Saturday, July 31, 2004

Hillary: Pantsuit, et al.

Lest anyone think the Clinton's actually support the Kedwards ticket, as always - look at what they do, not what they say. Robert Novak relates:

"Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton not only turned up one hour and 45 minutes late for a women's luncheon in Boston Tuesday honoring Teresa Heinz Kerry but appeared for the private affair accompanied by several staffers and a television news crew.

"The luncheon at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston was hosted by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's wife, Vicki. The event began at 12 noon, and Sen. Clinton and her entourage breezed in at 1:45 p.m. The TV crew was immediately ordered out, but the senator stayed."

Friday, July 30, 2004

Kerry Says Bible Approves Abortions.

(HA!! I’ve never written a headline like that before. It feels good, dirty, but good.)

This is too easy sometimes. Abortion. Kerry. Here’s his latest interview:

"Stepping gingerly into another social issue, Kerry reiterated that he believes that life begins at conception — and that a woman has the right to choose whether to abort.

"Asked whether he believes abortion is taking a life, Kerry said a fetus is a 'form of life.'

"'The Bible itself — I mean, everything talks about different layers of development. That's what Roe v Wade does. It talks about viability. It's the law of the land.'"

OK, John, so the "Bible itself" approves abortions provided that the point of viability has not been reached. Please give me a reference. Here’s what I have found:

Jeremiah 1:5 – Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you.
Luke 1:44 – As soon as the sound of your greeting reached my ears, the baby in my womb leaped for joy.

Let’s leave it at that for the moment. Before a child – a fetus – a form of life – has entered the womb, God knew him as an individual. Inside the womb, the baby – not the fetus or the form of life – leaped for joy.

I fail to find a basis for insinuating that the Bible in any way recognizes different layers of life and thereby approves overtly or tacitly abortion.

Next, Kerry uses the "viability" argument as if it is all that matters. Viability, after all, is "the law of the land."

But making illegal partial birth abortions is also the law of the land. Why doesn’t he support that proposition?

Here is Kerry's position: John Kerry voted repeatedly against the Partial Birth Abortion Ban. He says that a health exception is necessary. Kerry spokeswoman Stephanie Cutter has stated that Kerry would support the ban if it included a "clear exception for life or health of women."

And here is what Congress found when it wrote the Ban - selected from the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act of 2003: "(O) For these reasons, Congress finds that partial-birth abortion is never medically indicated to preserve the health of the mother; is in fact unrecognized as a valid abortion procedure by the mainstream medical community; poses additional health risks to the mother; blurs the line between abortion and infanticide in the killing of a partially-born child just inches from birth; and confuses the role of the physician in childbirth and should, therefore, be banned."

So, viability is not the only issue according to John. Problem is that “health” of women includes psychological issues such as depression and anxiety.

In essence, John wants to completely support abortion rights, yet say it doesn’t reflect his personal position – it is, after all, in selected ways, on some issues, the law of the land. And the Bible, well, it says something about it, right?

This man is a toon - a walking, breathing slab of celluloid.

W’s October Surprise via Putin?

From the American Foreign Policy Council on July 24 through their Russia Reform e-mail:

”RUSSIA’S STAKE IN IRAQ RESTORED. Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshiyar Zebari has said that his government is committed to fulfilling all contracts concluded with Russian companies. According to RIA Novosti, Zebari, who is visiting Moscow, told reporters he had met with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and that agreed to appoint officials to handle resuming the contracts, including those concluded under the United Nations Oil-for-Food program. Zebari said they had not discussed sending Russian peacekeepers to Iraq, given the Russian government’s well-known opposition to such a move, but added that there were “many other ways in which Russia could be helpful to Iraq.” Baghdad would soon ask Moscow to appoint a new ambassador in order to restore “full” diplomatic relations, the Iraqi official said.” – Jonas Bernstein

I am of the active presumption that Iraq does nothing in a major way that could have the appearance of being an affront to the US without our advance concurrence. I think in this situation that honoring the Russian contracts plays off of the report that flitted through the net on Russia supplying troops.

Regardless of this news bit saying peacekeepers was off the table, I suspect it was merely on another table – directly between Moscow and WDC. Now wouldn’t it be amazing if Russia supplied some troops just prior to the election? How would the Monads play that one????

You can subscribe to the Russian Reform e and other excellent periodic writings by visiting www.afpc.org.

John Kerry, Theosophist & Monad.

In last night’s speech, Kerry said, "She [his mother] gave me her passion for the environment. She taught me to see trees as the cathedrals of nature."

The complete and correct quote is: "I believe in the cosmos. All of us are linked to the cosmos. Look at the sun: If there is no sun, then we cannot exist. So nature is my god. To me, nature is sacred; trees are my temples and forests are my cathedrals. Being at one with nature." ---- Mikhail Gorbachev (1990)

I guess with John just discovering his Jewish roots during the primary season, he can be forgiven for using "temple" and "cathedral" interchangeably.

John Muir also spoke of trees and cathedrals, but in a slightly more arrogant sense. Muir held that forests were God’s places of sanctuary, and with trees getting cut down to build cathedrals, it should be no surprise that we were becoming a nation further and further from God. Kinda undercuts the whole "man being granted dominion" theme of the first couple of chapters of Genesis.

On one end of generally recognized (and recognizable) religion, Pantheism is often grouped with Hinduism – an amalgamation of Gods leading us towards peaceful coexistence (read – the French are our friends (insert mantra here). Pantheism also equates God with nature. It is Panentheism that states that God is greater than nature.

On the other end is the Liberal Catholic Church, a group that bases it form of Christianity on theosophy. 'Theosophy' refers to a body of belief which holds that all religions are attempts by man to ascertain "the Divine," and as such each religion has a portion of the truth.

This is consistent with a man who at once believes life begins at conception, yet allows woman to choose to end that life up until the moment the child has been delivered. It is consistent with a man who can vote for and against the same thing at the same time. Theosophy, then, is a religion that allows the nuances of Kerry to be glorified.

To explore theosophy further, and thereby to better understand Kerry, here are a couple of tenets of the faith: Reincarnation, Karma, and Universal Brotherhood.

Universal Brotherhood? Every thing of whatever kind is from one divine source. All things are 'monads' in reality. All monads potentially possess the same principles and their forms and natures are an expression of their present consciousness level.

We are all one with everything – our fellow humans, our cats, that tree in the back yard (Woody Allen said that only God can make a tree because it is so hard to get the bark on), and that former tree now in the fireplace (now I understand why I get warmed by fire (empathy) and often stare at the flames (car-wreck effect)).

Liberals. Theosophists. Monads. It all makes sense now.

The Boys of Summer Visit Pennsylvania.

Kedwards, inwardly frustrated by the failure of balloons to release as the convention concluded, overcome the malfunction by releasing them at every campaign stop afterward. Here, they are seen casually ignoring the helium-filled vessels as the crowds point skyward in awe.





Kerry's Spinal Tap Moment

Someone needs to do a "This is John Kerry" documentary. Before Rob Reiner got the organically based cerebulum dysfunction, he made funny movies that lacked politics. "This is Spinal Tap" was one of them. It is the story of an aging rock band trying to survive in the new era. Everything goes wrong for the poor guys from equipment malfunctions to dressing room sandwiches being cut incorrectly. They finally give up. You are torn between feeling badly for them and beinghappy they are going away - they are so negative.

John Kerry's campaign is heading that way according to this Drudge post. They looked for balloons at the moment they were expected, the convention director reels off a sailor's diatribe on air ... poor Johnny!!

From bunny suit to balloonless; silly look to looking silly. What could be next? A trip to Scranton, PA? I guess money does not buy everything.

Kerry's Thump

Real Clear Politics sums up Kerry's speech: "... America saw too much of John Kerry ...". From the same post, you can link to Zogby's new stats - Kerry by 5. What was that thump? Did you hear a thump outside?

Kerry needed to break through, to establish his supremacy. He seems to have failed. His resume ended at age 24. That presumes that a lieutenant with about 120 days in theatre is better positioned than someone who has been commander-in-chief through two wars. A lieutenant with camera in hand, reintroducing himself to recent areas of engagement to reenact scenes – this must have put his charges in harm’s way, wasn’t it frowned upon by the higher-ups? This guy is just illogical and self-serving.

And I’m not sure why this photo bothers me so much, but it does. My first reaction was that the difference in mouth positions means that the backdrop photo was a stage. If it is just a difference in timing between speaking and relaying to the screen, then it must have been very disconcerting to watch. So I suspect it was a staged pic. And it is that which disturbs me. How often did Kerry stand there in the same suit, at attention? How many pics were taken? And to top it all off, for me – this is a man that condemned war, that called our vets war criminals, that protested while others died. For him to stand there in a soldier’s pose is an insult to me. I remember instantly my father who served in Korea. He was on the front lines. Scarred, shot at, shooting. Never looked for a way out. Served his time until the government told him it was time to leave. Didn’t come home and complain – he went to work. For Kerry to run on his “war record” is pathetic.

Over and out.

Thursday, July 29, 2004

Kerry Kaptions

Here's the captions submitted. I'm supposed to pic a winner and relegate the rest to honorable mention? How about they all win ... e me to arrange some time in my garden!!!

j blake:
Slick Willy... Hey, I heard John got a gig on that play Vagina Monologs.
Algore...How do you suppose that happened?
Slick...AAAhh suppose he pulled a few strings.

