Monday, December 27, 2004

While here we timidly ask for recounts, not just Ukraine, but ROMANIA too asked and got a re-vote. In both cases the challenger - who accused the fraud, won, will take office.
A little cosmic joke on me.
Chrismas at the Durstleys - and f*ed up DU story
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=102&topic_id=1098057&mesg_id=1098057&page=
quaoar  (1000+ posts) Sat Dec-25-04 10:59 AM
Original message
Dad tries to sell Christmas gifts on eBay
http://newsobserver.com/24hour/weird/story/1953401p-993...
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
HOUSTON (AP) - The kids were naughty, Dad put the presents on eBay instead of under the tree - and Mom's been crying ever since. Now, even the tree's down.
Saturday morning was sure not to be very jolly for three brothers - 9, 11 and 15 - who didn't straighten up when their father told them Santa wasn't too pleased with their fighting, cuss words and obscene gestures.
Dad and Mom had warned their sons that the Nintendo DS video system - and the three games that go with it - were headed for the auction block if they didn't get their act together.
"No kidding. Three undeserving boys have crossed the line. Tonight we sat down and showed them what they WILL NOT get for Christmas this year. I'll be taking the tree down tomorrow," the man announced in his eBay posting.
Sat Dec-25-04 11:08 AM
Response to Original message
2. According to the father, the boys wereEdited on Sat Dec-25-04 11:13 AM by Rowdyboy
"flipping the bird", yelling, kicking, and using improper grammar. Thats really not outrageous behavior for boys ranging in age from 9-15. Actually, it seems pretty normal to me and a bit of an overreaction on the part of the father. JMO.
Instead, he's going to give the money he makes to his church for a new heater.
on edit: the information I gives comes not from the article, but from the list site on ebay which has since been withdrawn...
Sample responses

MichiganVote (1000+ posts) Sat Dec-25-04 11:04 AM
Response to Original message
1. Harsh but good for him. Too many kids are starved for limits nowadays.

InvisibleBallots (798 posts) Sat Dec-25-04 12:38 PM
Response to Reply #28
37. That is bad how?
Sounds like the kids learned a valuable lesson. They say you become an adult the first Christmas where the presents you buy cost more than the presents you receive. Next Christmas perhaps the kids will give the gift of peace and quiet to their parents.
"Problem is not whether or not to give it. It was already given, shown, then taken away, then the tree taken down, and now the proceeds go to the church heater!"
I bet if this family was not Christian, we'd all be cheering this creative disclipline. Since he's a Christian, we must hate him. GOP Culture War is working quite well - with the badly needed aid of so called "liberal" anti-Christian bigots.
"Actually, kids do have a right to expect their parents to not sell their stuff. "
What utter bullshit - it wasn't "their stuff" - it was Christmas gift the parents were going to give them.
"Why not just stuff an electrode up their asses? That'll surely make them better people."
Wow - how did you get from a parent returning the gifts they were going to give their children, to stuffing electrodes up kids' asses? You need help?
and the better ones:
48. No, I don't need help. I teach.
The first year I taught, I had a kid in class, 17 years old, who just talked a lot. According to school regs, after three warnings, I was to call his parents. I called his dad, who assured me that he would take care of it.
The boy missed three days of school and came back with his arm in a cast and his jaw wired with several teeth missing. His dad had taken care of it all right.
I've never called another parent since, but have had many call me. Like the one whose daughter "only" made a 97 in my class instead of all 100s and so lost her car for a semester and the right to go to the prom. Like the one who withdrew his child from school because I wouldn't agree to skip the Holocaust.
The truth is, parents have no training in most cases, and like most complex tasks, fuck it up. Their kids then do the same.
I teach 300 adolescents a year from ages 15-19, and in my tenth year now. I've had serious problems with 2 in all that time. Truth is, if you tell people (kids included) what you want and why you want it, they respond about 99% of the time.
But destroying a holiday, making a public spectacle of folks, ridicule and mental cruelty, while all-American, just doesn't work. Next year, these boys will be wholly justified in raising all kinds of hell because they know that some excuse will found for canceling anyway.
This whole behaviorism and reward-punishment binge we're on is outdated, ineffective, harmful, and just quite mean. Hasn't got a damn thing to do with religion, cause you can't find a verse one that will recommend the activity herein described to parents.
Mean assholes are just mean assholes. he brought the church into it, not me"
The crap was sold for $5300 on eBay.
My closing post:

robbedvoter  (1000+ posts) Sun Dec-26-04 11:38 PM
Response to Original message
167. A story fit for our times: Daddy dearest triumphs, gets applause from
scarred children, frustrated parents...
Few notice that presents should NEVER be used as either incentives or punishment. The entire scene is reminiscent of Dudley Durstley and his tantrum that he got less than 37 presents this birthday, only this time Vernon is applying the Harry treatment: locking in the cupboard & public humiliation.
And what about the a*hole paying 5,000+ for the "educational" gesture?
Well, the entire story, reaction to it is si sordid, it somehow makes sense people here don't give a damn about democracy. With lives as empty as those, why bother?

Sunday, December 26, 2004

http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=104x2868666
Is the fundies' God like Tinkerbell?
I raise the question because it seems to me that the fundies are extraordinarily defensive about how and to what extent God and Jesus are acknowledged and worshipped publicly. DildO'Reilly got his panties in a bunch about people saying "Happy Holidays" instead of "Merry Christmas," as if this practice somehow would actually do harm to God. So -- is their God so weak that he can't handle any reduction in public adulation? I think of an analogy to "Peter Pan," in which a fairy would die every time a child said she didn't believe in fairies, and Tinker Bell was brought back to life when the children clapped. If God is real, I should think he exists regardless of whether we believe in him or not. If Jesus is divine, he will remain so even if nobody says "Merry Christmas" and nobody puts nativity scenes on courthouse lawns. Do the fundies have such a feeble God that he will die if all the children don't clap?

gmoney  (1000+ posts) Sun Dec-26-04 07:59 PM
Response to Original message
5. Without faith I am nothing
The argument goes something like this: ‘I refuse to prove that I exist,’ says God, ‘for proof denies faith, and without faith I am nothing.’ 'But,’ says Man, ‘the Babel fish is a dead giveaway, isn’t it? It could not have evolved by chance, it proves you exist, and so therefore, by your own arguments, you don’t QED.’ 'Oh dear,’ says God, ‘I hadn’t thought of that,’ and promptly vanishes in a puff of logic, “’Oh, that was easy,” says Man...
Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

