May 29, 2004
INTERVIEW
Charles Johnson points out a very interesting
interview with the President. The part I liked the best:
A president shouldn't worry about how history will judge him. I'll never know. I'll know how short term history will judge me, if I'd ever read the editorial pages I'd figure it out, because they're the ones writing the history. But when we try to do big things—accomplish big objectives—whether it be cultural change, or … the struggle we're in—it's going to take a while for history to really judge the accomplishments of a president and the true impact of a presidency. If you're doing little things, then maybe 20 years from now we'll be able to figure it out … But with big things it's going to take awhile. And so when you hear this thing about, "Well he's worried about his standing in history." I'm not. And most short-term history will be written by people who didn't particularly want me to be President to begin with.
I also very much enjoyed the end of the interview when he talks about how the war is affecting him personally. Read it if you have time; it's a window into the personal life of the President.
Posted by: Sarah at
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The first time I ever heard the word "legacy" in relation to a sitting President was with Bill Clinton. Every move he made, every decision coming out of the Oval Office was considered first in regard to his legacy.
In the military, I learned things take care of themselves if you work hard and do your job well. Bush has that same philosophy. I sincerely believe he will do what he feels needs to be done, and the election is a sideshow. That sets him apart.
Posted by: Mike at May 29, 2004 03:12 PM (NZ4lg)
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May 09, 2004
GRRRR
I hate that sneaky
#@$%$ Kerry.
Posted by: Sarah at
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May 07, 2004
LOVE
I love the President.
Over on RWN there are four stories about what kind of man President Bush is. I know some people in the blogosphere are reluctant Bush supporters; I however genuinely like the man. I don't agree with him on everything -- religion plays a much bigger role in his life and his politics than in mine, and I disagree with some of his stances on issues (marriage amendment, stem-cell research, etc) -- but I truly like him as a person and as a President despite our personal differences.
When I read about how he reacted to a child whose mother died in the WTC and a woman who whispered that she prays for him, I can't help but think of what a good man he is. He cares. He has the weight of the world on his shoulders -- he has ordered our servicemembers to go to Afghanistan and Iraq and die for their country, while the rest of the world hates him with every breath they take -- and yet he stops to comfort someone else who needs it.
Can you imagine for a moment what it must be like to be President Bush? Knowing that everyone around the world hates you, that they burn you in effigy and carry posters that liken you to Adolf Hitler? Knowing that everyone thinks you're too stupid to be President, too incompetent to be trusted, and too big of a liar to listen to? Knowing that servicemembers are dying because you are trying to do what was right for our country, and all anyone can focus on is WMDs and imminent threats? Den Beste complains that his readers won't see the forest for the trees; how must President Bush feel knowing that he's trying to make the world a safer place in the future while so many people are harping on the details?
And of course with my love for the military I'm especially touched by the two stories about President Bush and soldiers. The first shows him jogging with a SSG who lost a leg in Afghanistan; the second finds him saluting a wounded LTC in the hospital.
I cry nearly every time I read a story about a servicemember's death; I can only imagine how much it affects the man who made the decision to send them all to the war in the first place. I sometimes can't sleep at night if I'm worrying about being a good teacher; I can't even believe President Bush gets any sleep at all. I really feel for him: he has the hardest job in the world.
I love him. He's my President.
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Thanks for saying that so well, Sarah. It is exactly the way I feel. I saw the photo of him holding the girl so tenderly, you can see the pain he feels for her is real. Just imagine the,and I know you can because of the wonderful way you write it, the pain he must feel with each one who is wounded or killed.
All the haters who think he did this for personal profit are so blinded it seems surreal to me when I listen to C-span I think where are these people getting all the vitriol? Thanks for your blog, I hope it is helping get through this terrible time.
Posted by: Ruth H at May 07, 2004 09:52 AM (itSbs)
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This post exemplifies part of why I admire you so much. You are one of the most sincere people I have ever known. I just hope that you never feel betrayed by Bush.
