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To: abstract who wrote (62574)9/19/2005 1:59:40 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 65232
 
As if those were his only qualifications.

.....Many have called for the head of FEMA Director Mike Brown. But Bill Clinton's choice to be Southwest Regional FEMA director in 1993 was even less qualified, earning his job handling disaster recovery of a different sort.

Raymond "Buddy" Young, a former Arkansas state trooper, got his choice assignment after leading efforts to discredit other state troopers in the infamous Troopergate scandal. If a storm like Katrina struck the Big Easy back then, Young would've been in charge.....

investors.com



To: abstract who wrote (62574)9/19/2005 2:45:03 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 65232
 
"Clinton is simply playing on the ignorance of his listeners--
a time-honored Democratic tactic"

Uncharted Territory, Once Again

Power Line

In recent years, the Democrats have violated many of the tacit conventions of civility that have enabled our political system to work for more than two centuries. Yesterday another barrier fell, and once again, we entered uncharted waters: former President Bill Clinton launched a vicious attack on President Bush on ABC's "This Week" program.

This has never happened before.
Until now, both parties have recognized a patriotism that, at some level, supersedes partisanship. Consistent with that belief, former Presidents of both parties have stayed out of politics and have avoided criticizing their successors. Until now. The Democrats appear bent on destroying every element of the fabric that has united us as Americans.

Clinton's vicious attack is even worse in the context of his wife's Presidential bid: it is fair to assume that he was motivated not only by partisanship, but by his own desire to re-occupy the White House, and, most likely, wield once more the levers of power.

AFP reports:

<<<

Breaking with tradition under which US presidents mute criticisms of their successors, Clinton said the Bush administration had decided to invade Iraq "virtually alone and before UN inspections were completed, with no real urgency, no evidence that there were weapons of mass destruction."
>>>

This attack was false in every respect.
The invasion of Iraq had the support of dozens of nations. The UN's inspections could never be "completed," but the UN itself had reported that large quantities of WMDs remained unaccounted for. On the other hand, Clinton's suggestion that there was "no real urgency" about the situation in Iraq was probably sincere, as it typified Clinton's approach to terrorism: he perceived no urgency after the first bombing of the World Trade Center in 1993, or after al Qaeda's attempt to simultaneously destroy a dozen American airplanes over the Pacific in 1995; or after the attacks on American embassies in Africa in 1998; or after Saddam's attempt to assassinate former President Bush; or after Saddam repeatedly tried to shoot down American aircraft; or after the Cole bombing in 2000; or after the Taliban took over Afghanistan and converted it into a training ground for anti-American mass murderers; or after any number of other provocations. So, naturally, Clinton saw no urgency with respect to dealing with Saddam's regime. Of course, had Saddam facilitated a post-9/11 attack on the U.S. using chemical or biological weapons, you can imagine how harshly Clinton would have criticized Bush for his lack of foresight.

Clinton's assertion that there was "no evidence that there were weapons of mass destruction" is a flat-out lie.
The Consensus Estimate of the American intelligence agencies has been made public, and we have quoted from it and linked to it on many occasions. America's intelligence agencies said, with a "high degree of confidence," that Saddam possessed both chemical and biological weapons. These were the same intelligence reports that Clinton received as President, so he is well aware of them. His statement was not a mistake, it was a lie.

Clinton goes on:

<<<

Clinton said there had been a "heroic but so far unsuccessful" effort to put together a constitution that would be universally supported in Iraq.
>>>

A ridiculous standard, of course. No nation has ever adopted a constitution that was "universally supported," least of all, our own.


And more:

<<<

The US strategy of trying to develop the Iraqi military and police so that they can cope without US support "I think is the best strategy. The problem is we may not have, in the short run, enough troops to do that," said Clinton.
>>>

Someone tell me: what did Clinton ever do, during his eight years in office, to build up America's armed forces or increase our power?


He continues:

<<<

On Hurricane Katrina, Clinton faulted the authorities' failure to evacuate New Orleans ahead of the storm's strike on August 29.

People with cars were able to heed the evacuation order, but many of those who were poor, disabled or elderly were left behind.

"If we really wanted to do it right, we would have had lots of buses lined up to take them out," Clinton.
>>>

Note that when Clinton faulted the "authorities," he meant the Bush administration--although, as AFP points out, he "agreed that some responsibility for this lay with the local and state authorities." In fact, the entire responsibility lay with state and local authorities.

Here, Clinton is simply playing on the ignorance of his listeners--a time-honored Democratic tactic.

And speaking of "buses lined up to take them out," readers of this site are well aware that buses were "lined up," and that the City of New Orleans' hurricane plan contemplated that those buses would be used to evacuate residents. But, due entirely to the incompetence and fecklessness of local authorities, hundreds of buses that were "lined up" were never used. Clinton knows this; again, he is baldly attempting to deceive his listening audience.

Clinton finished up with some budget commentary:

<<<

On the US budget, Clinton warned that the federal deficit may be coming untenable, driven by foreign wars, the post-hurricane recovery programme and tax cuts that benefitted just the richest one percent of the US population, himself included.
>>>

More lies. As Clinton well knows, the Bush tax cuts benefited all taxpayers. And by historical standards, the current deficit is relatively small as a proportion of GDP, and is dropping.

Again and again, President Bush has tried to work with the Democrats as if they were loyal Americans first, and partisans second. He has treated Bill Clinton with a friendship and respect that, candidly, is disproportionate to Clinton's meager accomplishments. Again and again, the Democrats have rebuffed Bush's overtures and taken advantage of his patriotism and good faith. Clinton's politically-motivated tissue of lies and distortions is just the latest example out of many. But it is unprecedented, coming from a former President. That is a sad thing: the latest wound inflicted on the body politic by the Democratic Party.