Saturday, December 18, 2004

http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=203&topic_id=171696&mesg_id=174463&page=
m berst  (1000+ posts) Fri Dec-17-04 10:00 PM
Response to Original message
109. perpetrator or victim? a different view
Is Bev Harris a perpetrator or a victim? I think that she is both, and I want to tie this into my earlier posts about the haves and have-nots as well as the damage that the Reagan administration did to our society.
One side says she is out there on her lonesome fighting heroically for us and we should cut her some slack. She is under pressure and attacks and we need to stand by her.
The other side says that she is a grandstanding fraud only interested in herself and has taken advantage of her supporters. There is no excuse for her irresponsible behavior.
I think that there is truth in both positions, and that both miss the important truth. There is a very powerful lesson that we can take from this situation, one that will allow everyone to win - or at least not take a hideous loss -including Bev.
Bev is grandstanding and taking advantage of her supporters, but not maliciously necessarily, and before we cast aspersions on her it might be wise to see the context within which she is operating. Is she a have or a have-not in my outline of the two world views in the other post, and how does that shed light on the arguments about her.
Bev has bought into the great Reagan myth of self-actualization - as so many of us have - and she is striving to be one of the "haves" and so make a difference in life. Not financially rich necessarily, but one with status and influence. Much of her failure recently may have more to do with her using a bad model for her activities than it does with any evil intent on her part. In the Reagan model, each individual can become all that they can be and so gain status, wealth and success. This ethic led many people down a path of greed and money, while others went down a path of applying this model to various political and social causes, and the thinking has also permeated the Democratic party. The problem arises when the inevitable clash comes between an approach to life that is self-centered and attempting to use that approach to advance causes that are community oriented and supported.
Bev is a have-not striving to be a have, and so gets a lot of sympathy from others who are have-nots. She is Cinderella at the ball, a lone fighter against tremendous odds, the mouse that roared. She didn't so much manipulate people into thinking this, because it is probably how she sees herself, there is some truth in it, and plenty of people are desperate for it to be true and will foster and promote the myth for her.
Bev's rumored sloppy bookkeeping and poor financial accountability leads me to believe that money is not her goal, so the charges of her being a con artist are probably false. If she were interested primarily in feathering her own nest, she would have made sure that no hint of impropriety skipped into public view.
Bev seems to be interested in being the "star" - the celebrity of the election fraud issue - yes, but that doesn't mean that this is her prime motivation, either, or she wouldn't make so many sloppy mistakes with her image.
Bev is trapped in the Reagan mythology and in that way a victim. Reagan changed people's thinking from community to individual, from team to cog, and this was somewhat under the radar. "If you believe you can achieve" self-realization and individual initiative were translated in left wing circles as "personal beliefs" and "life style alternatives" and "making the right choices" and "being the change you want to see." While the supposed goals are different then those who took Reagan's green light on selfishness as an invitation to pursue greed, the underlying premises are the same.
I can well imagine Bev justifying how she has gone about things, and before we throw her to the wolves we might want to consider all of the ways in which we are making the same mistakes. One can take a look at how to approach the election fraud situation and come to the conclusion that fame - celebrity hood - and status and finances are needed before anyone can have any impact on society or even get attention. So flamboyance and the cultivation of an image are tools to help get the job done. Then she might think in the very Reagan era terms of "what you believe you can achieve" and other semi-mystical beliefs and formulas for succeeding in any endeavor.
Yet we watch her seemingly working against herself. Why is this? I would say that she is making the same understandable mistake that so many of us make. The Reagan formula for how to live your life and achieve things will not work for social causes because the goal and the means contradict each other.
Let's compare the career of the current President of the United States with the career of Bev Harris. These two extreme examples illustrate the point very well. How is it that no matter how badly George Bush screws up he wins and no matter how hard Bev tries she loses? I think it is because the Reagan approach to life only works when it is used in the interests of greed and selfishness. When someone with a self-actualization background such as Bev tries to apply these "winning strategies" to a community cause it sets up a dissonance that eventually will either turn the movement into a co-opted hand maiden to the powers-that-be - as some say the entire Democratic party has become - or will shake and rattle the organization to pieces.
Now this is not to defend Bev's lapses and errors in judgment, nor to say that there may not be some personality flaws involved. It also not to dismiss those who have been hurt by her behavior.
Many on the left are not pursuing wealth, but yet they have embraced the Reagan philosophy. They are pursuing status or security and congratulate themselves on their cleverness or superiority as measured by what they do for themselves, not what they are doing for others or for the society. Even doing "good things" is primarily so that they can tell themselves that they have rounded out their personalities and is entirely disconnected from any actual results their do-gooding may be having on the root causes of the problems. Sooner or later the beneficiaries of the do-gooding are resented, and we have Democrats talking about people as "stupid" or defective or doing arm chair analysis of people's mental health.
Or, some on the left take Bev's approach and use the same tactics that the Religious Right, and multi-level marketing businesses, and other types of hucksterism have used - building a cult of personality, creating a "buzz," encouraging hero-worshiping loyal "true believers," and playing into people's fantasies of being the underdog or being persecuted.
The great lesson here is that the Reagan philosophy of self-centeredness in its many permutations has expanded into all areas of our society and into our thinking, and it does not workfor achieving community goals. It can only lead to selfishness, greed and destruction.
As Democrats, we once started with the notion that we as a society can rise no higher than the least among us. Now, the have-nots don't count for most Democrats.
All of the failures, all of the problems, the arguments, the divisions in the Democratic party can be solved by one simple thing. Reject the entire package of celebrity, wealth and status as the model for everything. Focus on the needs of the least among us first, and always, and build from that solid foundation. Then watch all of the problems start being resolved as if by a miracle.
m berst  (1000+ posts) Fri Dec-17-04 07:57 PM
Response to Reply #37
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=203&topic_id=171696&mesg_id=174010&page=
98. great post Sydnie
I would mention something else that people invested - their hopes.
Hopes, dreams, and time are not seen as valuable by far too many people. For those who are already at risk and are willing to be aware of the fact that they are at risk, hopes, dreams and time are all that they have left to give, short of giving their lives.
I think that we can gain a better understanding of the Bev feuds here - as well as the Kerry feuds that have arisen here because of Bev's comments about him - and all of the feuds at DU if we consider that the battle may be between the haves and the have-nots. I offer this for consideration in the quest for understanding and better communication, not as an assertion to be violently argued over as is to often the case.
Haves and have-nots don't so much disagree on positions and ideology as they have different views of reality. When I say "have" I don't just mean that they have money - it also includes having a sense of security and having a sense that they have a place in the society.
I think that behind all of the Fundamentalist moral values rhetoric, all of the liberal bashing and all of the right wing ideology is a have versus have-not battle. Unfortunately, many people who by any rational measure are have-nots are voting for the Republican party because they can believe that they are haves. And, unfortunately, many haves are in the Democratic party and bring all of the prejudices and world view of the ruling class into the discussion here masquerading as something else.
Whether one is a have or a have-not, then, partly depends upon what one actually has and partly upon what one thinks they have or wants to have. Part mindset, part bank account, in other words.
Both parties have become parties that represent haves. The Republican party represents those who may have money, and who have their religion, their jingoism, and their membership in the all-white all-Jesus club. The Democratic party has become the party of those who may have money, and who have position, status, security and membership in the elite, academic, and intellectual club.
Haves in the Democratic party will argue in favor of caution, patience, moderation, compromise, realism, intellectualism, practicality, meritocracy, status, qualifications and individual responsibility and blame.
All of that is anathema for the have-nots.
Have-nots in the Democratic party argue for solidarity, compassion, alertness to danger, creativity, suspicion of those with wealth, power and status, fairness, and collective action, responsibility and blame.
I think these two world views are what animates the two sides of almost every discussion at DU, and among liberals and Democrats in general as well. I saw a thread yesterday that highlighted this for me, and I may not have the facts exactly right about the particular debate, but it will serve as an example.
A poster said he had a problem with his driver's license and asked for help and advice. Now, you wouldn't think that this would be controversial, but sure enough two antagonistic camps started to form.
The one camp berated the poster for his irresponsibility, and chided him for wanting something for nothing by asking for advice at DU.
Now, a have-not might say hey, wait a minute, the guy made a minor error in forgetting about a traffic ticket, and got into a little jam here. The result is a draconian and arbitrary decision by the state to suspend his driving privileges (ironically the original offense was unknowingly driving on a suspended license as a result of a neglected or forgotten ticket for a minor traffic infraction). A have not would say that the fines and punishments are excessive - they are for most people. A have-not would say that this has more to do with whom the police pull over than it does anything else. A have-not would say that you are more likely to be pulled over if you are a certain race or a certain economic status or in certain neighborhoods.
Yet, a have would argue that it is all the poster's own fault. Some said that he was stupid for not doing the obvious and enlightened thing - hiring an attorney. Think about that one. The poster said that had the court and the DMV informed him of all of the facts, he would have opted for the alternative - 5 days in jail - rather than agreeing to a huge fine that also included (unknown to him when he made the decision)losing his license for 6 months. This was met with more ridicule - what kind of idiot would agree to spend 5 days in jail seemed to be the unspoken implication.
There are people in this country for whom the situation is already a dire emergency. They are already falling behind, they are already fighting off the wolves, living in fear and poverty, suffering from diminished opportunity and hostility from those around them. They were promised by various haves to put their faith and trust and hopes and dreams - and for many of them dollars and hours they could ill afford - into various people and ideas, from the Democratic party, to Kerry to Bev. They don't have the luxury of sitting back and giving Bev, or Kerry, or the Democratic party chance after chance after chance.
It is shocking to me to see every day Democrats speak with no compassion whatsoever for the people who are going under and going under fast as they are told what is wrong with them, how they are too emotional, too alarmist, how they should get over it and move on, or what famous or wealthy person they should pledge their undying loyalty to.
I would argue that their is a great unseen army of have=nots out there, and that army is growing every day. There are many who are have-nots but are vigorously resisting facing the truth and clinging to nay shred of evidence that things will be ok, and those are the ones who most vociferously argue the point of view of the haves. Soon, I predict that the majority of people in the country will be have-nots and will realize that they are.
Yet so many Democrats see the forgotten people as losers, defectives, stupid, emotionally disturbed, irresponsible, and as an irritant and an annoyance.
Look at every argument you see at DU again and tell me if you see an underlying dynamic at work - the haves versus the have-nots.

Friday, December 17, 2004

I started this on DU
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=132x1436519
Fri Dec-17-04 08:53 AM
Original message
Discrimination against the poor by the Dems - how acceptable to you?
While I wasn't looking the Democratic party dec;ared itself "the middle class party. I suppose this would be like an income Goldilocks litmus test: we represent people who don't have too much or too little - but juuuust right.
I used to consider the "lomousine liberals" and "liberal elite" total BS, but now I realize that there is a grain of truth in it: if you don't reach a certain tax bracket, you ain't in our club.
GOP may work for the richest at the expense of everyone else and may discriminate against anything in sight, but they are clever enough to not exclude the poor from their target demographic. Very clever indeed, as they intend to increase this demographic with their policies.
Think of it: if you are unemployed, or too poor to pay taxes, DNC is not paying any attention to you (most of their economic incentives are in the form of tax credits). But the GOP which chennels your tax money in faith based crap, will reach these people in the soup line and bamboozle them.
When Wes Clark proposed a tax program that eliminated taxes for families up to 50,000, Kerry said: "but how are they going to share their part of the burden?" "By sending their sons and daughters in wars" Clark answered Faux bimbo who, interestingly enough asked the same question. Kerry promissed with a straight face that in 3 years the minimum wage will go up all the way to...$7...Oh, glory!
I am not asking for acceptance in the middle class party - I left voluntarily as soon as I saw the income litmus test.
But as an outsider , I have a bit of advice: you may want to rethink your platform/base - because by the time BFEE is done with this country, there won't be any Goldilocks economic base left for ya. That's the one area in which I suspect they'll be competent enough to accomplish their goal.

Wednesday, December 15, 2004

"Not one cable "News" show breaks the top 40....."
Author WC Green    
  http://bartcopnation.com/dc/dcboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=2&topic_id=343058&mesg_id=343058&page=

        


For the first time since the election, not a single Fox, CNN or MSNBC show has garnered enough viewers to qualify as a top forty basic cable show....
BO, Fox networks "biggest" star, was the last "personality" to drop out of the top 40 ratings list as he slipped into oblivion after hitting 38 in last weeks Nielsen compilation.
What does this mean? Even with all the hoopla surrounding the Scott Peterson case, the continued bad news from Iraq, the mounting threats against Iran and the still disputed election, no one much cares what BO or SH or and of the rest of the Fox loudmouths have to say...
Remember, more people listen to NPR than watch Fox. More people watch PBS newscasts than watch any Fox show, More people read the NYT than watch any show on Fox........
http://www.top5s.com/tvcable.htm

"I was trying to forget and you reminded me"

Monday, November 29, 2004

Cheswick - the Clenis/Clark hater
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=132&topic_id=1395863&mesg_id=1396854&page=
Cheswick2.0  (1000+ posts) Mon Nov-29-04 11:11 AM
Response to Reply #69
75. you aren't making any sense
how is talking about whether or not Clark should be the nominee in 08 hijacking a thread about whether or not Clark should be the nominee in 2008?
This makes about as much sense as your insistence four years ago that Clinton and Lewinski were the great love affair of the century and that he would leave Hillary and marry her when he left office. For some unknown reason you had the hardest time admitting a sleazy affair was a sleazy affair. Maybe you are not the best judge of character?
This is my last post in this petty pissing match. Knock yourself out if it gives you satisfaction to conintue.