And of course I don't view sincerity as a be-all end-all. Too many use 'But he meant well' as an excuse for evil. Your sincerity is integrated with the other principles of yours that I admire. Without that framework, sincerity can be downright dangerous.
Posted by: Amritas at May 07, 2004 02:27 PM (YGEzG)
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He is real. I think he epitomizes the word "Texan." He was raised well. Barbara Bush is the quintessential American Mom, and I can't imagine any of her brood wandering from the straight and narrow for long.
I have never understood why anyone would want the job he has.
Posted by: Mike at May 07, 2004 04:47 PM (kbqMz)
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Have you noticed how much he has aged in the last two years? I think it is due to the amount of stress in his job.
Posted by: Amy at May 07, 2004 10:46 PM (aJ30v)
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Not *everyone* hates him. I love the guy. Didn't at first, but do now. Were he still a drinking man, I'd love to set with him for a pint or two. And I don't think he loses any sleep over what those who hate him think.
Posted by: Seppo at June 29, 2004 11:57 AM (YEQAi)
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April 15, 2004
TUITION
I saw an AP article with the intriguing title
Iraq War Proves Thorny Issue for Kerry. What struck me was this unrelated paragraph towards the end:
During his day on campus, Kerry promoted his plan to give a free college education to students who agree to public service. He said he would pay for it using $13 million that banks earn for issuing government-backed student loans.
Huh? So I decided to check it out. First I found a little more info in the original article from Iowa:
Kerry proposed the "Service for College" initiative to help make college affordable and strengthen America's security. According to this initiative, for two years of service to the United States, every young person can earn the equivalent of the state's four-year public college tuition. Students could also get two years of college tuition in exchange for one year of service.
"It is great because it offers tuition to students and at the same time helps out the whole country by getting students involved in service like AmeriCorps, Peace Corps or the military," Schoenthal-Muse said.
We already have that for the military: it's called ROTC. Still not satisfied that I understood exactly what Kerry is proposing, I went right to the link at his website.
Now, I was a little disgusted when I read the opening paragraph
On September 11th, 2001, America experienced the most terrible and deadly attack in its history. Yet, President Bush's response was to call on Americans to wait in long lines at airports, go shopping, or wrap their windows in plastic.
which has nothing at all to do with education, but somehow Kerry ties it in to making our nation stronger by calling on young people to get into public service. I don't know what that has to do with 9/11 or the jab at Bush, but whatever.
So I finally got to the pdf file of his proposal, and I see that he's offering
a simple deal to hundreds of thousands of America's young people: If you will serve for two years in one of America's toughest and most important jobs, we will pay for four years of tuition at the typical public university. Young people will also be able to use their educational awards to pay off student loans if they have already finished college or to enter job training, start a small business, or buy a first home.
Forget for a moment the big question of where the money will come from to implement this plan and focus on some fine print. My big question is whether you get a salary while you're doing your two years of service. Are those two years done for no money and then you just get tuition at the end, or do you make some sort of salary for the service in addition to the college tuition? That's a big difference, and it's not addresed.
If you're working and making a salary for two years, plus you get free college, then that's a lot of money that has to materialize out of nowhere. I'm nowhere near competent in economics or business (wish the husband were here), but this sounds fishy to me.
Does anyone else understand how this could work?
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It works by everyone forgetting he ever said it. Of course, only Congress can make it happen.
AmeriCorps now does things groups like the Boy Scouts are no longer allowed to do.I know one young woman who cleared trails in Arkansas for a year. They were paid virtually nothing, but had "the experience of helping others." It is, however, the only true public service.
Politicians like to claim they've spent their lives in public service, but I hardly consider a good-paying job with lots of perks a "service."
Posted by: Mike at April 15, 2004 01:29 PM (cFRpq)
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You're right to be concerned, as the details are important. Arguments for alternative public service have been around since the fights over the draft in the late 60's.
Every time we propose to increase incentives for non-military "alternative" public service, careful consideration needs to be given as to whether such incentives will be detrimental to the ones for enlistment in the military.