UPDATE: Reader Steve Tefft sends this Clinton quote from July 23, 2003:

    [I]t is incontestable that on the day I left office, 
there were unaccounted for stocks of biological and
chemical weapons.
That was then, I guess; this is now. And 2008 is just a few short years away. So it's time, apparently, to revise the historical record.

powerlineblog.com

news.yahoo.com

cnn.com



To: abstract who wrote (62574)9/19/2005 3:36:25 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
"There was certainly a lot of heat... but not on the
President. Where was the outrage? Where was the
concern? Where was the blame?"

Democrats Never Felt the Heat

posted by Jason
Generation Why?

In one week, 739 Americans lost their lives due to the weather. The American Journal of Public Health definitively established that the medical examiner's numbers actually undercounted the mortality by about 250 since hundreds of bodies were buried before they could be autopsied. From the moment the local medical examiner began to report mortality figures, political leaders, journalists, and in turn the public actively denied the disaster's significance and questioned whether the deaths were - to use the popular phrase - "really real."

It was 1995 and there was a Democrat in the White House.

There was no blame on global warming, despite the fact a heat wave was the cause.

There were no charges of racism, though deaths were concentrated in the low-income, elderly, African-American, and violent regions of the metropolis.

There was no questioning of the President or his response, despite an inadequate local heat wave warning system, power failures, inadequate ambulance service and hospital facilities, and city officials did not release a heat emergency warning until the last day of the heat wave.

There were no calls for Congressional inquiries, even though long before 1995, American public-health officials warned of the dangers of extreme summer weather.

    After cities including Philadelphia, St. Louis, and 
Chicago itself experienced heat disasters in the late
1980s and early 1990s, the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention began prodding government agencies
to develop plans for preventing heat-related casualties.
But few cities took this advice seriously. Chicago's
Health Department shelved its heat-emergency plan in the
office's back regions.
The Chicago Heat Wave was dubbed "one of the greatest and least-known American disasters in modern history."

There was certainly a lot of heat... but not on the President. Where was the outrage? Where was the concern? Where was the blame?

texasrainmaker.blogspot.com

en.wikipedia.org

detnews.com

sws.uiuc.edu

slate.msn.com

slate.msn.com



To: abstract who wrote (62574)9/19/2005 7:21:49 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
"The eager retailing of false reports like Broussard's is an
important reason why early public opinion polls placed
substantial blame for the catastrophe on the administration."

Oops, Never Mind

Power Line

On Sunday, September 4, Aaron Broussard, president of Jefferson Parish, La., appeared on NBC's Meet the Press. He broke down as he told the story of a woman stranded in a nursing home who kept calling her son for help, day after day, until she finally died on September 2, ostensibly because the federal reaction to Hurricane Katrina was too slow.

Broussard's heart-wrenching story was a major moment in the anti-Bush media frenzy that followed the hurricane. Only it turns out Broussard's story was untrue. NBC has now issued a correction:


<<<

New details and interviews with the son whose mother died in the flood show that the tragedy unfolded from Saturday through Monday, Aug. 29 - not Monday through Friday, Sept. 2 as recounted by Broussard. The owners of the nursing home were indicted Tuesday for the deaths of more than 30 residents, which officials say occurred on Aug. 29.
>>>

So the patients at St. Rita nursing home died the same day the hurricane struck New Orleans. The purportedly slow federal response had nothing to do with it.

It's a little hard to understand how Broussard got his facts so wrong. He didn't just make a mistake on the date; he told the story in elaborate detail. Only every detail was false:

<<<

The guy who runs this building I'm in, emergency management, he's responsible for everything. His mother was trapped in St. Bernard nursing home and every day she called him and said, "Are you coming, son? Is somebody coming?" And he said, "Yeah, Mama, somebody's coming to get you.
Somebody's coming to get you on Tuesday. Somebody's coming to get you on Wednesday. Somebody's coming to get you on Thursday. Somebody's coming to get you on Friday." And she drowned Friday night. She drowned Friday night.

RUSSERT: Mr. President...

BROUSSARD: Nobody's coming to get us. Nobody's coming to get us. The secretary has promised. Everybody's promised. They've had press conferences. I'm sick of the press conferences. For God sakes, shut up and send us somebody.
>>>

Here is what really happened:

<<<

Rodrigue said he didn't see or hear Broussard's comments on Meet the Press. When told of the sequence of phone calls that Broussard described on Meet the Press, Rodrigue said "No, no, that's not true."

"I contacted the nursing home two days before the storm [on Aug. 27th] and again on the 28th of August," Rodrigue said. "At the same time I talked to the nursing home I also talked to the emergency manager for St. Bernard Parish," Rodrigue said, "to encourage that nursing home to evacuate like they were supposed to and they didn't until it was too late."
>>>

This is the nursing home whose owners refused to evacuate, and are now under indictment due to the deaths of 34 patients and staff. The eager retailing of false reports like Broussard's is an important reason why early public opinion polls placed substantial blame for the catastrophe on the administration. Congratulations to the bloggers who were skeptical of this story and ultimately forced the correction.

Via InstaPundit.

*******
<My 2¢ - This whole myth (Read blatant lie) was used by a
liberal hack to get prominent MSM coverage so he could tell
additional lies about FEMA & the federal response to Katrina
& deflect criticism away from the grossly incompetent
response by state & local officials.>
******

powerlineblog.com

msnbc.msn.com