This is the DU member formerly known as Cheswick.
and my answer

robbedvoter  (1000+ posts) Mon Nov-29-04 01:21 PM
Response to Reply #75
87. here's an idea: post on your pet issue and I promise I won't go thereEdited on Mon Nov-29-04 01:22 PM by robbedvoter
to scream: "everyone out of this thread, is a stupid idea and we need urgent 24/7 posting on the Clak08 thread. To do anything else is selfish and evil"If you really believe in something (other than sticking it to Clakies), try going about it in ways that actually rally people close to your beliefs rather than antagonoze them.
As for love affairs, I dunno" whacha talking about, Willis?". I am hardly the Harlequin novel type. I see however that you are as preachy towards Clinton's sexual life as you are towards Clarkies. You know the forum for that - and it ain't DU. It must be a deep seated sexual disturbance for you to stil fixate on my postings on the matter , years after. I am flatered, but get some help. A healthy, non-hypocritical sexual life could do wonders for your disposition.
It also unclogs the brain and helps with that multitasking you have so much trouble with. One can have sex, work to expose the stolen election, AND for a candidate for next time. The first one usually keeps the energy for the others positive and vibrant, rather than whiny and preachy.
Comeon, try! let go of Monica and live a normal life! 
 

Saturday, November 27, 2004

To those asking for proof of theft

Sat Nov-27-04 08:25 PM
Response to Reply #84
88. "proof" is a red herring
No crime could ever be solved if investigators had to have proof before an investigation could be considered or intitiated. Of course there is no proof up to the standard you are asking for at this point. There could not be.
Even should a Republican operative go to the press tomorrow and say that he had been paid to steal votes for Bush it is likely that the right wingers would be able to spin that out of existence as they did the proof from Edmonds, Clarke, O'Neil and Wilson. In each case, and with this case of potential election theft, there is more than sufficient evidence to call for a full scale investigation for the purpose of discovering the proof that would hold up in court - if such proof does in fact exist.
If the police were constrained from questioning suspects until and unless they had "proof" how would they ever solve a crime?
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=132&topic_id=1393491&mesg_id=1393881&page=

Friday, November 26, 2004

"I consider the Ukraine coverage another thug tactic"
Author concerned citizen    
http://bartcopnation.com/dc/dcboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=2&topic_id=340673&mesg_id=340680&page=

to rub our noses in their lawlessness. This is part of their play-book. It was the same with 2000 election. No humility from Bush, in fact the opposite. He kept saying "I was elected because..." "People elected me becasue..." It was an open taunt.
Same goes with Valerie Plame.
They keep Novak in plain site, comfortable, ostentatious, contentious, as though he hasn't a care in the world.
It's the same with the Ukraine election. They're covering it, and making statements all the way to the top, because it's provoking, taunting, humiliating. It's how these people work.
and the follow up
m berst  (1000+ posts) Tue Nov-16-04 05:32 PM
Response to Original message
54. and then after Clark dropped out I wrote...
It has been sad watching the Dean and Edwards campaigns collapse. Talking to their supporters, I hear the same despair from them that so many Clark supporters have been feeling.
I have been hanging with the Kucinich people, but hope is starting to die there, too. I can't find a political organization to be involved with, and our attempts to keep the old LFA people together has not been very successful. The Kucinich people are facing the same challenges now, and are asking each other "what now?"
I am feeling like 3 strikes and you're out. The stampede to the official Clark campaign - strike one. The crushing of the grass roots people - strike two. The stampede to Kerry - strike three.
There is some talk among Kucinich supporters of third party efforts. While I do think that there is a good possibility that the two parties will break up and reform into new parties, I don't think it will happen before November. The usual arguments are going on about working within the party, the danger of splitting the progressive vote and thereby giving Bush the election, the importance of staying true to your convictions, etc.
I am amazed at how quickly and thoroughly the national debate has collapsed. It seems that people want to close their eyes, and open them again in November to discover that it was all just a bad dream. Kerry will be elected, and Kerry will turn the country around and save us and we won't have to worry anymore. I certainly hope they are right, but in any case the real loss will be that if they are not, there will be nothing to fall back on.
I have no problem in principle rallying behind opposition to Bush, but why did that have to also mean the breaking up of the grass roots organizations, the end of the national discussion, and the crushing of people's hope and enthusiasm? That makes me suspicious of the DNC and the Kerry campaign. They haven't really been telling us to pull the lever for Kerry - which is all we are good for to them - rather, we had to stop talking and organizing, as well. Be quiet now, or you are helping Bush!
We were privileged to be part of a moment in history when many people had great hope and were reaching out to each other. My only hope now is that things don't get too rough for everyone in the coming years.
I think we will now see a bitter partisan campaign and an even split in the electorate, as we did in the last national election. It will play out in the mass media, and we will be reduced to spectators. We will be hearing a lot about gay marriage, I am afraid.
I was politically active in 1968. That year Eugene McCarthy ran an insurgent campaign in the Democratic primaries, and then Robert Kennedy jumped into the race and was close to having the nomination won when he was murdered. The party met in Chicago for the convention, and in defiance of the people's will nominated the party's choice, Hubert Humphrey. The city was like a war zone throughout the convention with thousands of demonstrators in the streets. George Wallace then entered the race as a third party candidate and siphoned off a critical number of Democratic voters, and Nixon won the election by a tiny margin.
I tell this story for purposes of comparison. There was quite a bit of discouragement, sadness, and hopelessness over the events in 1968, and that created a pall that hung over the country for decades. Yet I am seeing more discouragement, sadness, and hopelessness now then I did then. That is stunning to me.
I believe we are, figuratively speaking, living in the eye of a hurricane. I hope I am wrong, but the signs are there. For decades, right wing xenophobes have been peddling the line that "they hate us" in other countries. The irony is that "they" - overwhelmingly - didn't hate us until the xenophobes grabbed control of the government. Now, more and more people around the world do fear and hate us, and I am not just talking about people in the Middle East. Thank God for the European press as a "reality check" for us here, or we might succumb to the comforting illusion that things are just fine and that we are a bunch of chicken littles.
I stumbled onto the Sean Hannity radio program accidentally the other day, and was preoccupied with something else and let it run for a few minutes. I heard that "liberals are traitors" that "liberals want the terrorists to win" that the teacher's union is a "terrorist organization" that "liberals hate America and American values" and on and on in that vein. This is a national radio show with a huge following, and the host was demonizing half of the people in the country. This is pure hate, and it won't just go away, it will continue to poison people's minds. Substitute the word "Jews" for the word "liberals" and it could have come right out of Joseph Goebbel's ministry. The Nazi analogies are way overused, but not in this case.
But there I go again - shooting my mouth off instead of rallying behind Kerry.
Reason, critical thinking, and discussion having failed, we will now be forced to live the truth rather than to talk about it. We are about to find out the hard way whether we have been right or not.
Perhaps things will be just fine. Perhaps we were all worried about nothing. Perhaps life will go on without any major disasters. Perhaps the lessons from history don't apply this time.
It is an enormous gamble.
DU post - on Clark's campaign