No matter how you slice it, domestic public service is not the same and a "one-size fits all" strategy won't work IMO.
A "one-size fits all" approach is generally true for military enlistment incentives (with some exceptions). But what complainers often fail to understand is that even a soldier in some specialized non-combat MOS is still as deployable to a combat zone (Iraq) as any combat soldier.
Not so for "Americorps" volunteers, who I gather often design their own public service projects (to include such dangerous duty as passing out condoms in high schools and teaching about STD's).
Posted by: Paul H. at April 15, 2004 03:57 PM (s6c4t)
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Here's your answer.
He said he would pay for it using $13 million that banks earn for issuing government-backed student loans
He's gonna rob a few banks.

)
Posted by: Larry at April 15, 2004 05:54 PM (6TcYT)
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Americorps volunteers do a lot of the social service stuff that would otherwise not be done at all. I'm of two minds about Americorps and CityYear (a similar program that, for a time, was affiliated with it). My eldest daughter was a volunteer, and she thinks of it as one of the best things she has done. It does give inner-city youth a chance to be of service, and also to be influenced in a positive direction. There is putatively a structure for discipline, but it can be sporadically implemented.
My daughter was older than some of the volunteers, and a college graduate. Her service (2 years) gave her an opportunity to work through some issues, and decide on a career direction. It also gave her some practical experience with being in charge of a group. She will be taking her first vows this summer in a Franciscan order.
These programs need to be supported by the business and charitable community, not just supported by the government. I don't think they can realistically be expanded to the general population, though. There's a big difference in the quality of volunteer you get when you spread the net too far.
Posted by: Linda at April 19, 2004 01:26 PM (pF95l)
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April 05, 2004
VANDALS
I've
said before that I think many on the Left use the empty Support Our Troops claim to soften the blow when they rally against President Bush. (Others just
say what they really mean.) Most of the time I doubt their sincerity, because you can't fully support the troops without understanding them. So I wasn't that surprised when I found
this today on LGF:
Sometime overnight, someone used yellow spray paint to write “Kill Bush” on a section of the memorial where names of local veterans are displayed on a sloping wall. The same slogan, along with others, was repeated on the back of the memorial.
A lot of people will do whatever it takes to get their point across, even if it comes to vandalizing something as significant as a veteran's memorial. As long as word gets out that Bush is evil. I've come to expect this from the Left, and it really makes me sad.
Comments of some others who stopped by the memorial Saturday morning are unfit for publishing in a family newspaper.
I wish I could have met and talked to those people.
Posted by: Sarah at
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Wow,
You really are over the top.
How dare you lump all liberals together with as*h*les who would vandalize memorials.
How DARE you?
You know what, I could point to instances of cross burnings on the lawns of African-Americans and make some idiotic claim about how this represents typical conservative sentiment.
But that would be utterly stupid, and insulting, and immoral.
But I see the right has no qualms.
Deal with this: NOT everyone agrees with Bush or his policies. It does NOT make us traitors. It does NOT make us unpatriotic to express our dissent.
OF COURSE, there are extremist wackos on the left AND on the right. It would be STUPID of me to generalize everyone on the right... and characterize the ENTIRE right by the extremism of a relatively few... but clearly, you have no such problem doing the same thing.
Deal with this: The fact that you clearly have so much contempt for those who disagree and who dare to dissent does far more to dishonor your husband's service than anything the far left could do.
Posted by: jab at April 05, 2004 03:40 AM (pMjZc)
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Ease up there Jab, or are you trolling?
Since all I have to do is quote her post to show how you are WAY overreacting, I'll do so.
"many on the Left"
"A lot of people"
Nowhere does she says, ALL, or even The Majority, hell, she doesn't even say Liberal.
Vandalizing Veterans Memorials is a bit worse than 'disagree and who dare to dissent '. It is outright inflammatory and destructive.
Disagree and dissent all you wish, but don't look for sympathy when you defend what she is actually talking about, rather than what you wish her to be talking about.