(Editorial privilege, rewritten slightly – Sensing a loss in November, Kerry preps an audition tape for The Vagina Monologues)

JP:
“I go out with my trusty 12-gauge double-barrel, crawl around on my stomach... That’s hunting.”

Matthew K:
My God, its Tony Randall from Everything You Wanted To Know About Sex !! (Woody Allen movie)

Dorkafork:
"John Kerry emerges from his campaign's state of the art hairdryer. The Kerry campaign uses cutting edge equipment to keep their hair 'natural' and 'carefree'."

Beavereater:
The only job Kerry ever really tried out for was duct cleaner in the Fwench Bastile.

Chris:
Recently elected President John Kerry arrives at the U.N. General Assembly to address that body on his desire to have the U.S. rejoin the community of nations.

Woody Emanuel:
1. John Kerry emerges from his life-support system.
2. "Stephen Hawking was right - there ARE worm holes!"
3. "Teresa, I shoved it, can I come out now?"

Gathered from the net:
"Hey Teresa! Look at me! I'm a bunny rabbit!!"
"By day, a mild-mannered politician. By night, he's...Colonoscopy man!"
"Have the man who just took that picture killed."
"Hey guys, there's no snipe in the spaceship... Guys? Hello?"
"Democrats! Into ramming positions!"
"Kerry's audition for The Blue Man Group was not going well."
"When they backed the elephant up, he began to get nervous. But it wasn't until they brought out the giant bottle of lube that John Kerry truly felt fear."

The only reason I need.

Choosing a president is an important task. Litmus tests are not wise. Regardless, I found one. W is reviewing the 9/11 Commission reccomendations. He will adopt "some" very soon.

"Kerry, Bush's opponent in the presidential campaign, says Bush should implement the commission's proposals immediately. Kerry also wants the panel's life extended 18 months to ensure reforms are adopted."

Once a legislator, always a legislator. The man will never understand the constitutional separation of powers. Kerry loses.

Even into the darkest of caves, a little light must shine.

I many times give up hope that liberals will ever think outside themselves long enough to consider the realities of the world, to view things as they may be rather than how they presume them to be. Then I read this article that asks "What if Bush is Right?" Now my world is peaceful again.

Some liberals can think. How refreshing. It’s a very good read.

But it does conjure another question: What if Kerry is right? Well, that’s easy – right about what? He doesn’t stand for anything that is decisive or divisive. He stands for everything. Life begins at conception, but abortion is A-OK! How cute. Doesn’t that require a response to the dismissal of the culpability for the cessation of life?

Rather reminds me of when my daughter was 4 and we would talk about life. I could get her to like anything, or at least say she did. But when left to her own devices, she made decisions. When left alone, out of the glare of daddy, she did things that didn’t help daddy to be happy.

You don’t think Kerry would actually do anything if elected, do you? Do you think he might actually make decisions? Well, it sure would be nice to know before he gets elected, eh?

Anyway, the article is a great read. Reminds me of splunkering in Colossal Cave – turn R and find Lantern.

Wednesday, July 28, 2004

Re-enacting History in Real Time.

Lt. Col. Robert "Buzz" Patterson writes of Kerry as a soldier in Reckless Disregard:

"On February 28, 1969, now in charge of PCF 94, Kerry came under fire from an enemy location on the shore. The crew's gunner returned fire, hitting and wounding the lone gunman. Kerry directed the boat to charge the enemy position. Beaching his boat, Kerry jumped off, chased the wounded insurgent behind a thatched hutch, and killed him. Beaching the boat was foolish; leaving the boat as the commander was stupid. Killing a wounded man ran counter to the Geneva Conventions and naval regulations. Yet his killing of the wounded man behind the hutch earned Kerry the Silver Star.

"With an amazing and unbelievable agenda, Kerry and his crew returned within days, armed with a Super 8 video camera he had purchased at the post exchange at Cam Ranh Bay, and reenacted the skirmish on film. He wanted to document the incident upon which he would stake his military, national security, and political bona fides for years to come. In a bizarre, utterly outlandish sense, he was already running for political office: He was already staging campaign commercials." (pp 43-44)

Many times an isolated episode is more pathetic than the person. When the person becomes a series of similar episodes, the rest of us should hold an intervention for him. Time to go to the nervous hospital, John. It'll be OK ...

Shuffling off to ... Scranton.

I just received an e from the Rocky & Bullwinkle campaign. Excerpts:

"Please join John Kerry, John Edwards, Teresa Heinz Kerry, and Elizabeth Edwards when they visit Pennsylvania for two exciting rallies as part of their Believe in America Tour this Friday, July 30 in Scranton and Harrisburg.

Come help us welcome the Kerry and Edwards families to Pennsylvania in their first appearances after the Democratic National Convention, and hear the next president and vice president of the United States outline their vision for a better America.

Scranton Rally, Lackawanna County Courthouse, 200 N. Washington Street, Scranton, PA.  Gates open at 11:30 a.m. Tickets are required for this event. To get your complimentary ticket(s), please click here:

http://johnkerry.com/scranton

Harrisburg Rally, State Capitol Building, Third and State Streets, Harrisburg, PA.  Gates open at 5:00 p.m. Tickets are required for this event. To get your complimentary ticket(s), please click here:

http://johnkerry.com/harrisburg

Because of security, no umbrellas, bags, or signs will be allowed at either rally. Please limit personal items as well. Both events will take place RAIN or SHINE
Join us at the rally in Scranton or in Harrisburg, bring your friends and family, and show that America supports the Kerry-Edwards ticket.

See you there,

Pennsylvania for Kerry-Edwards"

If you follow the link, you put in your personal information then print out a ticket. Here’s my ticket:

The Lackawanna County Courthouse is a large building sitting in the middle of a normally sized city block – this one is 4.7 acres. It is the only building on that block, so it is surrounded with grass. Here’s a picture:




 

 

 

Why Scranton and Harrisburg? Philly and Pittsburgh are democrat country. Scranton is heavily democrat, but they have voted in a pub congressman (Don Sherwood) a couple of times lately. There is enough pub votes through gerrymandering to do that. Twenty minutes south in Wilkes-Barre is Kanjorski - pure dem. Regardless, Scranton and Harrisburg bring together the marginal votes necessary to swing the commonwealth. The only population center not discussed is Erie - home of Tom Ridge, pub country.

Surely there must be a limit to the number of tickets they will allow to be printed. What would happen if everyone who signed up for a ticket did not show up? Is this what is generally referred to as the machinations of the VRWC?

So, let's all get our tickets, then go to Shooky's Deli across the street and watch everyone not show up!!

The Girls of Summer – Teresa Heinz.

The hills are alive with the sound of music
With songs they have sung for a thousand years
The hills fill my heart with the sound of music
My heart wants to sing every song it hears

My heart wants to beat like the wings of the birds
that rise from the lake to the trees
My heart wants to sigh like a chime that flies
from a church on a breeze
To laugh like a brook when it trips and falls over
stones on its way
To sing through the night like a lark who is learning to pray

I go to the hills when my heart is lonely
I know I will hear what I've heard before
My heart will be blessed with the sound of music
And I'll sing once more

Tuesday, July 27, 2004

Boys of Summer - Kucinich Kampers

OK, now, timing is everything. When Alabama casts its delegate votes for Kerry, then you, Jim, you yell “K!” And, Sally, when Arkansas casts its votes, then you yell, “U!” You see, because Kucinich has only 8 letters, we need to spread this out to every fourth state. I’m telling you, by the time Iowa comes up, the convention will be at a standstill. It’ll be putty in our hands. That’s when Dennis walks into the arena …

The Boys of Summer - Richard Dreyfuss.



I’m not a politician or a delegate. I’m not from Massachusetts. I have, however, played those roles on tv. Balding? Lumpy physique? Yes, that’s real, that’s me. CUT!! Can you see the Aquafina label? That’s a paid endorsement. It’s got to be clear. Can you see the label? OK, let’s reshoot. {Deep breath, glance into mirror just off camera, zen moment of silence, re-absorbed flatulence.} I’m not a politician …

Kerry Picture Caption

In the spirit of no employees, etc., being qualified to enter the contest, I'll post my captions as they come to mind ...

"Emphasizing his commitment to education, Kerry emerges from the Safe Sex Simulator smiling broadly."

Ship of Fools

I’ve thought about the orifice-emerging photo below. While it is comedic, I doubt it has the lasting power of Dukakis and the Tank. The Tank had the added benefit of casting doubt on whether a guy who looked like that could ever lead the country in military times. Kerry’s photo is simply unfortunate – similar to when you are sitting on the couch folding laundry, you’ve got a pair of your wife’s underwear in hand and the pic makes it look like you are trying to figure out if they fit you or not. That’s just dumb – you already know if they fit.

But now Kerry is making a real mistake. He’s going “dark” during August.

Despite all the hoopla about his fundraising reaching beyond all expectations, his cash-on-hand was always short of W’s. And since he can now only use federal funds, he never did anything, seemingly, but collect money. I heard several times of media blitzes and him introducing himself – and since I live in Pennsylvania, I expected to see a lot of his Bullwinkle mug. Literally – perhaps one commercial during the entire summer. Yet I’ve seen plenty of W.

Darth Kerry and Anakin Edwards are now going to “conserve” the limited federal funds. W, during the same August period, will presumptively spend with abandon. The effect will be to take whatever bounce The Dark Side gets out of the convention and turn it into a dead-cat thud. By the time the end of August comes, W will have erased any afterglow from the DNC convention and will set the stage for his own significant bounce going into Labor Day.