m berst  (1000+ posts) Tue Nov-16-04 05:22 PM
Response to Original message
53. dug back into the archives
My last post before Clark dropped out-
We may be in the final hours of the Clark campaign tonight, and I have been thinking about the future. I have been contemplating several seemingly unrelated ideas as I watched the campaign unfold, and they finally coalesced in my mind. What have we learned from the Clark campaign? What is the common thread?
At the Kucinich forum there is a Wesley Clark thread, and naturally I posted there. Charges were being made against Clark, but rather than defend him I posted a positive statement of support.
Whom do I want to win?
In the Clark campaign we saw the professional campaign people cut the legs out from under the grass roots groups. Then we saw the grass roots groups controlled by people who seemed determined to stomp out spontaneity, creativity and motivation. We saw Clark struggle, and fail to get his message across in the various media outlets. We saw the Democratic core voters rally around a tried and true Democrat. Whom do I want to win? The American people.
What is the common thread?
It is this: the people who seized control of the Clark campaign and the Democratic party are upper middle class white college educated liberals, with a distinct East and West coast bias. These are the same people who dominate the media that isn't controlled by the neo-cons. These are the same people rallying around Kerry.
I believe that there is a liberal elite, and that they are driving the Democratic party away from it's roots as a progressive working class party. Who is left out? Most of the potential Democratic voters. The minority communities, the working people, those who don't embrace the looking down their noses more organic and politically sophisticated than thou crowd.
The people aren't too stupid to get the message. The message is dumbed down by the professional liberals and by the media elites, because they are protecting their perks and privileges.
The future for me is to work with the forgotten, the ignored, the disenfranchised, the hurting, the marginalized... the majority. Those are the people who could have put Clark in the White House. The beautiful people didn't want them at the party.
It is hard for me to imagine a scenario that could so thoroughly destroy the possibilities that LFA and General Clark's vision promised than the events we have watched unfold over the last few months. That destruction, in my view, is the result of the failures of the organization, both official and unofficial.
The organization always seemed to me to be working against the General's vision. We warned of this here very early in the campaign, and the response was pretty unambiguous - "go away!"
Many have expressed
the unique qualities that Clark brought to the race, and why it is so difficult for so many to get on the DNC orchestrated Kerry bandwagon.
- Clark showed us that progressive ideas could be expressed in a way that did not threaten or offend the sensibilities of the more conservative people.
- His incredible record of service and achievement would have served to further legitimize those progressive ideas.
- Clark could have actually ended the "Republican Revolution" rather than just slow it down a little.
- Clark could have been a President for all of us, not just half of us.
- Clark gave people hope.
If someone can explain to me how Kerry could do those 5 things, or convince me that the times call for less, or explain to me why we need to give them up and settle for something less, then I will consider jumping on the bandwagon.
After 35 years of voting straight Democratic party ticket in every election, I will not be doing that automatically this time. I enrolled many, many conservatives in the Clark campaign, and they are saddened today about the future of the country. They did not sign on only to be told to support whomever the DNC annointed, and neither did I.
I don't agree that the campaign was ever solely about taking back the White House, nor do I recall it being about "Clark or whomever as long as it isn't Bush."
Whether this means working within the party to overturn the elitist leadership, or forming a third party, it is too soon to tell. It is bait and switch, however, for people to now say that removing Bush was the only or even the main objective all along. I cringed the first time I heard a Clark supporter say "eyes on the prize" because I feared it would lead to this.
Many Clark supporters are not Democrats, and to suggest that they should now embrace Kerry insults their intelligence and does a disservice to Wes Clark's original vision that called us to service. So many new people were brought into the process by the Clark campaign. They weren't enrolling in DNC politics as usual.
If our enthusiasm and hope is so easily and instantly transferrable to Kerry, then I have to question just what it was we were hopeful and enthusiastic about. Removing Bush? I think not. Many of us want to change the conditions that allowed the crisis we are in, not just swap out occupants of offices. The DNC has stood by and made compromise after compromise with the RNC. Leaders in the Democratic party have been up to their eyeballs in political corruption and "go along to get along" strategies. If not for that, we wouldn't be in the mess we are in.
There was a revealing exchange between Clark supporters today. Many who are saying "ok I am ready to go to work for Kerry" are discovering that there IS no Kerry campaign that they can find. We have seen from many of the communications to us from staffers that our suspicions that Kerry is the hand-picked candidate of the DNC leadership, and that we were cheated out of having a voice in the process are true. But I guess I should keep my "eyes on the prize" and be quiet about this.
People are having difficulty connecting up with the Kerry campaign because there WAS no Kerry campaign. It was a DNC campaign. The emperor is wearing no clothes.
But..... it is ok to pull the shenanigans that the DNC pulled, because we need to stop the shenanigans of the Bush adminstration? I came aboard the Clark campaign to stop ALL of the anti-democratic shenanigans, not to swap one set for another. I, and many others, came on board the Clark campaign to save our constitution and to restore decency to the political arena, not to sign on for "getting rid of" Bush as the "prime mission." The problems are just a teensy bit bigger than that, wouldn't you say? Or if they aren't quite a bit bigger, why the scare tactics about Bush to get us into the Kerry camp as quickly as possible? I resent the bait-and-switch tactic that now tells us we signed up for a different mission then the one we thought we were signing on for. "Getting on the program" behind Kerry just means "shut up" in any case, it seems to me. I don't find that very persuasive. I will work for a campaign that allows me to retain my freedom of speech, thank you very much.

http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=104&topic_id=2701711

Tuesday, November 23, 2004

W"S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=104&topic_id=2741571&mesg_id=2741615&page=

MrBenchley  (1000+ posts) Tue Nov-23-04 10:30 AM

12. The perfect end to a perfect trip...
He insulted his hosts and demonstrated public cowardice...
"SANTIAGO, Chile (CNN) -- Plans for a state dinner for President Bush at Chile's presidential palace were scratched Sunday after the United States insisted on security measures that Chile called unacceptable.
The change came a day after Chilean security guards temporarily blocked one of Bush's Secret Service agents from entering an official dinner.
For the Sunday event, the Secret Service insisted all guests -- totaling more than 230 -- pass through a metal detector, a top level Chilean Foreign Ministry official told CNN. U.S. officials did not dispute this account.
President Ricardo Lagos believed the measure was humiliating for guests, the Chilean official said."
http://www.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/americas/11/21/bush.dinne...
....babbled in public like an idiot....
"In a joint public appearance with Lagos, Bush meant to take note of plans for January 30 elections in Iraq, but said instead: "I noticed today that the elections are on schedule for June the 30th."
And Bush said he and Lagos were determined "to bring drug trafficking to bear," presumably a mix-up with his frequently stated eagerness to crush that global scourge.
Referring to the relative innocence of the days before the September 11, 2001 strikes, Bush told executives on Saturday: "We thought we were protected forever from trade policy or terrorist attacks because oceans protected us."
In that same speech, Bush meant to praise the Asia-Pacific Economic Forum (APEC) meeting here, but instead declared: "Our nation is a Pacific country, as well. And that's why the OPEC conferences are so important." "
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/afp/20041122/t...
...and finished up by sashaying around in public with his pants open.
By the way, the look on Putin's face is priceless.
Mesg #340305 "My favorite analogy: Bush = Leopoldo Galtieri"
Author tech98    
http://bartcopnation.com/dc/dcboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=2&topic_id=340295

Dictator of Argentina. A dim-witted tool who launched the invasion of the Falkland Islands as a distraction from economic malaise, cronyism and incompetence.
Excerpts from The Economist's obituary:
Leopoldo Fortunato Galtieri, a failed dictator, died on January 12th, 2003 aged 76
He might have been forgiven by at least some of his fellow Argentines for his ruthlessness, but not for his stupidity.
Incompetence in civilian life, in commerce or in the professions, can have serious consequences. In government it can be disastrous, as it was for Argentina in 1982, when General Galtieri was the unelected military president. Argentina was going through one of its regular periods of high inflation and poor growth...Day after day crowds gathered outside the presidential palace to jeer at the general. The protests were largely forgotten when he announced that Argentina was to seize the Falklands, a small group of islands in the south Atlantic that had been a British possession since 1833.
Such a patriotic gesture is an old remedy, and has had a degree of success. Hitler reinforced his popularity by sending troops into the Rhineland in 1936 against French wishes. These days Pakistan's self-appointed president, General Musharraf, is routinely bellicose towards India.
Britain, under Margaret Thatcher, buckled on its rusty armour and dispatched every warship, troopship and rowing boat available to the Falklands, 13,000km away....On June 14th the Argentines surrendered.
There seems to be no dispute that high office fazed him. “Only Johnny Walker is crying”, was the headline in a Buenos Aires newspaper in a reference to the general's dependence on Scotch whisky.
When he joined the army as a young man he was interested in military engineering, and probably his ambitions should have stopped there. While a lieutenant he was noticed by American advisers attached to the Argentine army and in 1949 attended the School of the Americas...He is believed to be the only student in the history of the school to have failed the course.
“What most puzzles me”, says Oscar Raul Cardoso, an Argentine political analyst, “is how someone so mediocre in all senses reached the top.” Could it happen again? The answer is probably yes, again and again.

Monday, November 22, 2004

TailWgnDog
Mon Nov-22-04 05:46 AM
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=132&topic_id=1381141#1381156
Response to Original message
6. The rightwing political element in this country has . . .
an agenda. Much of it turns around legalities. Their agenda is to turn back the legal clock of time to Lochner, (1905).
This was a time before President Franklin D. Roosevelt's "Big Deal" expansion of the federal government that gave our congress great power to over-ride state laws.
So in effect, the rightwingnuts want to erase about 100 years of congressional and U.S. Supreme Court laws. Seriously. It would call back the time when corporations were untouchable, ran rampant over the country and allowed what at that time was called "the gilded age" and "baron robbers."
Envision the movie "Titanic" and the split between the classes of the ship's passengers being only two: upper class and "steerage" of the low class. No middle class. None. That's when corporations had no boundaries, no laws to regulate them, and when they trammeled over the (no) rights of individuals.
This is the GWBush agenda. And GWBush has *snowed* and mislead and lied to people, pandering to their religious fears in attempts to pull together a coalition of voters in order to achieve his agenda.
Which is why the more educated people across the nation did NOT vote for GWBush. And which is why GWBush and Company belittled educated ppl, etc., etc., etc.
Simple, really."

To which I added that this agenda makes the "party of the middle class" obsolete. Who'll represent the majority?
.

Saturday, November 20, 2004

http://www.gawker.com/news/culture/stalker/gawker-stalker-bungalow-8-nycs-best-crack-den-026053.php
Celeb gossip site gawker reports:
Freemans tuesday night the 16th of nov. the bush twins along with 2 massive secret service men tried to have dinner they were told by the maitre 'd that they were full and would be for the next 4 years upon hearing the entire restaurant cheered and did a round of shots it was amazing!!! Ed: We're hearing that this is actually true.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Friday, November 19, 2004

davhill 
Original message
Cult of Personality
As I drove around the bend in I-4 in downtown Orlando I was greeted with a billboard displaying a huge 20' visage of Bush with the inscription "Our Leader". It was not left over electioneering; it was just recently erected. Such billboards are characteristic of dictatorships everywhere. I never thought I would see one in my own country. Are such things popping up all over the rest of the country too?
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=104x2720788

Monday, November 15, 2004

Digby - the perfect candidate?