Man, I shouldn't feed the trolls.
Posted by: Blueshift at April 05, 2004 05:39 AM (crTpS)
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Shouldn't feed them, but it's hard not to.
John Ray has reached the point that he now has an additional blog dedicated just to greenies. His Dissecting Leftism got too crowded!
Posted by: Mike at April 05, 2004 07:53 AM (cFRpq)
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I have a box of Troll-Be-Gone here left over from the infestation at Jennifer's. Turns out that the pellets work just fine on both left and right-wing trolls. Just sprinkle a little around the post and sweep up the dead trolls in the morning.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at April 05, 2004 08:34 AM (+S1Ft)
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"...you can't fully support the troops without understanding them."
I absolutely disagree with this statement. There are a lot of people who have no idea what the troops go through yet support what they do.
Posted by: Ted at April 05, 2004 11:15 AM (blNMI)
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Ted, I meant understanding who they are and what they do. Understanding that they're not all mindless robots following Rumsfeld's orders. Understanding that most of them love and cherish our country and feel that their duty station is wherever they must go to fight for our freedom. Not understanding how bad it sucks to wear body armor and kick down doors, but understanding that they're not Bush's minions...
Posted by: Sarah at April 05, 2004 12:07 PM (ctmsL)
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March 30, 2004
UNFAIR
No time to blog, but I was flipping through the paper at work this morning, and
an editorial caught my eye; naturally it's on what a horrible man President Bush is. There was one paragraph that finally made me say
ein Minuten bitte:
When he focuses on human embryos, he speaks of his obligation to foster and encourage respect for life, but when respect for human life gets in the way of his wish to strike back at those he considers enemies of the United States, he is willing to bring about the deaths of thousands of innocent human beings. These are not the actions of a person of principle.
That's unfair. We all have conflicting values that depend heavily on the situation. I don't support indiscriminate killing, but I do support taking a life under certain circumstances. That sure doesn't mean I lack principles, it just means that my principles can't be summed up and contrasted in one small paragraph. It's completely unfair to write an editorial saying the President has a "meandering moral compass" when everyone has nuances in their value system.
MORE:
My ein Minuten bitte has caused some wrinkled brows. No, it's not proper German; it's a line from Eddie Izzard's stand-up routine about Martin Luther. We use it a lot in our house here, as well as the Simpsons psuedo-German quote Das Phone ist eine nuisance phone! and the Family Guy's Du werdest eine Krankenschwester brauchen!
We love fake German.
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This is something I agree with completely. Anyone who doesn't have conflicting values within their own lives are either so good that God is about to assume them bodily into heaven, or they are absolute evil incarnate.
Posted by: NightHawk at March 30, 2004 09:19 AM (5GWma)
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I take it you saw the editorial in the paper, Googled it, and found a copy at Common Dreams? Or do you start off every morning with Common Dreams?

Never been there, and don't want to start now. The name sounds so Leftist - the idea of a collective sharing einen Traum (dream). Ein Traum, eine MentaLLLität, eine Gehirnzelle (brain cell)!
Posted by: Amritas at March 30, 2004 10:47 AM (kRnVN)
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Yep, googled it. I tried to go directly to the LA Times, but their page was such a mess that I gave up and went elsewhere. No "common dreams" for me...the thought weirds me out while reading 1984 and Brave New World!
Posted by: Sarah at March 30, 2004 11:09 AM (VwSPl)
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Einem Augenblick bitte! (Is that right?)
It's not just unfair, it's total bullshit. Bush does everything possible to avoid the deaths of innocents. And other civilians. While still getting the job done.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at March 30, 2004 11:22 AM (+S1Ft)
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I think it's
"einen" mit dem Akkusativ.
It's not just Bush - it's the US military as a whole which "does everything possible to avoid the deaths of innocents". If there were a massacre, everyone would know about it. But there is no Iraqi My Lai.