“Going dark” will ensure that people will not warm up to Kerry and will continue to vote against W rather than for Kerry. It may be the single most disastrous decision out of this ship of fools.

Monday, July 26, 2004

Kosmonaut Kerry Kaption Kontest.

By popular demand ... caption contest.  You can leave it in a "Comment" or you can e me.  I'll recount and rank the entries just before Kerry starts his speech.  A prize?  Come to Philadelphia.  My garden is overflowing.  Winner can pick cucs, tomatoes, crookneck squash, and beets - enough for a bushel.

Kerry: High-Tech Dukaksis.

Together again, naturally.


Altered States, Five.

Iowa First Lady Christie Vilsack will be the prime-time speaker at the DNC Convention on Tuesday. She used to write columns.

"Vilsack's Aug. 24, 1994, column was particularly critical of dialects from other regions of the country. In addition to the knock on African-Americans, Vilsack knocked residents of New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

"'Later, on the boardwalk, I heard mothers calling to their children, 'I'll meet yoose here after the movie,' she wrote. 'The only way I can speak like residents of New Jersey and eastern Pennsylvania is to let my jaw drop an inch and talk with my lips in an `O' like a fish. I'd rather learn to speak Polish.'"

Who are these people? Two cups of coffee, no breakfast, and I'm being insulted. This wasn't speech overheard at a cocktail party - she wrote it and had it printed in the newspaper!!! First of all, it is "yous," as in the "two of yous," and "yous guys." It ain't and never has been "yoose." "Yoose" rhythms with "moose," you moron. And a fish?!? She's comparing me to a fish?!!?? And what is wrong with speaking Polish? You got a problem with halupki and perogies?

These people are really beginning to irritate me.

Altered States, Four.

Do as I say, not as I do. We are the party of inclusion. Just don't tell anyone we included you. DNC thugs remove al-Jazeera's banner and replace it with one that reads, "Strong for America."

Who's Strong? The guy by the banner looks like an Arab to me.

Altered States, Three.

Going back in time to the Days of the Gipper, it is easy to remember the condemnation of the Strategic Defense Initiative. Beyond claiming it was unnecessary, the force of the argument was that the entire concept was beyond anyone's capabilities. "It will never work," I recall hearing time and again.

Time to share something: the first system has been deployed. Don't you find the timing rather, um, suspect?

MISSILE DEFENSE BRIEFING REPORT NO. 150
American Foreign Policy Council, Washington, DC
http://www.afpc.org
July 26, 2004

FIRST GROUND-BASED DEFENSES DEPLOYED
Twenty-five months after breaking ground, the first interceptor of the Pentagon’s Ground-based Missile Defense program was installed at Fort Greely, Alaska on July 22nd, the Seattle Times reported the next day. The interceptor installation marks the first step in the roll-out of the Bush administration’s “initial deployment” of defenses to protect the United States against ballistic missile attack. Five more interceptors at the Greely location – as well as another four at the Vandenberg Air Base in California – are expected to be installed by the end of the year. These will be followed by ten additional Alaskan interceptors by the end of 2005. “We’re coming to the end of an era where we have not been able to defend our country against long-range ballistic missile attacks,” the Scotsman newspaper (July 23) cited Major General John Holly of the Pentagon’s Missile Defense Agency as remarking at the historic event.

Sunday, July 25, 2004

Altered States, Two

Mrs. Processed Tomato-Bullwinkle is delusional:

"We need to turn back some of the creeping, un-Pennsylvanian and sometimes un-American traits that are coming into some of our politics," the wife of Sen. John Kerry told ...

Minutes later, Colin McNickle, the editorial page editor of the conservative Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, questioned her on what she meant by the term "un-American," ...

Heinz Kerry said, "I didn't say that" several times to McNickle.

When she faced McNickle again a short time later, he continued to question her ...

... she replied, "You said something I didn't say. Now shove it."

Conclusion: You sow potatoes, you reap potatoes. The woman has the mental ability of a tuber.

Altered sense of reality

The USA Today reports on the Fisk University president, Clinton administration Energy Secretary Hazel O'Leary situation.

The following three paragraphs are taken directly from the linked article.

Sense of reality one:

The United Airlines crew told police that O'Leary was "getting loud and abusive" after the flight was diverted to Richmond, Va., because of storms Thursday night, said Cpl. Frank Donkle of the Richmond International Airport Police.

A flight attendant restrained O'Leary when she tried to get into the cockpit, Donkle said, and she was escorted off the Nashville-to-Washington flight and questioned by the FBI.

Sense of reality two:

"I regret the unfortunate misunderstanding that occurred," she said in a statement. "The situation was resolved. At no time was I rude or disrespectful to anyone."

Commentary: Wow. The depth of the arrogance and stupidity of these people never ceases to amaze me.

Saturday, July 24, 2004

THIS is why.

If a democrat ever wonders why us pubs think you are bonehead stupid, he or she should read this article.

Kerry gives a speech in Detroit. His campaign designs the press pass for the event - it's got a picture of a Rolls Royce on it. No other car, just this European luxury vehicle. T'ain't made here. Kinda rubbed the Motor City union members roughly.

Bad enough. But it got worse.

Now, remember that Kerry's campaign made this press pass. When asked about it, Kerry spokesman David Wade said, "I could say that the Rolls-Royce is the perfect symbol of who got the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy, but sometimes objects in the rearview mirror are closer than they appear." ... "Under President Bill Clinton, our strong economy actually helped bring Rolls-Royce jobs to the United States for American workers." ... "Now, with health care costs rising and no end in sight under George Bush ..." blah, blah, blah.

How pathetic. They would get so much more empathy from us folks out here if he simply said, "Yeah, kinda dumb, eh? It's a mistake that will not be repeated."

Direct. Honest. Try it sometime.

Thursday, July 22, 2004

Kerry's Quiet Panic.

From the frequently changing "Quote of the day" section on lucianne.com:

Brokaw: "Did you know that [Berger] was under investigation?"
Kerry: "I didn't have a clue, not a clue."
Brokaw: "He didn't share that with you?
Kerry: "I didn't have a clue."

If Brokaw were questioning a Republican candidate, perhaps the phraseology would have been more historically rooted: "What did you know and when did you know it?"

Regardless of Kerry's quiet, outwardly calm response, I suspect the entire topic has his highly nuanced mind working feverously to control his sweat glands from spouting like unplugged fire hydrants.

A glimpse of his genius is visible through his campaign’s action: His paper trail is being sanitized. But thanks to internet archiving, the battle cannot be won.

Sandy Berger has been advising Kerry on matters of national security for quite some time. Sandy Berger has been telling Kerry everything Sandy Berger knows. Sandy Berger has been, so it seems, sharing state secrets. Kerry has been repeating same. Ut-oh.

Wednesday, July 21, 2004

Say it ain’t so, Linda.

Linda Ronstadt opened her mouth at a concert and received a bum’s rush afterward. She said something about supporting Moore before she sang “Desparado.” How pathetic. While she continued to sing, the owner of the casino had her bags packed, and when the concert was finished, guards escorted her from backstage to her bus.

Those “artists” that view such actions as censorship should read the constitution. It isn’t censorship until the government does it. The owner of the hotel acted consistent with the way these same artists act when they draw up a guest list to a dinner. If the host doesn’t want politics or religion discussed, or only wants a particular vein of politics or religion discussed, then that is their prerogative.

When I get invited into their house to discuss how the few people made homeless pursuant to supply-side economics is a good thing in light of the prosperity of the many, and they let me stay through dessert, then I’ll listen to them as they spout about being muzzled on someone else’s stage.

Anyway, the worse was yet to come. In her after-bum’s-rush comments, she shares that when she finds out that Republicans and “fundamental” Christians are in the audience, her artistic enjoyment takes a hit. Wow. Then she tells us all to get more informed on the issues. Perhaps she meant Moore informed.

I feel badly for Linda. After all, I feel I owe her something. She got me through some challenging years of puberty with her Blue Bayou and Tumbling Dice renditions. All post-Stone Ponies. But those memories go {poof!} real quickly when you see a current picture of her. She’s got that bovine-round-head-gimme-an-apple look about her. I’m sure she can run up a hefty food tab at Denny’s.

But her crack about pubs and Christians is simply amazing. It is divisive and elitist. It is discriminatory. Substitute Muslims for Christians and hear the hallways echo with ugly condemnations. Instead of Republicans, who they claim to be rich, white people, insert poor or people of color and hear the walls come crumbling down.

But none of that will happen because it is OK to denigrate Republicans and Christians. Being both, I guess I should feel put upon. Instead I feel sympathy for people like Linda. I’ll pray for her. Even as she despises me, I’ll pray for her.

Tuesday, July 20, 2004

Zones of Comfort Elect Presidents

The pundit class spends countless hours analyzing the actual or proposed policies of the presidential candidates. The candidates spend millions of dollars explaining themselves. In truth, the vast majority of votes are cast based upon the voter’s zone of comfort and have little or nothing to do with a substantive analysis of the issues.

I was talking with a friend’s wife. I saw her rarely and the conversations were mostly brief. This time the discussion turned to politics. She liked President Clinton in his upcoming re-election bid. She liked him, she explained, because of his educational policies and how they affected her two grade-school-aged children. I asked tentatively, “what particular policies, how do they affect your children?” An uncomfortable silence did not ensue; she responded quickly and cheerfully, “I don’t know, really, I don’t know any of his policies. But I like them. I like him. He cares about education.”

