious
By David Hogberg
Published 10/29/2004 12:07:18 AM


WASHINGTON -- Among the more dangerous ideas floating around this election is that sending John Kerry to the White House will force Kerry and the Democratic Party to take seriously the war in Iraq and, by extension, the broader War on Terror.

Here is Andrew Sullivan, in his endorsement of Kerry: "…the Democratic Party needs to be forced to take responsibility for the security of the country that is as much theirs as anyone's." And here is Christopher Hitchens in his non-endorsement endorsement of President Bush:
I can't wait to see President Kerry discover which corporation, aside from Halliburton, should after all have got the contract to reconstruct Iraq's oil industry. I look forward to seeing him eat his Jesse Helms-like words, about the false antithesis between spending money abroad and "at home" (as if this war, sponsored from abroad, hadn't broken out "at home"). I take pleasure in advance in the discovery that he will have to make, that Abu Musab al-Zarqawi is a more dangerous and better-organized foe than Osama bin Laden, and that Zarqawi's existence is a product of jihadism plus Saddamism, and not of any error of tact on America's part… I look forward, in other words, to the assumption of his responsibility.

The philosophy behind such sentiment is determinism -- the idea that men don't so much control events as they are controlled by them. The circumstances at a given point in history force a president to take certain actions. This theory tells us that since the war in Iraq and the War on Terror will still be going on when Kerry would take office, he would have little choice but to make a strenuous effort to ensure our national security. It makes me want to throw up my hands and say: "Have we learned nothing from history?"

Let's look at some examples, starting with the president who had one of the worst foreign policies in our nation's history, Jimmy Carter. Carter faced some crucial events that should have forced him to take serious foreign policy measures. Yet his response to the Iranian hostage crisis and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan were anything but serious. With the exception of one failed rescue attempt, Carter publicly disavowed the use of force against Iran, and even went as far down the road of silliness as trying to get Libyan leader Mohamarr Qaddafi and then former Attorney General Ramsey Clark to intervene.

On Afghanistan, many conservative Democrats predicted that the invasion would change Carter's outlook on the Soviet Union. "Carter's more vigorous response to the invasion of Afghanistan had raised hopes that he had a new realism in his assessment of the Soviet Union," recalled Jeane Kirkpatrick. But in a subsequent meeting with Kirkpatrick and other conservative Democrats, Carter scolded, "Your analysis is not true. There has been no change in my policy. I have always held a consistent view of the Soviet Union. For the record, I did not say that I have learned more about the Soviet Union since the invasion of Afghanistan." When Congress later decided, in response to the invasion, to add more to the defense budget, Carter complained that the increase "is more than we actually needed." Carter was an unserious man facing serious threats.

Next, let's move to terrorism. Did the 1983 bombing of the Marine barracks in Lebanon force President Reagan to see the growing threat of terrorism as urgent? Not as much as he should have. Although he later bombed Libya in response to some hostage incidents, he never gave terrorism as much attention as communism. As for Clinton, few dispute that he didn't take it seriously even in the wake of the first attack on the World Trade Center, the bombing of the Khobar Towers, or the bombing of the American embassies in Africa. For that matter, how many times after 9/11 have you heard people say they are relieved that Bush was president and not Al Gore?

Clearly, different men react differently to events; how they react is what matters.

Thus, it is absurd to the point of lunacy to assume that electing Kerry will force him to take terrorism seriously. If we were to assume that, what is the point of voting for a president? For that matter, what is the point of having an election at all? We can just put 50 people in a circle, spin a bottle, and put in charge whomever the bottle points to. After all, current events would compel him or her to approach the War on Terror with grave concern.