Posted by: Amritas at March 30, 2004 07:33 PM (dpay0)
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LA Times (all the way in Germany? - wow!) ... registration ... grumble ... grumble ... on those occasions when I see LAT articles (usually reprinted in the Hawaii papers) I try to Google them so I can copy, paste, and link them.
"Everyone has nuances in their value system"? And we're the ones being accused of
simplisme?(Simplismus auf Deutsch?) 
I don't see conflicting values here so much as I see situation-sensitive, hierarchical values. It's not a matter of having contradictory values; it's a matter of valuing both X and Y - but ultimately valuing X more given the choice.
(Picked X because if I picked Y, I could be accused of being "sexist"(TM). "That chauvinist pig prefers HIS own chromosome! Gasp!")
Posted by: Amritas at March 30, 2004 07:46 PM (dpay0)
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Marc - Yep on the U.S. (and allied) military. Heck, they were trying to minimise enemy
military casualties, even at risk to themselves.
My high school german hass accumulated nearly two decades of rust... Ich bin, du bist, er/sie/es ist, wir sind, ihr seid, sie sind... Der/die/das/dem/den/des...
Posted by: Pixy Misa at March 31, 2004 12:46 AM (kOqZ6)
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"Buenos noches, mein fuhrer!"
Posted by: david at April 01, 2004 02:31 AM (EjwYl)
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March 16, 2004
GO, AL
I told my mom last night about how Oda Mae's vote is going to cancel out
my co-worker's vote in the November election, and apparently my mom is going to be doing some cancelling-out of her own. Today is the Illinois primary, where my mother will be voting Al Sharpton. Hysterical. If Democrats wanna play anyone-but-Bush, then my mama will give them a taste of anyone-but-Kerry. What a little saboteur...
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In our Texas primary I went to vote and they asked me which party. I told them "Libertarian," and they just looked at me funny. So, I took a Republican ballot. Afterwards, I wished I had taken the Democratic ballot just to be able to vote for Al.
Posted by: Mike at March 16, 2004 12:50 PM (cFRpq)
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March 15, 2004
NO DVDS FOR KERRY
I was thinking about the annoying conversation between my
co-workers as I was cooking my delicious
cow-on-a-bun for dinner. I keep my mouth shut all the time at work. Despite the fact that we're on a freakin' military post and people around here should value and respect the USA, I never talk about politics or things that I think aren't good office talk. I respect my German co-worker and don't want to make a fuss. But do they even consider for a moment that maybe I'm not turning cartwheels at the thought of John Kerry? Nope. Completely unprovoked, out of the stinkin' blue, my officemate says, "Do you think Bush already has Bin Ladin?" Immediately, without taking a breath, I answered with a firm "no." To which the other officemate supplied a "yes." I looked at both of them and said, "You can't really be serious?" and they said that they were, that they
had heard that this might be true. They
heard it, like it's on the same level as rumors about whether Johnny made out with Susie over the weekend or whether we're getting a Subway in the old Bookmark building here on post. I looked at the American co-worker and said, "Do you really have such little faith in your own government?" and he said, "I do if Bush is in charge." And that was the end of the conversation.
I have never brought up politics in our office, and I've made it a point not to say anything unless asked a direct question, but they have to be warming up to the idea that I'm not a Bush-hater. I already know that they are both extreme Bush-haters; in fact, my one co-worker who is a German with American citizenship through marriage, and who has never lived in the US, is going to register to vote for her very first time ever just so she can vote against Bush. (That really pisses me off.) I am just waiting for the day that someone asks me outright who I'm voting for.
So while I was cooking my beef, I started thinking about how many DVDs you'd have to offer me to vote for Kerry. The number is much much higher than how many I'd give to talk to my husband. I can safely say that if someone offered me $100 to vote for Kerry this year, I would turn it down. So I raised the bar in my mind: would I take $1000 to vote for Kerry? In my janky little part-time job, I make roughly $1000 per month (oh god that's ridiculous for someone with a Masters Degree.) Would I give up the chance for an extra month's pay to vote Kerry? You bet your sweet bippy. I would sacrifice one month's pay to have an extra four years of President Bush instead of Kerry.