She was perfectly aware of and at ease with her oblivion. She knew she had to have a reason (even if only the penumbra of a reason) to take a stand, so she found one. She persisted in her ignorance regardless of her intellect. I learned with concealed amazement that facts or knowledge did not matter to her on certain issues.

I have since seen other, more broadly shared instances of conscious oblivion. One quick example: Who won Florida in the 2000 Presidential Election?

Urban legend: The USSC gave the election to Bush. He lost Florida. If only they counted and recounted every vote, the truth of Gore’s victory could have been declared.

Documented fact: The votes were counted and recounted – and by organizations antagonist then and now to Bush. Bush won the popular vote in Florida.

If the legend is so demonstrably false, then why the herd mentality by intelligent, educated, caring people? To dispel the easy analysis: just because facts are available doesn’t mean that they are sought, learned, or believed. The common thread joining the above observations is that people prefer their zone of comfort, regardless of its dysfunction, above anything else. A person’s zone of comfort is similar to family – it exists irrespective of your desires, you have little control over the selection or behavior of its members, and you will defend it to your last breath even as you inwardly resent the very notion.

It doesn’t make them less intelligent, less educated, or less caring. People make decisions – in politics and fixing cars – based largely upon instinct. Sometimes “experts,” like first-cousin Nick or a veteran news commentator, are consulted. But in the end, instinct prevails. If the car runs fine thereafter, we stay with the mechanic; if not, we change and factor in that knowledge in the next selection.

The zone, I suggest, determines voting patterns for the overwhelming majority of voters. Piercing the veil to enter a person’s zone, then, is crucial to electoral success. But when one commercial, one speech, or a single headline can result in movement in the polls, then it seems rather easy to do so. In reality, it is very difficult – it requires an emotional investment, trust, and commitment. Polls change because people haven’t reached the point of inclusion or exclusion yet; they are still guessing or have chosen to not pay attention until some later time (if at all).

Once established and even for the most erudite of citizens, zones invite strange bedfellows. It feels comfortable, as a supporter of a woman’s right to choose abortion, to oppose legislation that prohibits partial-birth abortions or that gives homicide-victim status to a fetus. After all, any intrusion on the issue of choice or status is like the elephant’s trunk under the tent – there is much more to come. What is ignored is the undeniable savagery of terminating a full-term pregnancy by picking apart a functioning human brain; and the cessation of life by culpable murder with impunity. It is not a position those same people would advocate if the fetus – in either case – was their soon-to-be-born granddaughter, in whom they had invested immeasurable emotional capital.

It feels comfortable, as a supporter of lower taxes, to commit to high-dollar contracts to build military power and prisons. After all, lowering taxes will provide an incentive for increased economic activity, thereby raising overall revenues. What is ignored is the timely, age-old wisdom inherent in J. Wellington Wimpy’s statement: “I’d gladly pay you Thursday for a hamburger today.” It is a position those same people would frown upon if found in the personal finances of their newly emancipated children.

In the voting booth, when zones dictate which lever gets pulled, it leads us into dangerous territory. We vote to oppose as often as to support. Literally millions of citizens will cast their vote on November 2 for “anybody but Bush.” Millions will also cast their vote against that “French-looking liberal with the bad hair and disheveled wife.” These are not votes “for” anyone – they are votes against someone – someone who happens to belong to another family, someone outside the voter’s zone of comfort.

This helps to explain why politics can function in spite of a palatable lack of depth: a nod-and-a-wink is given to a paper-thin veneer of seriousness. Ask someone to explain Kerry’s position on Iraq and in almost pulpit-worthy tones you get “long-overdue foreign involvement in the affairs and redevelopment efforts in Iraq.” Does anyone really think that the Saddam-supporting French will be welcome in any measure in today’s Iraq? If Kerry wants to extricate us from a “quagmire,” then how is that furthered by telling the Iraqis how to run their affairs? The veneer can be compromised quickly. But the zone is family, and Kerry supporters will ignore the analysis. Family trumps all. Family ipso facto provides the illusion and security of depth.

President Bush tried for a time to escape this vacuum of intellect. He almost succeeded in changing the course of politics. Recall his pre-September 11 speech when he explained the science, his reasoning, and his decision regarding the use of stem cells in medical research. It didn’t matter if you agreed with him – he shared the depth of his analysis. There was substance; there was a there there.

While the zone mentality is always present, it seems heightened in the midst of an election cycle. Substance becomes irrelevant, perhaps even inappropriate. Conservatives cringed when Bush spoke appreciatively of Senator Specter’s “service to the party” during the primary campaign in Pennsylvania. But Specter is family regardless of his Republican-in-name-only status. President Bush was reminding Republicans to vote for family; it worked. Did you notice how vocal Senator Robert Byrd was during the impeachment and Iraq War discussions, and how he is muzzled during national campaigns? We can let him speak his mind when the choir is active, but when we need to be seen as a party of the future, we can’t let an 86 year-old and ex-KKK member be seen. We have an image to convey. There’s a time when the patriarch needs to be locked in the attic for the good of the family. We all understand.

Sometimes politicians play too heavily into the veneer. Kerry seems to be desperately searching for a campaign theme. It changes constantly because it is not him he is introducing, it is a theme. So instead of substance, we get labels: Benedict Arnold CEOs yields to the Misery Index to the Jobless Recovery to Let America be America. Now, in a sign of structural fatigue, he adopts someone else’s label: Two Americas theme is now getting some play. Kerry is so focused on the faux-finish that he has forgotten a fundamental issue: if a person presents their inside then the outside will define itself. He is rapidly becoming like the new boyfriend at his first family picnic trying too hard to be liked – no one can put their finger on a specific reason, but everyone is getting rather tired of his presence.

Ironically, while zones of comfort decide who will lead us, we are governed best during a second-term presidency. Veneer gives way to substance; our leader sets aside any pretense of pleasing the voters and focuses on his elected job with the full force of his intellect. The paradox is that it takes a few well-vetted sound bites to get there.

Sunday, July 18, 2004

John Q. Liberal: Who Are You?

It’s news worthy that Mrs. Kerry says, "I have to say that John Edwards is very beautiful …"? Is it that you can’t find anything substantive to say or that you all just want to feel gossipy in front of 1,400 people? I don’t understand.

Her husband keeps on repeating the bit about there being more blacks in prison than college. Quite to my amazement, I was one of the first to debunk that “liberal fact” and got internet press wide enough to make me giggle. Yet he keeps on saying it. The facts are so easy to find. He must believe, therefore, that facts do not matter and that most people listening to him don’t care more about his rhetoric than the facts. What kind of speaker and audience is this? I don’t understand people adopt such a mentality.

The same people take W’ “16 Words” on Africa and Iraq in the SOTU a couple of years ago and start the “Bush Lied” campaign far and wide. Now that their ammunition turns out to be as false as the government scientist that cooked the data on electro-magnetic waves causing cancer, one would think an apology or correction or something would be in order. After all, W was right. Nothing forthcoming. That tells me that you will accuse someone of lying, a dereliction of duty, without consideration for the wake. You care only to make someone look badly. Then when the damage is done and it turns out that you were wrong, you change the topic. That seems rather unfair and infantile to me. But you have the constitutionally strengthened power of the press. Why don’t you respect it more? I don’t understand people that act so flippantly.

The Veepstakes. Kerry says he never offered the job to McCain. Wow. Kerry says, about Edwards, that the White House is not the place to learn on the job. The country is at a war-footing. Health-care costs have a causal relationship to med-mal litigation expense. Kerry picks Edwards. No national security experience. Made his money as a tort litigator. But he smiles a lot and appears to spend a lot of time each morning in front of a mirror. And Kerry could not keep his hands off him. This is our country we are running, boys, not a high school homecoming parade. I don’t understand how to take Kerry seriously if he picks Edwards as the best choice for veep.

The press soaks up Bubba “hinting” that Hillary, our favorite Wet Hen in a Pantsuit, could run for POTUS as early as 2012. The press falls to be critical or analytical of such a statement. Pathetic. Bubba could not say “as early as 2008” because that would imply that Kerry could lose in 2004 or not deserve re-election if he wins. Hillary in 2012? Sixty-four years old running; 65 in office. She’s only 56 now and look at her! If Edwards floats onto a ticket because he’s “pretty,” how do we travel in such a different direction a couple of years down the road? Bulls rarely age well, and Hillary is no exception. Oh, yes, I forgot. Hillary is the smartest woman in the country. No wait, when she testified, she couldn’t recall so many details. Including how her fingerprints got on the billing records located in the White House that were under subpoena and no one could find. But I listened to Condi Rice testify. Now, that’s a smart woman. The press position? The liberal establishment position? Not to be understood.

Liberals cut the military budget, including pay rate increases, every time they are in control. A decrease in the rate of increase is a “cut” if it applies to social programs, yet they say they support the military. Soldiers sign up for and are trained to engage in combat, yet the liberals present disgruntled soldiers as the norm when combat actually occurs. Our military is rebuilding the infrastructure of two nations yet all the press can report on is a claim by some kid that there was compelled oral sex in that Abu prison (a claim which is highly suspect). W is skewered for invoking a commonly used troop turnover restriction and thus requiring longer tours of duty (“but our boys want to come home”) and the press merely looks at W for a reaction when the democrats suggest we should re-institute the draft. This entire topic is discussed in a decidedly unserious, lack-of-facts manner. I fail to understand how liberals expect to be treated with intellectual respect when their positions are so contradictory and so clearly lacking research.