 
The Pageant
Atrios is full of 'tude these days and rightly so. This nonsense about finding leaders who are immune from GOP criticism is just ridiculous. I thought we all understood that the attack machine has no relationship to the truth. There is no such thing as an acceptable Democrat anymore. There isn't even such a thing as an acceptable moderat republican anymore. Look what they are doing to Specter.
I simply cannot believe that after the last twelve years any Democrat still believes that there are limits to what the Republicans will say to assassinate someone's character or how far the SCLM will go to promulgate it if the story is juicy enough. Perhaps Mr Nelson needs to make a run for the presidency and see if all that Red state love sees him through.

Thursday, November 11, 2004

"Good heavens ..."
Author samela    

you've drunk the Kool-Aid again, but this time from listening, I suspect, to too much AM talk radio.
Democrats bowing to PETA? Give me a break. I missed that one.
You have total amnesia about what this election was about. It was about jobs lost to outsousrcing. It was about health insurance costs rising. It was about being mislead into a war in Iraq. It was about civil liberties assaulted in the Patriot Act. And then, in the end, it was about a tape mailed in from Osama.
Bush and Cheney were not talking about guns. They were not talking about gay marriage. They were not talking about animal rights or wrongs. They were not talking about abortion. THose things were talked about on the pulpits of the churches whose membership lists they obtained. It was a backdoor campaign? WHY? Because most of the nation disagrees with them on these subjects, and they have to whisper them to this tiny but important part of their base in the dark of night, in the back rooms, and in code. They can't reveal them to the rest of the nation ... who poll after poll show to be in agreement with Democrats' openly stated positions on a whole range of these issues.
The Democrats put on a convention show wrapped in flags and tough talk and patriotic songs. John Kerry and John Edwards sat on front porches and addressed groups of believers in churches. They opposed gay marriage in favor of civil unions (as 60% of the nation agrees), they demurred on abortion by saying their personal beliefs could not interfere with the law of the land and the will of the people. They donned duck-hunters garbs and rifles. What do you want them to do? Start espousing trickle-down economics and advocate tax cuts? Start calling homsexuals the spawn of Satan and telling women their place should be in the kitchens?
The margin of error in this election was no doubt the 4 million more evangelical Christians the Republicans managed to get out with their push polls and whisper campaigns. That pushed them over the top. Do NOT confuse that with the beliefs and values of a majority of Americans. Iraq + Terror was the main issue of this campaign. The media allowed Kerry to be beat up on in questions regarding his national security credentials in time of war. The terror warnings and Osama tapes didn't help. A majority of Americans (but only barely, and perhaps not even legally) decided to leave well enough alone. They'll come to regret it, I have no doubt.
In the meantime, your proposal to sell off gays and women and embrace guns and yahoos ... well, it occurs to me maybe you're supportin the wrong side. It's never to late to re-register as a Republican. The rest of us feel good about our mainstream Democratic values.
Gone To The Dogs (a poem)
Gone To The Dogs
(If the Democratic Party were a lovable mutt)

by

trotcop


As his moderate tail,
Moves to the right,
The lovable mutt,
Gives chase with great delight.

The years roll by,
He makes no gain,
Then one day he feels,
A sharp searing pain.

He realizes too late,
All the time he's let pass.
The only thing that he accomplished,
Is he bit his own ass.
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=132x1346790

Monday, November 08, 2004

  
New reality
        


I submit we are now "studying" such a new post election manufactured reality: "It was the values all along"
The quote:
''That's not the way the world really works anymore,'' he continued. ''We're an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you're studying that reality -- judiciously, as you will -- we'll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that's how things will sort out. We're history's actors . . . and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.''
and this is what we now study:
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/11/05/opinion/meyer/main653931.shtml
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Moral Values Malarkey
WASHINGTON, Nov. 5, 2004
This Against the Grain commentary was written by CBSNews.com's Dick Meyer.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Let’s try to snuff this election’s new Big Theory before it becomes Conventional Wisdom, although it’s probably too late.
snip
While the nexus of issues boiled into the words "moral values" certainly were a big factor in this election, it’s being exaggerated partly because of the oddities of the poll itself and partly because the Big Theory conforms with what Republican strategists want you to believe.
First, the poll: If the poll had been worded or constructed only slightly differently, moral values would not have been the top issue. We’re building a worldview out of a small, odd vista.

Sunday, November 07, 2004

To those who hope in "behind the curtains action"

31. From the reality vased community - if interested:
"Kerry forces planned for a
battle that never was" (by Patrick Healy, Boston Globe, Thursday Nov.
4, The Nation section, p. A340.)
It was Cahill who
shared the (not good) news..to the nominee who was working off of five
hours of sleep...And while a team of lawyers pressed to go to court on
Ohio at 8 am to challenge the state's vote-counting procedures, Cahill
said, KERRY DID NOT SEE THE POINT.
'He immediately just decided that in order to go forward in a time of
war, an election lawsuit was not something that he wanted to put the
country through' Cahill said."
Mike Papantonio - lawyer on the campaign was on Ring on Fire (Air America) with Reno (black comedienne).(he usually co-hosts with Bobby Kennedy) She asked him why was he turned around from the tarmac - en route for Ohio - election night. After repeated questioning, he admitted that "certain elements in the party thought it would make us look like cry babies"
he proceeded to tell her "get over it" about 10 times to which I am happy to say she yelled: "No way I am"

Saturday, November 06, 2004

PeteNYC
Kerry will soldier on - the battle is just beginning
I unintentionally offended some DUers by saying "Kerry isn't about to "pull a Gore." I admire and respect Al Gore, and my reference was specifically to his decision to lay low for a relatively long period of time after SCOTUS robbed him of the presidency.
I don't know what's going to happen about voting problems/theft/anomalies, but I DO know - as I said in the previous thread - that Kerry's voice will be loud and clear in the coming days, weeks, and months. He's got the support of millions of Americans. He won't let go of the issues he fought for.
Take heart. The next four years are going to see an unprecedented movement on the part of Dems, liberals, progressives to hold * accountable for EVERY fuck up.
America is going to have a major case of buyer's remorse when all is said and done.

Patrick
Sat Nov-06-04 02:29 PM
Response to Reply #8
15. Can't he add the consequences?
Never mind the vote count. The country has been tested and sifted. The shit is immobilized at the top and I include democrats who have deceived us for four long years by not stopping but increasing fraud then marching us into the guns and then like Bonnie Prince Charlie, fleeing to their mansions.
The worst part is not that flight, but that pretension they are "still in the game". Hello, the game is no longer there. They are the Great Auk preening the last feathers, basking in the twilight of their demise.
The carrier pigeon never asked us to join it. All hail the graciousness of the carrier pigeon.
There is nothing but tyranny and anarchy in fact with the spotty official remnants in their Montaigne Towers pretending, pretending, they are the last parts of America.
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=104&topic_id=2619234

Friday, November 05, 2004

I came full circle


I left Ceausescu's Romania for freedom. The stupid think is that for 20 years I never gave it a second thought. Then, just as I became a trekkie when it was over - from watching reruns - I started to get the taste of democracy years after it disappeared. I got engaged in 2000 when I felt personally robbed and thought - at every step that I was empowered. Turned out it was all a lie.
The ruling party just got rulinger"
said Mark Crispin Miller
So, I am back to enjoying my family, my garden, my city, my friends - for as long as they let us - then contemplate flight.
Still, I will have to figure out a way of continuing the fight to bring back democracy - eventhough I doubt I will live to see it (Ceausescu ruled for 35 years). But someone has to keep it going. So, without illusions, unicorns, raibows and rah, rah, rah - I am still in it.
It was stolen, damn it - and we need to bring back elections. Some day.
NEW DIRTY WORD


"Are too!"..."Am not"!..."Are too!"..."Am not!""
Author daldem    

1811 posts
Date Fri Nov-05-04 10:25 AM

  

        


My conversation with my republican stepson this morning.
Daldem: "Congratulations, you evangelicals pulled it off"
Stepson: "I'm NOT an evangelical".
Daldem: "Yes you are"
Stepson: "I am not, I'm a Methodist"
Daldem: "Maybe so, but deep down you're an evangelical".
Stepson: "I am not !"
Daldem: "That is okay if you are, I still love you"
Stepson: "I am NOT an evangelical"
Kids, I think we have a new dirty word. It is even better
than Liberal. From this day forwad every republican that
I know will be addressed as an evangelical. After many
"are toos and am nots" I ended the conversation saying that
apparently he needs to find out more about his own party's
base.
DU sez CNN: Edwards likely to be named DNC chair
my entry:
robbedvoter  (1000+ posts)         Fri Nov-05-04 12:37 PM
Response to Original message
24. Perfect. Dead meat for a dead party.Edited on Fri Nov-05-04 12:41 PM by robbedvoter
The guy who co-sponsored IWR and got praise for ONE SPEECH is the perfect figurehead for the party that ignores voter fraud, can't really oppose a war and tries to snooker people that it's on their side.
Way to celebrate ineffectiveness!
I am all for it - but then again, I left the party when this patsy was put on the ticket.
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=203&topic_id=23 594#
Le mot juste

"I think a large part of the public likes the conservatives' theme music. Now they will be tested on whether they like the lyrics." -- Barney Frank
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6407226/site/newsweek /
The "Outlandish" McCain Offer. Kerry's courtship of
Senator John McCain to be his running mate was
longer-standing and more intense than previously
reported. As far back as August 2003, Kerry had taken
McCain to breakfast to sound him out to run on a unity
ticket. McCain batted away the idea as not serious,
but Kerry, after he wrapped up the nomination in
March, went back after McCain a half-dozen more times.
"To show just how sincere he was, he made an
outlandish offer," Newsweek's Thomas reports. "If
McCain said yes he would expand the role of vice
president to include secretary of Defense and the
overall control of foreign policy. McCain exclaimed,
'You're out of your mind. I don't even know if it's
constitutional, and it certainly wouldn't sell.'"
Kerry was thwarted and furious. "Why the f--- didn't
he take it? After what the Bush people did to him...'"