Wait til my co-workers hear that one.
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Don't worry, Sarah, I'm registering for the first time to vote in a Presidential election so I can vote for BUSH!! I'll cancel her out for you.
Posted by: Oda Mae at March 15, 2004 05:07 PM (Wdo4K)
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About ten trillion dollars is right, I think. Then you could do the job that Kerry won't.
Or buy a
lot of DVDs...
Posted by: Pixy Misa at March 15, 2004 09:10 PM (+S1Ft)
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I'm reminded by something my cranky but sharp as a tack granny always said--- you can respect other people's opinions without giving up your own dignity. Seems to me that there's little commednable in biting back your tongue for the sake of making nice in a public environement (i.e. work). Politics is a public realm as it is, voicing your opinion among the opinions of others is what politics is all about. If other people invade your space by making assumptions and assume alliances that aren't there and you don't call them up on it, you've only yourself to blame. It isn't their fault that you don't say your piece and go home fuming. It's yours. The key is to be both respectful of them and yourself. You do yourself a grave disservice by keeping silent. Speak up.
Posted by: Crystal at March 15, 2004 09:35 PM (s6c4t)
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Crystal, that's beautiful.
Oh, and, Sarah, 1,000 bucks?! Go for it! If that's what it takes, we'll chip in!
Posted by: Tuning Spork at March 16, 2004 12:38 AM (PucHz)
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I'd give up a years pay, if not more.
Also, I've convinced two co-workers, as well as a childhood friend, all whom have never voted, to register this year.
I hope they vote for Bush, and I talk to them about politics when they ask, but they haven't said who they'd vote for.
Posted by: Blueshift at March 16, 2004 05:51 AM (crTpS)
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You want to get your point across without having to say an actual word? Just show your co-workers
this advertisement. They'll be shocked.
Posted by: CavalierX at March 16, 2004 04:28 PM (R9DSb)
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March 10, 2004
IRONY
In a weird twist of irony, my dislike of Kerry is reaching bushian proportions. The thought of Kerry becoming president both scares and repulses me, which I imagine Bush does for many other people. But at least I can point to concrete reasons why I vehemently oppose Kerry the Waffler for president, like this account of
Kerry supporting unilateralism in Iraq...back in 1997 before Hitler, I mean Bush, was at the wheel. For pete's sake, Kerry, this is the age of the internet. It's so easy to find what you said before; you'd better start being consistent.
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Like any *intelligent* (i.e., Leftist) person, Kerry is flexible and open to change. That trait is a must if one is to swallow revisionist history: e.g., Vietnam as stage for war heroics one moment and AmeriKKKan hell zone the next. It's the rigid Rightists who are dangerous, not John Fluid Kerry, capable of adapting to anything, including Iranian nukes. Besides, unilateralism under Clinton would be small r-right by defintion. Anything is justified as long as it is branded with the sacred letter "D."
Posted by: Amritas at March 10, 2004 03:31 AM (Qdsoq)
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Kerry on his own war record:
"However, I did take part in free-fire zones, I did take part in harassment and interdiction fire, I did take part in search-and-destroy missions in which the houses of noncombatants were burned to the ground. And all of these acts, I find out later on, are contrary to the Hague and Geneva conventions and to the laws of warfare. So in that sense, anybody who took part in those, if you carry out the application of the Nuremberg Principles, is in fact guilty."
Source: http://qando.net/archives/002186.htm
So is he a hero or a war criminal?
Posted by: Amritas at March 10, 2004 03:35 AM (Qdsoq)
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This is what annoys me about him:
And all of these acts, I find out later on, are contrary to the Hague and Geneva conventions and to the laws of warfare.
Everyone in the military has this stuff drilled into them in basic training. Maybe he slept through those classes.
Posted by: Mike at March 10, 2004 07:00 AM (cFRpq)
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The thing that should upset you the most as a Military wife is how he talked about the military when he returned from Vietnam.