The more I read critically the liberal presentation of the world the more I want to dismiss the entire lot of people as irrelevant. How can I take seriously a group of people that repeat as fact things so easily disproved? How can I take seriously a group of people that view the world so black and white? This last sentence is worthy of illustration because they toss it in W’s face all the time. Is it possible that W has a different view of the world than John Q. Liberal? As is said about juries, why can’t reasonable minds differ? But, no, not in John Q.’s world. W doesn’t have a different view. W lies. W wants to take the constitution away. W wants to kill our young men for oil. It’s black and white. But not if the protagonist is liberal. France sells weapons to Iraq in violation of U.N. restrictions; France takes hundreds of millions of dollars in oil-for-food money and doesn’t provide the food; France vetoes our efforts to go into Iraq (because it knows we will find the evidence to prove the above, and we have) – and we are supposed to cow-tow to them because, as the liberals say, we just don’t understand the nuance of the relationship.

John Q. Liberal is probably fun at a party, sometimes. But to run my country? No thanks. Too immature for the realities of the world. Too focused on having a good time. Too, well, silly.

Saturday, July 17, 2004

al-Qaeda: Got Viagra?

It is amazing to me that collectives such as entire populations of countries cannot see the pathetic bully mentality inherent in al-Qaeda’s actions. First was Spain: A bomb on a track close in time to elections. Then the kidnappings: Japan stands firm; the Philippines collapses. Now it is Italy: a website posting reads, "O Italian people, your government has participated in the war on Iraq and sent troops and arsenal to our country. We urge you for the last time to demand that it withdraw peacefully from Iraq."

But here is the real issue: "Either you junk the incompetent Berlusconi or we will really burn Italy." The statement wants the Prime Minister of Italy ousted or they will bring onto Italy a “bloodbath” like September 11. That last phrase, that’s it. That is how any discerning person can tell that we are dealing with fools, incompetents, simpletons, schoolyard bullies with the intelligence of a box of rocks.

September 11, 2001, was a sucker punch. They have paid dearly for it and continue to pay. It reminds me of the Black Knight in Monty Python’s Holy Grail claiming that the missing arm was just a scratch. Now al-Qaeda has the gall to claim the WTC collapse as a “bloodbath”? As if they could repeat it at will? What a joke. These guys are deeply and irreversibly stupid. I wager that to a person they physically strike the women in their lives.

Movie script: Childhood trauma. School bully keeps on picking on you. Violence escalates. You do nothing. “If I ignore him, he’ll stop.” Demanding milk money has grown to demanding your lunch, and hints at after-school extortion. What do you do? How does the script progress? In Europe and southeast Asia, it seems, you hand over your lunch, you scream “Uncle,” and then you cut lawns all day Saturday and give the bully the money. In the USA, under President Bush, we stand up to the bully, we take the fight back to him. We draw his blood, take his lunch money.

Yet entire populations quiver under the threatening words of these clowns. And Kerry dances on the thin ice of working with these countries, thereby validating their policies and inactions. Kerry thinks we should all cut lawns on Saturday for someone else’s benefit.

This entire situation is like having two televisions on, side by each (as my dad used to say). One set has ESPN’s The World Series of Poker on; the other is Bravo’s Celebrity Poker. On ESPN, the braggart, the loud mouth, the guy with more chips than sense eventually walks away with nothing. The serious player, the one who sees the process not as a game but a business, not as a series of hopeful bluffs but as knowing when to hold or fold, stays seated and gets up only when prize money is awarded. Over on Bravo, the loudmouth is rewarded. The raving lunatic is given hands just to shut up.

I see al-Qaeda for what it is: a group of pathetic, Viagra-needy men with room-temperature IQ’s. I prefer my country to be run like a business, not some made-for-TV reality show. The difference between W and Kerry could not be more clear.

Thursday, July 15, 2004

Separated at birth



I know, I'm tired, sorry. Just couldn't help myself.

Inside Politics: Missing Quote

Greg Pierce at Inside Politics has a piece I am sharing in full text below.

Missing quote

"Mr. Speaker, leave it to the former head of the KGB to inject a little common sense into the American presidential race — and leave it to the partisan American media to ignore it," Rep. Joe Wilson, South Carolina Republican, said yesterday on the House floor.

"During the recent [Group of Eight] summit in Georgia, Russian President Vladimir Putin said to a gathering of the news media — and I quote — 'I am deeply convinced that President Bush's political adversaries have no moral right to attack him over Iraq.'

"I did not find this quote in the New York Times or The Washington Post because they refused to report it. I didn't find it broadcast on CBS or NBC or ABC News either. I found this quote in China Daily, straight from Beijing," the congressman said.

"You could have found the same quote in some Russian publications as well, including Pravda and the British-based Reuters news service. But you could not find that quote in the American media except for one outlet — CBN (My Aisling Note - Christian Broadcast Network).

"It's a sorry day for American journalism when they find themselves out-balanced by their counterparts in communist China and Russia. It's also a new low for partisan media bias."

Liberals & Avoidance

It amazes me how people - liberals and conservatives - avoid certain facts to uphold their vision of the world. Being conservative, I see it more in liberals. But that must be inaccurate on my part else the upshot is that liberals are stupid. Since I have friends that are liberal, I would rather not think that about them.

Let's focus on the word "stupid" for a moment. The process began with Reagan and continues with W. Liberals label both as “stupid.” A friend of mine with second-hand-but-reliable information says, “W’s not a quick study.” Another friend says, “We need someone smart in the White House.”

There’s a long-term observation about military intelligence that is apt. No, not the one about it being an oxymoron. I mean the one about people being promoted when they do well in their jobs – so a Lt. Col. becomes a full Col. But then they don’t do well, so they don’t get promoted anymore. However, in the process they have risen exactly one level beyond their competence. Are our national leaders one level beyond their competence?

Running the country is not much different than running a large state – except for the defense component. Both Reagan and W ran large states well before entering the White House. Both have shown great ability in defense matters. So why the “stupid” label?

Ben Franklin said something like, “It is better to keep your mouth shut and thought a fool, than to open it and remove all doubt.” That may be accurate in personal and some business relations, but apparently not in politics.

Bill Clinton is asked about diddling Monica and his “no sexual relations” comment. The question was framed like – “What did you mean by that?” Recall that this is still in the denial phase of that pig’s recovery. (Oh, sorry, I still get emotional a little bit, particularly when I recall my angelic 9 year old daughter asking me to explain what oral sex was.) He says, “I think we all know what I meant by that.” He opened his mouth and lied – but was thought of as brilliant. What a putz.

An example of W’s brilliance is quick for me to find: the press wanted him to apologize during that press conference a few months ago. Time and time again he deflected the issue politely but firmly. He saw it for what it was: a set-up. “Bush says he erred in …” “Bush apologizes to the country for …” You’d swear those reporters called each other before the press conference to make sure they wore compatible clothing. The wisdom of a father shone through.

Does he speak extemporaneously in meetings? I sure hope not. If he does, he just doesn’t get it. His words mean something. His decisions are final. To sit about and chit-chat doesn’t fit the role.

Stupid? Not in the least. So why do liberals toss it about? I think it is easier to label someone “stupid” rather than “equal but different.”

There are two visions of how our country should be run. The extremes are pure socialism versus pure capitalism. We do not and will never have either. But the tension comes in how much socialism to introduce into our otherwise capitalistic society. Do we address the healthcare issue by nationalizing 1/7 of the economy? Seems extreme, almost (dare I say) stupid – just look at Canada and England for examples of how it does not work. But do we just ignore those folks that cannot afford healthcare (including me at the present time)? Seems cold-hearted. So we have welfare programs that provide a safety net. Yet the liberals want more and more.

Back to ignoring reality, the present condition of the economy is a great example. How many liberals say it is “so bad,” “squeezing the middle class,” and “something has to change”? My undergrad was in Economics, so when reports come out about future economic indicators and non-farm payrolls, I actually have some vague recollection of what they mean and how they portend changes in macro-economic performance. Anyone who looks at today’s economy and says it is doing poorly is just not paying attention. My, if I were a liberal and the person were W, I’d say he were stupid. But Kerry thematically offers the “worst economy since the Great Depression,” “a jobless recovery,” and so on. On each and every account, he changes tunes because the facts bury his accusations. Yet he is not thought of as Chicken Little.

Why is that? Ends-oriented thinking on behalf of liberals. Liberals ignore facts that don’t support their view of the world. And they freely condemn as inferior those that conflict with them.

C’mere, honey, it’ll be ok. I feel your pain. Let daddy give you a hug. It’ll be ok. I promise. Big bad W will go away, I promise. Just four more years and he’ll be bye-bye. Just four more years to straighten out the mess BJ Clinton made of the economy (creating a false balloon), the military (not even money for spare parts), and terrorist management (they tracked OBL, they have pictures of his camps with him there, they knew he was behind the WTC parking garage, but they did nothing). Then big bad dumb W will be all gone. Then you kids can run the country again for a while. And then people like Hamilton Jordan can smoke pot on the White House roof, and the First Lady can tell a Secret Service agent he is “of no f*$%ing use” because he needs to keep his hands free and cannot carry her luggage (on her first day at the WH!), and the Surgeon General can tell everyone that masturbation is not only normal but that it should be encouraged, and the Attorney General can authorize the shooting of an unarmed mother holding her baby, and the President can do girls the same age as his daughter, and … you get the point.

Four more years. Relax. There will be a little pin prick, and you may feel a little sick, but then the pain will recede.

Tuesday, July 13, 2004

The Patient Wet Hen

Hillary Clinton, our favorite wet hen in a pantsuit, is taking a beating in the press because – as the story goes – Little John’s pick as sacrificial veep candidate gives him the front-runner status in 2008.