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6407226/site/newsweek /
Edwards Campaigns for Veep. Hours after bowing out of
the presidential nomination race on March 3, the
senator from North Carolina convened a small circle of
his closest advisers at his house on P Street in
Georgetown. He wanted the veep nomination, Edwards
told his aides, he wanted it badly, and from that
moment was going to wage "a full-fledged campaign" to
ensure that he got it.

Mark Crispin Miller


First of all, this election was definitely rigged. I have no doubt
about it. It's a statistical impossibility that Bush got 8 million more
votes than he got last time. In 2000, he got 15 million votes from
right-wing Christians, and there are approximately 19 million of them
in the country. They were eager to get the other 4 million. That was
pretty much Karl Rove's strategy to get Bush elected.

But given Bush's low popularity ratings and the enormous number of new
voters -- who skewed Democratic -- there is no way in the world that
Bush got 8 million more votes this time
I actually got invited to a Kerry fundraiser so I could talk to him
about it.(Diebold) I raised the issue directly with him and with Teresa. Teresa
was really indignant and really concerned, but Kerry just looked down
at me -- he's about 9 feet tall -- and I could tell it just didn't
register. It set off all his conspiracy-theory alarms and he just
wasn't listening.
http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2004/11/04/election_reactions/
index1.html

Thursday, November 04, 2004

What battleground demographics did W lock?

Birthmark  (1000+ posts) Thu Nov-04-04 01:59 PM
Response to Original message
1. He had the imaginary vote locked up.
That's one of his advantages. Those of us in the reality based community can never hope to pick up that increasingly important demographic.

http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=203&topic_id=20716#20771
Original message
Interesting Times.Edited on Thu Nov-04-04 10:35 AM by library_max
It's probably neither ancient nor Chinese, but the "ancient Chinese curse" of "May you live in interesting times" makes its point. It's often no fun to be there when history is made.
It's certainly no fun to look back and realize that the last free and fair Presidential election was in 1996. In 2000, the Republicans were surprised that it was so close, and they had to improvise a steal in Florida. This time, they had all their ducks in a row before the primaries. In retrospect, we never had a chance. Between electronic voting and gerrymandering and purges of the voting rolls and intimidating new and infrequent voters (read: Kerry voters), they had us coming and going. All the careful Democrats who voted absentee or provisional ballot to make sure that their votes got counted got to see the election called and conceded before the envelopes containing their votes were even opened.
And protest isn't going to change anything. Did it change anything in 2000? The votes were eventually counted in Florida in 2000, too, and Gore won. But Bush was already President. Same song, second verse.
The Republicans are now the PRI. They control all three branches at the federal and state levels. They can stay in power as long as they want. They are the government now. We need to give up the illusions that we matter politically, that there is any kind of partnership or cooperative role for Democrats. On the national level at least, we need to repudiate the government and all its works, because the government is the Republicans, pure and simple.
We are a true opposition party now. They are the establishment. We need to stand back and pick at their every misstep and failure and blunder, with mockery and cheap shots. We need everyone to understand that they, and not we, are running things and are responsible for the results. We need to ignore elections, at least on the federal level, for the foreseeable future. We need to prevent them from making us the fall guy for their failures, which is the only role they'll allow us politically. Like the PRI, eventually they'll become so ossified and institutional that they'll be vulnerable, but that point is decades away now.
For years, the Republicans have claimed that government is the enemy, that government can't and won't do anything to help anybody except the rich and powerful. Now they'll make it true. Watch education and every piece of the social safety net get "privatized" out of existence, at least on the federal level. "I'm from the government and I'm here to help you" really will become the bitter joke they've always claimed it is.
If there's anything we can accomplish politically, it'll be on the state level. We need to concentrate on state legislatures and governors' mansions. Because the federal government is going to concentrate on military adventurism and tax cutting, more and more functions will devolve to the states. If there's to be any decency and humane social institutions, they'll have to be on the state level. Imagine how little joy it gives me, a Texan, to write this.
We might as well face the facts. Republicans control all three branches at all levels. They control the news media. They control the process. A year ago, I'd have been the first to say that jeering and finger-pointing and demonizing the government are beneath us, no way to behave if we want the electorate to trust us with power. But they're the only way to behave now that the doors of power are sealed shut against us.
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=203&topic_id=19905#20607
Thu Nov-04-04 01:23 PM
Response to Original message
10. Absolutely - well said.
I invite everyone to measure the owning of the process in Florida 2000 vs Florida 2004. One week of 4-8h lines in Miami Dade produced less votes than Gore got - yet not even Palast is bothering to go in the bowels of that one. Ohio will be just as clean next time.
Original message
Interesting Times.Edited on Thu Nov-04-04 10:35 AM by library_max
It's probably neither ancient nor Chinese, but the "ancient Chinese curse" of "May you live in interesting times" makes its point. It's often no fun to be there when history is made.
It's certainly no fun to look back and realize that the last free and fair Presidential election was in 1996. In 2000, the Republicans were surprised that it was so close, and they had to improvise a steal in Florida. This time, they had all their ducks in a row before the primaries. In retrospect, we never had a chance. Between electronic voting and gerrymandering and purges of the voting rolls and intimidating new and infrequent voters (read: Kerry voters), they had us coming and going. All the careful Democrats who voted absentee or provisional ballot to make sure that their votes got counted got to see the election called and conceded before the envelopes containing their votes were even opened.
And protest isn't going to change anything. Did it change anything in 2000? The votes were eventually counted in Florida in 2000, too, and Gore won. But Bush was already President. Same song, second verse.
The Republicans are now the PRI. They control all three branches at the federal and state levels. They can stay in power as long as they want. They are the government now. We need to give up the illusions that we matter politically, that there is any kind of partnership or cooperative role for Democrats. On the national level at least, we need to repudiate the government and all its works, because the government is the Republicans, pure and simple.
We are a true opposition party now. They are the establishment. We need to stand back and pick at their every misstep and failure and blunder, with mockery and cheap shots. We need everyone to understand that they, and not we, are running things and are responsible for the results. We need to ignore elections, at least on the federal level, for the foreseeable future. We need to prevent them from making us the fall guy for their failures, which is the only role they'll allow us politically. Like the PRI, eventually they'll become so ossified and institutional that they'll be vulnerable, but that point is decades away now.
For years, the Republicans have claimed that government is the enemy, that government can't and won't do anything to help anybody except the rich and powerful. Now they'll make it true. Watch education and every piece of the social safety net get "privatized" out of existence, at least on the federal level. "I'm from the government and I'm here to help you" really will become the bitter joke they've always claimed it is.
If there's anything we can accomplish politically, it'll be on the state level. We need to concentrate on state legislatures and governors' mansions. Because the federal government is going to concentrate on military adventurism and tax cutting, more and more functions will devolve to the states. If there's to be any decency and humane social institutions, they'll have to be on the state level. Imagine how little joy it gives me, a Texan, to write this.
We might as well face the facts. Republicans control all three branches at all levels. They control the news media. They control the process. A year ago, I'd have been the first to say that jeering and finger-pointing and demonizing the government are beneath us, no way to behave if we want the electorate to trust us with power. But they're the only way to behave now that the doors of power are sealed shut against us.
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=203&topic_id=19905#20607
Famous last words:
I have no time for those crying in their teacups for stolen elections
John kerry - campaign trail 2003
And the picture
and link
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=203&topic_id=11874&mesg_id=17986&page=

Wednesday, November 03, 2004

Reaction to Kerry's concession:


Sugarbleus (1000+ posts) Wed Nov-03-04 12:17 PM
Response to Reply #117
128. I asked for my money back too....
I'm a poor disabled woman but I pitched in each month for the first time in my life. I COULDN'T AFFORD that money. I feel like I've been ripped of by a televangelist!
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=132&topic_id=1301011#

Tuesday, November 02, 2004

Sean Hannity begging people to vote W,

7. Sniffling, voice choking up ...
whining (well he always does that).
Saying if you don't vote you get:
Ted Kennedy winning
Hillary Clinton winning
Michael Moore winning
Al Franken winning (athough he did call Michael and Al idiots).
This is great!
Freepers melt down:

Hey Fellow Freepers -- I thought we were made of sterner stuff. This race is far from over.
Before you decide to post an "AAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRGHHHHH!" or a "Nooooooooooo!!!" or some other girlie-man type howl of despair every time an exit poll doesn't go our way, just imagine how much fun the DUmmies are going to have picking up your comment and posting it over at DU.
So if you don't have anything constructive to say, howsabout you go cry in the bathroom until you get control of yourself, and spare us all your useless whining.
If Bush loses this, it's going to be tough enough around here without your adding to the DUmmies' schadenfreude.
Of course, if Bush wins, I'll see you all over there when I go to add to their misery.
But please, in the meantime, I expect better of you guys. Jeez, I'd hate to be in a foxhole with some of you spineless crybabies
First result:
Just in from Paris:
"Comme a chaque élection présidentielle , le Harris ' Bar a organisé un
vote pour les Américains a Paris .. Kerry l'emporte avec une très forte
majorité ! Et le vote au Harris s'est toujours révèlé exact depuis les
années 1920 !!
Pour ma part je pense que c'est gagné et que vous allez pouvoir fêter
votre victoire . Merci de m'avoir alimenté en informations durant cette
campagne . Jamais une élection présidentielle n'avait suscité un tel
intérêt ici , aussi loin que porte ma mémoire . Je vous embrasse . Michel"
meltdown in BFEE - from DU
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=203x94
Barett808
Sent: Saturday, October 30, 2004 9:51 PM
To: Class of 1976 discussion group.; Class of 1976 discussion group.
Subject: RE: Notes from a friend on what Kerry's team is saying
ok, got a call on my cell phone this am while taking my son to hockey. my friend in the kerry campaign spoke late last night with mark mehlman of the bush team. mehlman was a roomate of my friend when they were both at the harvard law school. they are at opposite ends of the politcal spectrum, but are very good friends. mehlman says the bush team is in "major melt down" because their polling has them losing in ohio and florida, so they are in a mad dash to pull something out in the upper midwest. michigan isn't really in play. he called it a "head fake". wisconsin is slipping away, bush spoke in green bay today to less than 5,000 people (kerry drew 80,000 in madison on thursday). iowa has the numbers potentially but they've focused on it way too late, after the dems had a massive absentee push, so iowa is unlikely. they can't win with minnesota alone and even that state doesn't look good.
mehlman says that there is incredible discord at the top. cheney is absolutley livid with rove on the overall strategy ("we peaked too soon you bastard") and with karen hughes for not adequately preparing bush for the debates ("he looked like a g** d***** mental patient"). cheney is apparently a "real monster". the rnc doesn't know what to do because they can't get any clear direction from the top.
mehlman says that bush's slide in their polls began about three weeks before the debates when kerry when into attack mode with major foreign policy speeches at nyu and at a national guard convention, the day after bush spoke. the slide accelerated big time after the debates, "everyone was as bad as the first with no let-up in free fall" according to mehlman. cheney freaked during the first debate, convinced that bush "'lost the f****** election in front of 65 million people". Now they simply don't have the numbers to win in Florida, have not got their ducks in a row to "deflect" the massive number of early voters and are having real trouble maintaining the base in Florida and elsewhere ("our people are just turning away"). in ohio they've been simply overwhelmed with the new voter registrations and have been unsuccessful in court challenges. bush's number actually go now when he visits ohio after Treasury Secretary Snow's comments in the state that job losses were a "myth". Additionally many repubs are pissed about the financial proligacy of Bush and Cheney and their incompetence in Iraq, so a lot are simply going to "take a pass", read not vote. bush apparently has been totally "out of it" believing Rove and Hughes that everything was fine and that victory was assured, but is finally and slowing catching on that he might lose this thing. yesterday morning when made aware of the bin laden tape in nh, simply said. "It's over."
maybe all this can be chalked up to mehlman having a tough week.
Voting story from Texas - Red Sox unamerican?

Tue Nov-02-04 08:39 AM
Wellstone Democrat
I got challenged! Here's why!
7:05 I got to my voting place in snow and wind attired in warm clothing and....my Red Sox cap. I thought I'd get a few looks but was actually surprised at how many and how *angry*---though they'd look over my head, see the husband in his RS cap and turn away
I got up to the table, the elderly woman looked at me, took my registration card and looked around sort of frantically. Up comes an officious little man who asked to see my card and I asked who he was. "We need to see if you are registered" Oh, I said, why? I have a *new* registration card and here's my license. Who are you? "A volunteer" he says (I'm still holding the license). For the city, county or state? I asked. "Just a volunteer" he answered. Can I have your name since you are getting mine I asked? No he said. I then told the worker that I wanted either the supervisor of that poll or the police. Because a strange man was asking to see identification and refused to say who he was: he could steal my identity! ( )
That panicked them (and got me a poke in the back from my entertained husband) and they muttered and mumbled and then the elderly woman said: "well that hat" which got her a dirty look from the "volunteer." OH? Said I. A problem with the World Champion Red Sox? No, no, no, they both said. "Never mind, have a nice day." OK, said I, I'm going to call the board of elections and ask why they didn't tell me I could not wear a Red Sox hat and be an American. The "volunteer's" parting shot? "Don't make trouble."
Whoo boy, wrong thing to say to a woman in Texas. Two men in the next line said a version of of "apologize to the lady" instantly. The little turd said "I have to make sure there is no fraud." He then looks at my husband and his RS cap and says simply: "give your registration card to the clerk" My husband, my dear sweet quiet husband looked *down* at the little man and said: "Any problems with *my* hat?" No, no, no said the "volunteer" and the people around actually *hooted* as he walked away. As I squeezed between the lines to get to the booths a very old man in the next line grabbed my arm and said: "Honey, you vote for who you want. Its America and I'll probably cancel you out anyway!" Then, he looked at the "B" on the hat, looked at me and said (smiling): "Or maybe not..."
Made MY day. And, so I'm sitting at Dem HQ with my laptop, waiting to report this "incident" and to go out to the retirement apts near me to drive people to the polls in this driving sleet we have today. We called to see if people changed their minds for a.m. voting because of the weather. The manager said: "no, we have more down here than signed up already." As soon as the vans arrive, I'm off to do my bit---now that I have my avatar: I VOTED.
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=132&topic_id=1269395&mesg_id=1269395

Sunday, October 31, 2004

Bin Laden tape - selectively released. Missing paragraph:

This similarity was striking with Bush the Elder when he visited in the area. At the same time, some of our people (the Saudis) were fascinated by the USA and were hoping that his visit to our countries might influence us; however Bush instead became influenced by these people and their regimes, and he started to envy them, as they sit there for many decades in their positions and are stealing their country's money with any kind of audits or control. After that, he took up the same method of repression and restricting freedoms which under the guise of the Patriot Act, under the cover of the War on Terror.
Bush the Elder liked the idea that his sons would take over power from the father. He has also not forgotten the tactics of his own skills at voter cheating, like in Florida, so he could use them in an emergency



71. This tape is not addressed to his followers, but to us
he is using western language (wasn't he educated in England?)
he wants to influence the election, he wants to maintain the status quo that serves him. he is smart enough not to make a direct statement on this, but instead adopts a "spoiler" stance (see "Nader" for details)
The hope here is to keep people from voting.
I cannot say if the BFEE/Bin Ladin entreprise (Carlyle) was directly involved in soliciting his services or this was an OBL initiative. He is enough of a megalomaniac to want the feeling that he decides this country;s future - but not dumb enough to risk helping along a regime change to a more competent leader.
So, while the planning may have not existed, he did make BFEE a gift (again) and it was received as such - see what W's operative boast:
http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/247753p-212149c ....
See tape as boost for Prez
We want people to think 'terrorism' for the last four days," said a Bush-Cheney campaign official. "And anything that raises the issue in people's minds is good for us."
A senior GOP strategist added, "anything that makes people nervous about their personal safety helps Bush."
He called it "a little gift," saying it helps the President but doesn't guarantee his reelection.

Friday, October 22, 2004

http://www.truthout.org/docs_04/102304W.shtml
    It is, instead, an election about the presidency of George W. Bush. To the surprise of virtually everyone, Bush has turned into an important president, and in many ways the most radical America has had since the 19th century. Because he is the leader of America’s conservative party, he has become the Left’s perfect foil - its dream candidate. The libertarian writer Lew Rockwell has mischievously noted parallels between Bush and Russia’s last tsar, Nicholas II: both gained office as a result of family connections, both initiated an unnecessary war that shattered their countries’ budgets. Lenin needed the calamitous reign of Nicholas II to create an opening for the Bolsheviks.
Krugman: don't be magnanimous!

http://www.mollyivins.com/showArticle.asp?ArticleID=177...
TO: The day after the election, what’s the column if Kerry wins?
PK: Do not be magnanimous in victory. I hope the people around him understand that this is not politics as we know it. It’s not, “OK, well, we won an election. After the election we’ll get together and work in a bipartisan way to help the country.” They didn’t work in a bipartisan way when the United States was attacked. They immediately saw it as a way to achieve political dominance. Kerry has got to understand that he has a window of opportunity to expose what’s going on and to rock these people back to the point where we can try to reclaim the normal workings of democracy. Unless there’s a true miracle and the Democrats take the House—which is extremely unlikely—it’s going to be very bitter political civil war from Day One. The House leadership will try to undermine Kerry. I’m sure they’ll try to impeach him almost immediately. On anything.
We can go on and on about Tom DeLay, but the point is Tom DeLay is not an aberrant thing. He’s not an accident. The whole thrust of where we’ve been going for a couple of decades in this country has been towards putting someone like Tom DeLay in a position of great power. So, my column to Kerry, my open letter to him if he wins, will be: Do not be magnanimous. You need to expose and dismantle this machine...."

Monday, October 18, 2004

on DU:

montana500 (230 posts) Mon Oct-18-04 07:02 PM
Original message
Dick Morris on Faux: Bush is in trouble. Only one way he can win.
Suggests October surprise is Bush's only chance
MORRIS: “I think there’s gonna be a huge turnout. All the voter registration figures are up, the polling indicates.”
O’REILLY: “Who does that favor?”
MORRIS: “It probably favors Kerry. And I do believe he’ll get a very strong, very intense minority vote. There’s only one thing that can save George Bush. Think about how we felt in August. Think about how jeopardized and endangered we felt with photos of the stock exchange and IMF building circulating. The Al Qaeda militants, bombs possibly at the two conventions, the Olympics. We felt really in danger. Now we feel fat and happy. We’re felling pretty good. We turn on the TV set about Iraq. We watch it with half an eye, but nobody really thinks there’s gonna be anything happening here. If that’s the environment on November 2nd, Kerry’s gonna win. But, if - and I’m not suggesting Bush would fabricate it - - but if, in fact, Al Qaeda chooses to begin actions, to threaten stuff, to do stuff here, which they did in Israel and they did in Madrid right before the election, then I think that could elect Bush...Osama bin Laden will determine if Bush wins or not.”
Follow-up:
Morris just finished an appearance on “Big Story with John Gibson” (10/15/04, 5:03 PM EDT) in which he said essentially the same things, only this time he was very careful NOT to use the words “and I’m not suggesting Bush would fabricate it.”
http://www.newshounds.us/2004/10/15/dick_m...to_win.php...
[b]CREATING REALITY[/b]

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/17/magazine/17BUSH.html?oref=login&oref=login&oref=login&pagewanted=all&position

"In the summer of 2002, after I had written an article in Esquire that the White House didn't like about Bush's former communications director, Karen Hughes, I had a meeting with a senior adviser to Bush. He expressed the White House's displeasure, and then he told me something that at the time I didn't fully comprehend -- but which I now believe gets to the very heart of the Bush presidency.
The aide said that guys like me were 'in what we call the reality-based community,' which he defined as people who 'believe that solutions emerge from your judicious study of discernible reality.' I nodded and murmured something about enlightenment principles and empiricism. He cut me off. 'That's not the way the world really works anymore,' he continued. 'We're an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you're studying that reality -- judiciously, as you will -- we'll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that's how things will sort out. We're history's actors . . . and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.'