THE QUESTION THAT MUST be addressed is, will Kerry and the Democrats take it seriously? Kerry has shown a completely unserious attitude, voting for the Iraq war when it was convenient, and then voting against the $87 billion for our troops when he faced the upstart Howard Dean. He tells us in August that he still would have voted to authorize the use of force in Iraq, and then in September tells us that it is "the wrong war, in the wrong place, at the wrong time." He is a man who tells the New York Times that 9/11 didn't change him at all. He is so lacking in seriousness, that his acceptance speech at the Democratic convention did not even use the word "terrorism"

Then there is the Democratic base, much of which is anti-war, some of it ferociously so. What if stabilizing Iraq means American troops will have to be there beyond 2008? What if negotiations with the Iranians over their nuclear facilities prove futile, and Kerry is faced with the choice of using missile attacks and bombing raids? In those instances, he will risk alienating part of his base if he makes decisions they do not like. Do we really want to trust him with such decisions when he can't stand up to his base on a much easier decision like funding the troops?

On the other hand there is President Bush, who has shown that he is very serious about fighting the War on Terror and the Iraq War. Yes, he has made mistakes, such as not being more aggressive in Fallujah. But I see much of the criticism as Monday-morning quarterbacking. War is the most hazardous of all human activities, one in which leaders are going to make numerous errors. The standards much of the media and the political left now apply to the war are empty of any sense of perspective. Had such standards represented the zeitgeist of the 1940s, D-Day would have been dismissed as a fiasco, and the Pacific theater dubbed a quagmire.

Indeed, it amazes me that people aren't taking the arguments of Sullivan and Hitchens with a big grain of salt. One is clearly alienated by Bush on the issue of gay marriage, and the other has long been a man of the left. Ultimately, it comes down to this: Does it make any sense to choose a candidate who you hope will be forced by events to take the War on Terror seriously over a president who has already shown that he does? Hope is not a strategy.

David Hogberg, a Washington writer, hosts his own website, Hog Haven.



To: JBTFD who wrote (653563)10/29/2004 6:31:13 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769670
 
Old News, New Smear
By The Prowler
Published 10/29/2004 12:09:15 AM


With the Kerry campaign's apparent inability to gain political traction from the missing explosives story pulled together by CBS's 60 Minutes and the New York Times, late Thursday it appeared that the Kerry camp, along with the mainstream media, was pulling another rabbit out of its hat.

By 4:30 p.m yesterday the Associated Press was reporting that the FBI had opened an investigation into the no-bid process used to contract Halliburton for Iraq's oil industry. One problem, similar to the Iraqi explosives story, is that the Halliburton investigation has been ongoing for more than 6 months and has been extensively reported in the media.

The Kerry campaign's ability to spin this story came thanks to apparent coordination with the office of Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.). Earlier Thursday, Lautenberg faxed out to several media outlets a one-page letter addressed to Vice President Dick Cheney, asking that he and his staff cooperate with the ongoing FBI investigation, an investigation that in fact has changed little over the past 6 months.

The White House has yet to confirm that any such letter from Lautenberg was delivered or faxed to any office in the West Wing or Old or New Executive Office Building.

"It looks like Lautenberg is the source of this story," says a Pentagon staffer. "The Pentagon and the White House have been open about this investigation and what has been made clear from the very beginning and what the press has reported in general is that Vice President Dick Cheney had nothing to do with the bidding process in question."

"This is another example of dirty politics and desperation, plain and simple," says a Bush campaign adviser. "They are taking old stories, repackaging them, and letting their mainstream minions do their bidding."

Lautenberg, for his part, has expressed outrage and frustration that his claims of scandal and bid-rigging have been largely ignored by the press. Never mind that most of the newsweeklies and the New York Times and Washington Post have all done extensive investigations into Halliburton and its business dealings with the Bush administration.

While several staffers on the Kerry campaign denied any knowledge of the Halliburton story or coordination with Lautenberg, both John Kerry and John Edwards have talked about Halliburton on the campaign trail.

Word late Thursday evening was that based on the AP story the Kerry campaign was prepared to run a new 30-second TV ad similar to one it is currently running in Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Mexico, and possibly Florida about the Iraqi explosives story.