Did you ever go fishing? Sometimes you let a fish take the line out, knowing full well the hook is set and you can end this game anytime you want. Hillary’s silence is worthy of Bass Fishing with Rupert (Tuesdays at 8:00PM).

It’s received a bit of press that both Little John and Big John are statistically more liberal than Hillary and Ted (make yourself useful, get me a drink) Kennedy. For Big John, the statistics mean something – he’s been in the Senate since 1985. Little John was 35 years old and two years a partner in someone else’s law firm at that time. He joined the Senate fourteen years later. Little John’s statistical sampling is rather thin. All the quick thinking he displays on issues of first impression to him cannot change the nature of the thin ice upon which he skates. (A Jethro Tull musical interlude may be appropriate here.)

He will also be unemployed come January 2005. Four years with nothing to do can change a man, can make a man angry – look at Gore. I can bear his speeches better if I picture him chained to a redwood tree surrounded by loggers, chainsaws buzzing and darting towards him, spittle flying as our hero swears the bad guys will have to cut through him to get to the tree, and admiring fans resting on blankets in the shade with picnic lunches of macrobiotic shakes and vegan sandwiches touching each other warmly.

Both Hillary and Little John were practicing attorneys. But having been one, I can say without fear of contradiction that there is a wide chasm between corporate attorneys and tort attorneys. Suffice it to say that there are good and competent (as well as bad and incompetent) lawyers in every field. That written, corporate attorneys need to live with their mistakes as deals are negotiated and contracts are signed, and then the client comes back with a “help me understand” look on his face and a story about a contract being breached without apparent recourse. Tort attorneys can accurately say, “juries do funny things,” and move onto the next case. Baseball fans: Corporate attorneys rise in their field by increasing their on-base percentage; tort attorneys by smacking the home runs. This difference leads corporate attorneys to be better suited for running motion picture studios, and tort attorneys for being part-time actors/part-time food service industry employees.

The press is in love with Little John for one reason: they want the dem ticket to win and Kerry cannot do it. Perhaps the love affair will end before November, but I doubt it. The press has nowhere else to go but W.

But Little John as a threat to Hillary? The most he can hope for when she is done with him is a big tip.

Wednesday, July 7, 2004

Barbershops & Toons

If you hang out in barbershop, you’re gonna get your hair cut.

Since we have Bullwinkle J. Kerry and Rocket J. Edwards joined at the hip through the first Tuesday following the first Monday in November, we need to consider what is going to happen through mere association. (We know what will happen the first Wednesday following the first Tuesday following the first Monday in November – Rocky will shift from understudy to protagonist in anticipation of 2008 when we will have the first wide-open election since 1968.)

Until he finds his sea legs, Bullwinkle will run around with a bomb in his hand declaring the sky is falling and Rocky will be in tow. At some time, Bullwinkle will begin to speak of his vision and Rocky will split off and begin his “Two Americas” tour – one America for the wealthy (like these two toons) and one for everyone else. Rocky will try to scare us while Bullwinkle will don his clothes-that-make-him-feel-pretty and show how he can solve all the world’s ills.

So will we believe them? It is ironic that Kerry seems the dour one and Edwards the leading man; the public roles will be reversed. Kerry will speak optimistically of a new tomorrow in his funeral director’s outfit; Edwards of a dark and twisted present in his cheerleader suit. There is, so it seems, a structural problem here.

To meld their respective visions, let’s fashion where it will take us. Kerry wants international cooperation, input, and approval on our affairs; Edwards wants the little people to have all the advantages that he enjoys without having the money. The common thread? Socialism. Edwards can identify the problem, suggest a general solution, and Kerry can bring in the experts. Remind me, what was the top marginal tax rate under Carter? What is it now? How about in Europe? Answers: 70%, 35%, and 47%. Now, does twelve more points sound so bad for everything we will get in return? But watch the tax monster – there is no end in sight of what can be taxed.

Most people know of the VAT (value-added tax, the equivalent of a national sales tax here). In the UK, the rate is 17.5%. So if you spend your money, you pay 17.5% for the privilege. Since this is after-tax dollars, presuming that you spend everything you bring in, the effective top marginal rate goes from 47% to 56.275%. Twelve points is now over twenty-one points.

But there’s more. Most Americans are not familiar with the Television Usage Tax of almost $200 a year (for a color tv). Since this is a fixed-rate tax, it falls disproportionately on the poor. As if the concept weren’t bad enough, read this from the Television Licensing Authority website: "Using a television without an appropriate licence is a criminal offence. Every day we catch an average of 1,200 people using a TV without a licence. There is no valid excuse for using a television and not having a TV Licence, but some people still try - sometimes with the most ridiculous stories ever heard. Our detection equipment will track down your TV. The fact that our enquiry officers are now so well equipped with the latest technology means that there is virtually no way to avoid detection." Further, “[a]ny dealer who sells or rents TV receiving equipment (whether the equipment is new or second-hand) [is required] to notify TV Licensing within 28 days of each transaction, giving full details of the buyer or renter.” {Gulp!}

And if socialized healthcare is so wonderful, why do Canadians come here? Why is a second healthcare industry (private pay) present in the UK, complete with separate docs and hospitals?

With Bullwinkle and Rocky’s extreme liberal agendas, it is the perfect time to have a debate between capitalism and socialism, and to decide (again) to leave Europe and cleave unto our own dreams.

It isn’t just this election. We have lower tax rates to make permanent, we have an aging USSC to reseed, we have a war-without-borders to wage, and we have an economic recovery to respect and of which to stay out of the way. Putting toons in the White House comes at a great expense. But let’s not forget the other toons still lurking about – Boris Badenov and Natasha Fatale, otherwise known as Bill and Hillary Clinton (the latter of which I prefer to think of as a wet hen in a pant suit but I can’t imagine a graphic to go with it). Do we close this Roger Rabbit episode in our history or release a sequel?

If we go hanging around toons, we might just become caricatures ourselves.

Tuesday, July 6, 2004

Edwards' Special Interests

(This is an update of a 6/24/04 post in light of his tentative selection by the presumptive nominee.)

You can tell a lot about a person by the company he keeps – and the company he chooses not to keep. Senator Edwards (D-NC) has been tapped by Senator Kerry (D-MA) to be the sacrificial Veep. Let’s review his special-interest acquaintances in politics.

Special interest groups issue rankings of politicians based upon votes that they consider to be important to their causes. Below are the rankings assigned by various groups for votes cast by Edwards in 2003. I have only included the rankings at the extremes of -0%- and 100%. Many other rankings were given in between by other groups. I considered (under the theory that even a blind squirrel finds a nut every once in a while) but rejected including those groups that ranked him with ten points of perfect or a complete loser. I found that the picture did not change that much with their inclusion. Regardless, to get a broader picture, I have included the National Journal rankings.

Names of organizations can be misleading. For example, one would naturally think that something called “Air America” would fly or perhaps move along the airwaves in some fashion. Instead, in reality, it is something that consumes endless amounts of money, is present almost exclusively in small media markets, and exudes an obnoxious odor. Rather than its plain meaning, Air America seems more akin to a liberal version of Cow Pie Bingo. In light of this, each special interest group name below is also link to that group’s website.

The source data was compiled primarily from one of my favorite sites on the net - Project Vote Smart.

They love him … all 100% ratings:

Abortion Issues: National Abortion Reproductive Rights Action League (NARAL is known as“America's most aggressive pro-abortion organization”). Civil Rights: Leadership Conference on Civil Rights (the LCCR opposes the Federal Marriage Amendment through secondary means – instead of saying that they support same-sex marriages, they state that they are troubled by the infringement on civil rights and the use of the precious little time available to Congress). Family and Children Issues: National Network for Youth. Gender Issues: American Association of University Women (follow the site’s link along the top to “Issue Advocacy.” Seems the AAUW cares a lot about a continued right to have an abortion and doesn’t want school vouchers to be used in primary and secondary schools. What does either issue have to do with being a woman at a university?). Health Issues: American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists; American Public Health Association ("Seniors should be protected against situations where private insurers can charge premiums that fluctuate from state to state or that force them to change plans, pharmacists or current prescriptions should a private insurer decide to stop offering coverage in a particular community." Georges C. Benjamin, MD, FACP, APHA Executive Director. Oh, so we should socialize medicine, George?). Labor: Transportation Communications Union; AFL-CIO. Senior and Social Security Issues: Alliance for Retired Americans (Quotes: “$330 billion in tax breaks for the wealthiest American threatens (note – I want to be that American!)) the financial stability of the Social Security and Medicare Trust Funds,” and “Senator Kennedy, D-MA, introduced an amendment a tax bill that would shift $150 billion in dividend and tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans to the Medicare Trust Fund.” Anything else need be said?). Social Issues: Population Connection (aka, We-Be-Abortions); NETWORK, A National Catholic Social Justice Lobby (opposes W’s tax cuts, wants to socialize health care, opposes extending NAFTA to South America – these are Catholics, right? What do these issues have to do with spreading God’s Word?).