Sunday, October 17, 2004

Warning: W will use new language

Aides had alerted reporters to expect "new language" in Bush's routine rejection of Democratic rival John Kerry (news - web sites)'s warnings that the Iraq (news - web sites) war has so strained the US armed forces that compulsory military service may be around the corner.
"Our all-volunteer army will remain an all-volunteer army," Bush began, to cheers from supporters here in Florida, the richest prize among the dozen or so states up for grabs in the November 2 election.
"My opponent seems to be willing to say almost anything he thinks will benefit him politically," he said. "After standing on the stage, after the debates, [b]I made it very plain we will not have an all-volunteer army."[/b] "And yet this week..." he continued, before suddenly realizing the gaffe and shouting: "We will have an all-volunteer army."

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=1506&u=/afp/2...
On Bartcop forum:
"Times has (temporary) deathbed conversion"
Author samela    

        
is is a very powerful editorial, notable less for its "enthusiastic" endorsement of Kerry, for which I am grateful, than for the bulk of its content---a searing indictment of the Bush administration, spelled out in detail and step by step, on every domestic and foreign policy outrage. It should be required reading.
But I am struck by how the normally vapid Sunday Times is today filled with other must-read articles as well. To wit:
(1) Frank Rich's sizzling rant on how the Bush administration is "knee-capping" the media. (Read beyond the somewhat suspect protestations over Judith Miller's fate. It really is a chilling, and telling, piece, even if it is from the guy who found Al Gore too wooden).
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/14/arts/17rich.html
(2) An expose of human rights abuses in Guantanamo. The shocking techniques described herein are truly a day late and a dollar short. We already read the report of allegations by two British prisoners who were released--and their stories conform entirely with the new allegations being lodged by unnamed US personnel who are now speaking out. It's important. Read it, too.
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/17/politics/17gitmo.html?hp&ex=1098072000&en=e29ccfe1afd6371a&ei=5094&partner=homepage
(3) The real story about why there are no flu vaccines this year---because Big Pharma doesn't find vaccine making profitable, and because they don't want to spend the money to make them safely, as required by Clinton-era reforms. They don't take Bush to task for lying about the reasons in the debate the other night, but it effectively serves as an indictment of this administration for having done nothing on this front. It ends with a direct slam on them for allocating nothing to a "real" disease that kills tens of thousands each year while dumping $5.8 Billion on drug companies to develop anthrax vaccines, a disease no one has. Read it.
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/17/health/17flu2.html?hp&ex=1098072000&en=d2dfea7c2bb70b63&ei=5094&partner=homepage

Saturday, October 16, 2004

Digby: Jon Stewart's show is mocking THE MEDIA, not politics

Dumboys
I don't know how many of you are watching Crossfire, but Jon Stewart is on and he's making both Tuckie and Paul a tad uncomfortable.
They seem to be unaware that The Daily Show is a parody of the news and that its mission is to make fun of them. And that's because they are so insular and self-referential that they have no idea how the country really sees them.
They don't like it. Especially the Tuckster who is plainly wants to scratch his eyes out.
Stewart is trying to make the point that they are contributing to the dumbing down of the discourse by presenting this fake news, or political theatre, that they pretend is news. He isn't being funny and he isn't doing the usual celebrity circle jerk and they are finding it very discomfiting.
Good.
 Freeper woman lawyer writes Derbyshire (National review)
RE: MY BOY BILL
The following got my attention.
"Derb---I am a lawyer in . My practice is entirely employment law, representing management (i.e., defendants). I do a lot of sexual harassment claims -- companies like being represented by a woman attorney, looks better.
"I read through the huge and detailed complaint. I also have some doubts -- if it was all that bad, WHY would she keep going out to dinner with him, go back to work for him, etc. But the quotes in the complaint bother me, because it suggests they were taped. And the allegations are really bad. This isn't just a guy at work being obnoxious, it is someone in a position of power over an employee, and that is what makes it particularly bad. No one should have to tolerate the things in the complaint in relation to their job (unless it is consensual, of course -- that's a different issue).
"All that being said, I come back to something that I have learned over 12 years of practice in this area -- the more outrageous the allegations, the more likely they are to be true. People don't make up outrageous stuff, they make up (or exaggerate) mild stuff. That's a generalization, of course, and certainly an individual could make up outrageous stuff -- particularly if there is a partisan reason, and there are lots of reasons to think this is partisan, the timing of it in particular. But in the back of my mind, I'm not liking this...."
Posted at 10:24 AM
http://www.nationalreview.com/thecorner/corner.asp

Friday, October 15, 2004

Jon Stewart on Crossfire:

http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0410/15/cf.01.ht...
In many ways, it's funny. And I made a special effort to come on the
show today, because I have privately, amongst my friends and also in
occasional newspapers and television shows, mentioned this show as
being bad.
(LAUGHTER)
BEGALA: We have noticed.
STEWART: And I wanted to -- I felt that that wasn't fair and I should
come here and tell you that I don't -- it's not so much that it's bad,
as it's hurting America.
(LAUGHTER)
CARLSON: But in its defense...
(CROSSTALK)
STEWART: So I wanted to come here today and say...
(CROSSTALK)
STEWART: Here's just what I wanted to tell you guys.
CARLSON: Yes.
STEWART: Stop.
(LAUGHTER)
STEWART: Stop, stop, stop, stop hurting America.
BEGALA: OK. Now
(CROSSTALK)
STEWART: And come work for us, because we, as the people...
CARLSON: How do you pay?
STEWART: The people -- not well.
(LAUGHTER)
BEGALA: Better than CNN, I'm sure.
STEWART: But you can sleep at night.
caledoni (416 posts) Fri Oct-15-04 12:25 PM
Response to Original message
45. Zogby Gallups
I've been registered with Zogby for a long time. Rarely did they poll me. Then I tried somehting. I said I voted for der kleine fuhrer in 2000 (though giving him the lowest of marks.) Now I'm polled all the time. 
 
Platoon defies orders in Iraq
A 17-member Army Reserve platoon with troops from Jackson and around the Southeast deployed to Iraq is under arrest for refusing a "suicide mission" to deliver fuel, the troops' relatives said Thursday.
The soldiers refused an order on Wednesday to go to Taji, Iraq — north of Baghdad — because their vehicles were considered "deadlined" or extremely unsafe, said Patricia McCook of Jackson, wife of Sgt. Larry O. McCook.
http://www.clarionledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=...

Thursday, October 14, 2004

Debate comments on Atrios:

2) My mother was a delusional paranoid...that fixed, forced smile and those vacant eyes looked all to familiar to me...the man was creeping me out more than usual.
Anti Meme


Anyone notice that his answer to everything was education?

Outsourcing? education
tax relief? education
domestic security? education
illegal immigrants? education with a temp work card.
Ed

------------------------------------------------------------------------

I don't get it. The question regards minimum wage. Kerry gives a detailed policy position answer. Bush talks about "Mitch McConnell's plan" for five seconds, the flips over to education. A total flop. Not one media pundit has mentioned it.


Media sucks ass cause they're a bunch of whores. What's not to get?
fourlegsgood


That foaming was just some coke residue. That's how they got him to smile.
de Sade


Did anyone notice how Bush basically said that all the black and hispanic people in the country are poor?

Don't you worry about that. We'll send those darkies to community college and have them reading, writing, adding, and subtracting in no time. Laziness can be cured.
MillionthMonkey

------------------------------------------------------------------------

CNN poll - who won

Kerry 52
Bush 39

Larry King just announced.



Schneider: "just about as decisive a win for Kerry as in the first debate."

AWESOME
Gee |


Does anyone else find it ironic Bush is okay with purchasing flu vaccine manufactured in Canada but not okay with our simply buying pre packaged drugs actually manufactued here? Geez.
Mrs French

telltakeheart:
I don't hold a grudge - I would hire him as my pool boy
TelltakeHeart.
He'll drink every beer in the fridge and piss it out in your pool, but I admire your forgiving nature.
stencil


Bob Kerrey told Brokaw that George Bush senior was more responsible for the balanced budgets in the 90's than Clinton. This is who was offered as balance to Guilliani.
Anonymous


CBS "Undecideds" polled after the Debate:

Who won?

KERRY 39%

Bush 25%

Tie 36%

Bush actually went into Negative numbers while babbling on about lost jobs

Keery, on "does he offer specific plan,

Before debate 35%

After Debate 60%!!!!
thought


Everyone from the Bushie camp looks like their dog died.

They're wrong.

It was their chimp.
fourlegsgood


Bush''s Prescription Drug Program:

Debate 1: Ny-Quil
Debate 2: Cocaine
Debate 3: Prozac
HeavyJ


O'Lielly and Bush, bitchslapped, both on the same day, did I die and go to Heaven?
Ind4ke


Tomorrow on Fox and Friends : "Why Drool is Cool!"
David Ehrenstein

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