He almost single handedly is responsible for the hatred that many hippies had for soldiers in Vietnam calling them baby killers and the such.
Posted by: Tom at March 10, 2004 11:05 AM (+1ZQW)
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Oh, you are just a mean lying ultra-conservative right winger. I've never said the things that you said I said.
Posted by: JFwordK at March 10, 2004 11:12 PM (JmmCS)
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Oh my, JFwordK, such venom! I happen to be very close to this blogger, and people like you scare me! Atleast Bush is honest and truthful, whether people like him or not; he stands up for his principles. From what I see of Kerry, he's just out there saying whatever he chooses to say just to get the votes, and to me he has a mean streak! And guess what, I'm a registered Democrat!!! Kerry will not get my vote.
Posted by: Nancy at March 10, 2004 11:47 PM (boDJK)
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I identify completely with your comparison of your dislike for Kerry with the left's hatred of Bush. Are we all guilty of the same crime?
But really, I don't cast that dislike of Kerry on to other Democratic candidates. Although I dislike Sharpton, Kucinich, and Dean for different reasons, I have some degree of respect for them insofar as they seem to be honest repesentatives of themselves, at least.
Dislike of Kerry on my part is driven by his abandoning of command in time of war, his betrayal of his fellow veterans while that war was ongoing, his voting history through his Senatorial career, and his contemptable behavior on the current campaign trail.
The left's hatred of Bush is "he's a big fat smirking chimp liar!" and "It's all about the oil!"
Equivalency?
Posted by: Greyhawk at March 11, 2004 08:17 PM (O1mAk)
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"Are we all guilty of the same crime?"
Yes, though methods and motives differ.
I agree with you about respecting the other Democrat candidates. Kucinich in particular has always struck me as sincere. But the presidency requires a lot more than that.
And Kerry doesn't even that on his side. I'd respect him more if he were consistent, or if he changed his mind and explained himself. Maybe he IS doing the latter, but frankly his behavior has been so contemptible that I don't really care to research his attempts at self-defense, if any.
Posted by: Amritas at March 12, 2004 03:50 AM (Mo2jT)
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March 04, 2004
OK
OK,
Lileks, OK. I won't sit this one out. You're right.
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Today the news comments are about a new Bush ad showing the WTC towers burning. Kerry doesn't like it because "It politicizes 9/11."
Posted by: Mike at March 04, 2004 07:40 AM (cFRpq)
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Kerry probably doesn't like the ad because it doesn't feature HIM. After all, he played a role in the Bush war machine (shhhh!):
"Dealt the card of a horrific act of terrorism on American soil, Bush made decisions and took actions that are now questioned by many.
"Kerry endorsed those decisions with his votes in the Senate, from the USA Patriot Act to war with Iraq."
- Joan Vennochi, Boston Globe
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2004/03/03/challenge_is_to_rise_above_ambition/
Posted by: Amritas at March 04, 2004 07:55 AM (g4OZS)
Posted by: casino at August 30, 2005 06:18 PM (DKl3T)
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March 03, 2004
HONESTY
President Bush and Chancellor Schroeder just met, and
David compares the President's greeting from 2001 to this significantly colder recent one. He also found a shockingly honest interview with David Frum. My favorite exchange:
Frum: I have studied the European press. We had exactly three good days after the 11 of September.
Interviewer: And shouldnÂ’t you ask yourself why it is so?
Frum: No, the Europeans should ask themselves that. You were good at crying at the graves of the dead Americans. But when it came down to us Americas feeling threatened by Islamic fanatics, then as now, that was already too much starting in December 2001. And then these unspeakable books turned up on the bestseller lists in France and Germany, these conspiracy theories surrounding the 11 of September. That says quite a lot.
Posted by: Sarah at
03:35 AM
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Exactly right. The Left want us to repair relations with Europe. I think Europe should be trying to repair relations with us.
Posted by: Mike at March 03, 2004 10:29 AM (cFRpq)
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