They love him not … all -0%- ratings:

Budget, Spending and Taxes: Americans for Tax Reform (Their site shares: "Earlier this year, a senior Democratic House staffer, discussing a draft opinion column written by opponents of personal accounts, admitted in an email that their arguments were 'not entirely factually accurate' and were 'scaring seniors.' The email was mistakenly sent to a Republican staffer." Read the e-mail here. They seem like good guys!); American Shareholders Association (These guys issued a report entitled Kerry's 19-Year Record on Investor Issues. Gotta love someone who does their homework!) Business and Consumers: National Retail Federation; Associated Builders & Contractors; Business-Industry Political Action Committee; National Federation of Independent Business. Conservative: Christian Coalition (But, but ... aren't these the good guys? You have to be pretty bad to earn a zero from the good guys.); Eagle Forum. Family and Children Issues: Family Research Council ("Defending family, faith, and freedom." How come the liberals never talk about God?). Gender Issues: Concerned Women for America. Housing and Property Issues: League of Private Property Voters.

They try not to be so opinionated …

The National Journal issues six rankings. It is a pay site, unfortunately, but some info can be gleaned from the titles below:

0% Conservative on Economic Policy
0% Conservative on Social Policy
6% Composite Conservative Score

85% Liberal on Social Policy
93% Liberal on Economic Policy (Tied for #1 in both chambers with Sens. Kerry, Durkin, Sarbanes, Edwards, & Reed)
95% Composite Liberal Score (This is the infamous ranking of which Kerry got all the press for being the most liberal senator with a score of 97%. In fact, Kerry is the most liberal legislator (even though he's never legislated a single bill) – no one in the House reaches his height. Edwards Senate ranking? #2 (tied with Reed (D-RI) and Sarbanes (D-MD)).

By the friends he keeps, Edwards is a liberal’s liberal - just like Kerry. Perhaps we will finally have democrat candidates that don’t try to run from their roots. It’s time for a national discussion and to choose a path – liberal or conservative.

Monday, July 5, 2004

Shape-Shifter, not Flip-Flopper

Kerry thinks life begins at conception. But as a legislator, he cannot force his personal, religious feelings on other people. According to Kerry, then, when life begins is a religious issue.

First, let’s give him credit for consistency – 100% NARAL lifetime rating: never a vote against the interests of the most aggressive abortion-pushing organization ever to exist. As I write this, the number of abortions since Roe v. Wade is 46,456,737.

Religion to me is a matter of faith. I cannot see God, but I can look around me and see His hand in all of creation. The line between faith and science is much more easily drawn for me because I start with intelligent design rather than random chance. Irreducibly complex systems don’t frustrate me. Biological systems, for me, are like walking into another kid’s room – even though no one else is present, the toys are already partially put together when I start to play.

It is at that moment, when I begin to observe, to play, that pure science arrives. Anything I do can be replicated. I do not perform miracles. When life begins, when a cell divides, then, is a biological function – not one of faith.

If human life has begun, then the government has a fundamental interest, a compelling interest in preserving that life. That is the United States Constitution. Roe stood for the proposition that life does not begin until the point of fetal viability outside the womb is reached about midway through gestation. Once reached, a fundamental interest has arisen and the government must protect it. This is not religion – it is law.

So Kerry cannot force his personal, legal views on other people? I’m getting confused. Let’s try another direction.

If the beginning of life is religious and not biological for Kerry, then so must be other issues. How about the ending of life? As a Catholic, Kerry must believe in everlasting life in Heaven. So, if one never dies, then one can never be murdered. OK, illogical. Another direction.

If you can’t enforce your personal, religious or legal views on other people, then what can you enforce? The words “cultural,” “politically correct,” and “sanitized” come to mind. They all raise another specter for me – evolving standards. Nothing is immutable. What is acceptable today may be unacceptable tomorrow. The trick becomes when and how to abandon today’s position and adopt tomorrow’s.

And that explains Kerry. “Flip-flopper”? No. Shape-shifter. He is constantly searching for the new curve. Like Woody Allen’s “Zelig,” Kerry becomes like those around him. While Allen’s Zelig grew a beard upon meeting Hasidic Jews, or became pleasingly plump in the company of weight-challenged individuals, Kerry shifts shape in other ways. Introduce him to automakers and he drives an SUV; to environmentalists and he doesn’t even own one. Introduce him to voters seeking revenge and he supports war; to voters seeking enemy victory and he tries to cut funding for the war.

But such evolving cores must come at a cost. Do they manifest themselves in other ways in his life? Does he show elite liberals his manicure, and would-be veep candidates his pedicure? We do know he has said, "Don't you know who I am?" quite often. How about this: introduce him to the press after taking a spill on the slopes and he curses; to farmers and he tells where he learned to curse. Hey, John, I don't mean to get too religious, but it is not what goes into a mouth that will condemn a person to eternity in Hell, but what comes out of it. Don't be so proud of your filthy proclivities.

As a politician, unfortunately, shape-shifting comes at a cost beyond the air he breathes, the food he consumes, and the space he occupies: 46,456,971 religious-sorta-legal-but-not-politically-correct babies since Roe.

Sunday, July 4, 2004

Surprise, the LA Times misses the mark!

The travel industry gets blind-sided by a huge increase in travel and all the LA Times can say is something like, "wow, this in light of the hatred of Americans and the danger of traveling abroad."

Maybe it is pent-up demand, they say. Maybe this, maybe that. Amazing.

It is very simple. People are traveling for one reason: they think the economy is strong.

Bullwinkle J. Kerry's Realistic Path

Bullwinkle J. Kerry has taken the time to present what is postured to be a major position piece. Let’s give him the benefit of our time and patience.

A Realistic Path in Iraq. By John F. Kerry. Sunday, July 4, 2004; WaPo Page B07.

Like most Americans (I always despise it when anyone claims to be with “most” Americans; I can believe “many,” but “most” infers data which we know does not exist), I want to believe that this past week's events -- the transfer of sovereignty and the appearance of Saddam Hussein before an Iraqi court -- will place us on the road to success. (Fluff; meaningless opening.) But there is still no sign of a strategy that will get us there. We have transferred sovereignty, but (“but,” always a “but.” Nothing is good enough for this clown – we are either occupiers or leaving too soon.) Iraq still lacks the capacity to provide security and essential services. (I cheated – I read ahead. Bullwinkle’s “strategy” is to let somebody, anybody but us to do it!) To give democracy, pluralism and regional peace a chance (give peace a chance? Tell me that isn’t an intended grouping of words. Sorry, JFK, I knew John Lennon. Sir Winston O’Boogie you’re not), we need a policy that is effective -- a policy that finally includes a heavy dose of realism. (To be effective, we must be realistic. OK. But why do I feel that the first part of your realism is to tell Le Papier de Rapport that they were right – the situation is hopeless?)

Our foreign policy has achieved greatness only when it has combined realism and idealism, our sense of practicality and our deep commitment to values such as freedom and democracy. Look back at NATO and the Marshall Plan, the enduring creations of the Truman administration.
(Harry Truman. Remind me … same guy that chose to pre-emptively bomb a couple of cities in Japan rather than invade and risk great loss of life? Same guy know for his lack of nuance in his speech? The same guy that said, “Carry the battle to them. Don't let them bring it to you. Put them on the defensive. And don't ever apologize for anything”? You are quoting him? Ahhh, now I understand – Truman also said, “If you cannot convince them, confuse them.” OK, I’m with you now.)

Our military performed brilliantly in the war's first mission: ending the regime of Saddam Hussein. And all Americans share President Bush's desire for Iraqis to live with the blessings of democracy
(What happened to “pluralism” above?) and security. But we are a practical people, and we know that all the rhetoric we've heard hasn't been accompanied by a realistic plan to win the peace and bring our troops home (Oh, give me a break! Is this some crack at being a plain-spoken New Englander? And drop the “we,” Bullwinkle – you do not speak for me). We know that a chief of staff of the Army, Gen. Eric Shinseki, was right when he argued that more troops would be needed to establish security and win the peace in the weeks and months after Saddam Hussein's fall (The same Shinseki who told Congress in February 2003 that the occupation could require "several hundred thousand troops." Your sources crack me up, Bullwinkle!). And we know, especially, that we should have brought more friends and allies to the cause. (Tell me – French, Germans, Russians? They were afraid to fight against their own weapons!)

The point here is not to revisit history
(Wow. So you were just digressing thus far? You are 24.4% into your word count and now you say none of the above matters?) but to forge a new policy based on what we know and on what will be most effective. We still have an opportunity to prevent (which implies, of course, that only intervention in our current path will correct the course. OK. I’m listening.) Iraq from becoming a failed state and a haven for global terrorists (better there than here, eh, Johnny?) and Islamic extremists. We can still succeed in promoting stability, democracy, protection of minority and women's rights, and peace in the region, even at this late hour (do you hear yourself when you write? The sky is falling, the sky is falling!), if we construct and follow a realistic path. But if we are to reduce the overwhelming military and financial (bummer, the GOA just reported that Iraqi oil revenue is paying for the reconstruction, not us) burden America is bearing and maximize the chances of success, we will need help from others (tell, me – the French, Germans, Russians?). Getting that help will require not only convincing our friends and allies that we share an interest in preventing failure but also giving them a meaningful voice and role in Iraqi affairs (at the expense of who’s voice? The Iraqis themselves? They are the only ones running their affairs. Boy, this smacks of an occupation). That is the only way to forge real cooperation, and it is long past time for this to be done.

In recent months the Bush administration has taken some of the needed steps. It has worked through the United Nations to legitimize the transition to an interim Iraqi government and to call for troop contributions and financial assistance. But we need a more far-reaching plan if we are to win the substantial help
(“win” substantial help? So the help will be forthcoming only if we “win” it? Then I guess, it will be deserved. Then, if it is not thereafter forthcoming, we can sue them to compel the “substantial help”? This guy is pathetic.) that is required. We have to move our allies beyond the resentment they feel about the Bush administration's failed diplomacy (Boy, I feel a Cheney Moment welling up inside of me. The UN oversees the theft of billions of dollars in the Oil-for-Food Program; Old Europe sells weapons and enters into sanction-defying business deals … and W failed? You, Bullwinkle, are a moron.) so they can focus on their interest in fighting terrorism and promoting peace. The best way to do that is to vest friends and allies in Iraq's future.

On the economic front, that means giving them fair access to the multibillion-dollar reconstruction contracts
(oh, I get it – “winning” their “substantial help” means buying it.). It also means letting them be a part of putting Iraq's profitable oil industry back together. In return, they must forgive Hussein's multibillion-dollar debts to their countries and pay their fair share of the reconstruction bill. (Good thing they already said they would do this, eh? Otherwise you may fail at your diplomacy.)

We should also give them a leadership role in pursuing our wider strategic goals in the region
(Always presuming that someone else can do it better than us. Amazing. Consistent, but still amazing.). As partners, we should convene a regional conference with Iraq's neighbors. Such a conference would have two goals. First, it should secure a pledge from Iraq's neighbors to respect Iraq's borders and not to interfere in its internal affairs (You’ve never negotiated with Arabs, have you?). And second, it should commit Iraq's leaders to provide clear protection for minorities, thus removing a major justification for possible outside intervention (How funny! If only Iraq would provide clear protection for minorities, say the Christians and Jews, then Iran and Syria would not intervene. My 14 year-old son has a deeper and more accurate analysis.). Together, we should jump-start large-scale involvement with an international high commissioner (And where would this person come from? Please say the UN?) to coordinate economic assistance and organize and implement these diplomatic initiatives.

Then, having taken these dramatic steps
(Dramatic? Specifically, let the French/German/Russian federation tell the Iraqis how to run their country, we give them the spoils of war in the reconstruction contracts, and then let the UN tell the other Arab countries to butt out), we could realistically call on NATO to step up to its responsibilities (would that be the part of NATO that includes France or the part that includes Poland?). Our goal should be an alliance commitment to deploy a major portion of the peacekeeping force that will be needed in Iraq for a long time to come (You’ve never actually negotiated with the Russians, have you?). Just as NATO came together to contain the Soviet Union and bring peace to Bosnia (the same Bosnia for which Amnesty International writes in their 2004 report that “[i]mpunity for human rights violations remained endemic”? The report is available in French on their website.) and Kosovo (The same Kosovo that, in a report dated June 10, 2004, it was stated, “Today marks the fifth anniversary of the beginning of the ethnic cleansing of Roma, Ashkaelia, Egyptians and other persons regarded as "Gypsies" from Kosovo. In the wake of the cessation of NATO action against the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in June 1999 and the subsequent return of predominantly ethnic Albanians from abroad, ethnic Albanians violently expelled approximately four fifths of Kosovo's pre-1999 Romani population -- estimated to have been around 120,000 -- from their homes. In the course of the ethnic cleansing campaign, ethnic Albanians kidnapped Roma and severely physically abused and in some cases killed Roma; raped Romani women in the presence of family members; and seized, looted or destroyed property en masse. Whole Romani settlements were burned to the ground by ethnic Albanians, in many cases while NATO troops looked on.”), with the right kind of leadership from us NATO can be mobilized to help stabilize Iraq and the region )see above). And if NATO comes, others will too (Russia? China? North Korea? Al-Qaeda?).

Inside Iraq, the overriding need is for security, and the essential participants are the Iraqis themselves
(Oh, didn’t you say it was the French, et al., above?). The missing ingredient in this quest so far is a political accommodation among Iraqis (What was the constitutional congress all above?). Each Iraqi group -- the Kurds, the Shiites and the Sunnis -- has to feel it will have safety and a fair share in Iraq's future. Yes, let the Iraqis move forward with their schedule for elections and the writing of a constitution, but all must realize that the results of these elections and the constitution will hold only if the parties know they can protect their basic interests (Wow, if I were an Iraqi, I would feel another Cheney Moment coming – somehow embedded in the phrase “don’t lecture me, son, you haven’t a clue as to what I’ve been through.). Helping Iraq come together this way, by peaceful negotiations and not by civil warfare, is the realistic way to secure the loyalty of Iraqis to their new state, and the best way to give them a future to defend (Yadda, yadda, yadda … boy, this guy is really boring). And it will strengthen our efforts, and those of others in the international community, to overhaul the program to train and build Iraqi security forces that have the will and the capacity to fight against the insurgents and terrorists. In this context too, Iraqi reconstruction of Iraq with international assistance will have a chance. (At this point, I got up to get a sandwich.)

Success in Iraq must be separated from our politics. It is too important to our troops who are serving there and to the security of our nation.
(Wow. What balls this neutered Mr. Heinz-Kerry has.) I hope President Bush will fashion policies that will succeed. But today we are not pursuing the most effective path. It is only by pursuing a realistic path (The only “realistic path” he mentions is turning over everything to Old Europe and the UN. I fail to see a strategy there.) to democracy in Iraq that we can connect our ideals with American common sense. Only then can we heal the wounds between our allies and ourselves and only then can we muster the might of our alliances to isolate our enemies and win the war on terrorism around the world.

OK, he’s had his say. How’d he do? Sorry, ladies, but this piece by Bullwinkle is devoid of strategy and realism. And to think he used Independence Day to unveil it. What a waste.

Saturday, July 3, 2004

Moore: Master of his Domain?

I am being so terribly lazy today. Sitting back watching the Yankees ... darn, the Mets just this second hit a 3-run home run to go up 4-3. That's OK, the JV needs to feel good for a little while. The grown-ups will finish the game. Anyway, I am doing more reading than writing. As much as I don't care to talk about the A-V Studio, plastic-pocket protector reject Michael Moore, I will let someone else do the talking. You have to love the phrase at the end of the excerpt below, "half-educated, vindictive buffoon." Seems to include so much historical aimlessness, present-tense untethered hatred, and future helplessness in just four words. You know just by looking at him that he doesn't use anywhere near enough deordorant. You also know that with his newfound millions and liberal-elite stardom that he has a lot of sex - too bad he is usually alone when it happens. Ah, the Yankees just went up 6-4; Jeter's up with a guy on 3d. It's a good day.

The following section was taken from a longer piece written by Victor Davis Hanson. (All due respect, Victor, but I never understood the double last name for a guy. I figure you either take your wife's surname or keep your own - I kept my maiden name. You can do whichever you please, but you should pick one.)

The So-Called Loyal Opposition

We are in dangerous times, because beyond the normal Democratic/Republican, Left/Right natural give-and- take, there is now a growing and very crazy New, New Left. It has transcended both the old Marxism of the 1930s and the counterculture of the 1960s, and transmogrified into a strange sort of aristocratic, boutique damnation of Main Street, USA.
These furious critics of America are heiresses, work at trendy foundations, and include movie stars, upscale academics like a Chomsky, or global currency gougers such as George Soros. Al Gore's recent bouts of insanity are a metaphor of the scary era we are in.

But who is the real new Democratic guru that best reflects the new Know-Nothingness? We should judge a Michael Moore not just by what he says, but what he does every time he freelances without his publicists and handlers. At a time of war, he scoffs at 9-11 as if the wrong Americans were dying (If someone did this [9/11] to get back at Bush, then they did so by killing thousands of people who DID NOT VOTE for him!).

He praises our enemies who are beheading innocents in Iraq. (The Iraqis who have risen up against the occupation are not "insurgents" or "terrorists" or "The Enemy." They are the REVOLUTION, the Minutemen, and their numbers will grow -- and they will win. Get it, Mr. Bush?)

He shows contempt for our dead who fought and died for the right of Iraqis to vote. ("I'm sorry, but the majority of Americans supported this war once it began and, sadly, that majority must now sacrifice their children until enough blood has been let that maybe - just maybe - God and the Iraqi people will forgive us in the end.").

He slurs civilian workers like Nick Byrd and Paul Johnson who were trying to help rebuild Iraq. ("Those are not contractors in Iraq. They are not there to fix a roof or to pour concrete in a driveway. They are MERCENARIES and SOLDIERS OF FORTUNE").

He has contempt for Americans outside his circle of sycophants: "They are possibly the dumbest people on the planet . . . "We Americans suffer from an enforced ignorance. We don't know about anything that's happening outside our country. Our stupidity is embarrassing."

The problem with this war was never the material resources of the United States, the skill and courage of our soldiers, or even the support of the majority of the American people between San Francisco and New York. Indeed, we have the will, military power, and economic resources to crush our enemies - should we choose to. Rather the rub was always the lack of communication by our leaders who have a responsibility each day to counter popular superstition, half-truths, and misconception - and to do so with unapologetic audacity.

They do try. But so far it has simply not been enough. And the result of this Dukakis-like paralysis is that a half-educated, vindictive buffoon like Michael Moore and all the ignorance that he stands for have captivated a foolish cultural elite. Let us face it: the Left in this country has gone absolutely crazy. Without worries of rebuke or censure, the dinosaurs of the 1960s really do wish us to give one final gift of their wisdom and humanity - and so does its best to bring us a repeat of American choppers fleeing the embassy roof, circa 1975, with millions left behind awaiting death, reeducation camps, and exile.

Friday, July 2, 2004

In Defense of the F-Word

Charles Krauthammer has a piece today on Cheney's invocation of the F-Word that says it all. Enjoy your weekend.