Category Archives: Dump Duhbya
Stop
the Radical Right!
T-shirts to elect Democrats
electees.com
T-shirts to elect Democrats
Make yourself a billboard of one Winning this election will take all of us — each convincing one undecided voter at a time (even if we can’t understand how anyone could still be undecided).
Greenspan Needs To Retire
Benefits need to be cut, Greenspan says By MARTIN CRUTSINGER , AP Economics Writer
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said yesterday the country will face ”abrupt and painful” choices unless Congress acts quickly to trim Social Security and Medicare benefits for the baby boom generation. He said the government has promised more than it can deliver.
Returning to a politically explosive issue just before the Republican National Convention, Greenspan said the country must face up to ”some tough policy choices.”
Government resources even under the most optimistic economic assumptions on growth and productivity will be inadequate to provide baby boomers with the level of benefits their parents got, he said.
Starve the beast — that’s the fundamental philosophy of the Radical Right. They say we need to cut benefits people have been paying for for years because the resources aren’t there. Would that be the resources that were poured into the pockets of the Rich or dumped in the sewer of Iraq? These people think you are incredibly stupid. mjh
Bush’s Deceptive Radicalism
The Bush presidency Economist.com
[T]he vitriol and adoration that Mr Bush inspires both stem in part from the policies he has chosen. It is not just a matter of waging the most controversial war since Vietnam and dramatically increasing the size of government. Name your subject, from education and health care to missile defence, AIDS policy, gay marriage, stem cells and civil rights, and this presidency has sought radical change.
Radicalism can be good—but Mr Bush’s brand has turned a compassionate conservative into a contradictory one. What is conservative about allowing government to grow faster than under Mr Clinton? What is humble about announcing that you are trying to introduce democracy to the Middle East? Where is the compassion in his support for a federal ban on gay marriage, the limitations on stem-cell research or his other moves to accommodate the zealots of the Christian right? …
The American conservative movement has always been a marriage between “western” anti-governmentalism and “southern” moralism. Four years ago, Mr Bush made no secret of his own religious beliefs, but he gave the impression he would hold the often intolerant religious right in check. Instead, he has given it a big role in his administration on a host of issues. No doubt Mr Bush’s convictions are sincere; but they were not to the fore in 2000 and they are not shared by many of those who supported him then….
1.3 Million MORE in Poverty
ABQjournal: Over 1 Million More Living in Poverty
The new Census report — issued Thursday but not mentioned by Bush in his speeches in Las Cruces, Farmington and Albuquerque — showed the number of Americans living in poverty increased by more than 1.3 million last year while the number of Americans without health insurance rose 1.4 million.
It was the third straight year of increases for both categories. …
In a speech in Las Cruces Thursday morning, Bush touted improvements in the U.S. economy….
Pick One
(1) A review of state-by-state polls and historical voting data by Bloomberg News shows Bush ahead in 19 states, including Texas and Idaho, with 153 electoral votes. Kerry leads in 12 states, including New York and New Jersey, with 179 electoral votes. In 19 states that have 206 electoral votes, including Ohio and Wisconsin, the most recent polling results are within the margin of error.
(2) A compilation of surveys by Utica, New York-based Zogby Interactive said Kerry was leading Bush in the Electoral College, 286 to 214. The survey focuses on 16 battleground states and assumes that voters in the other 34 states will support of the candidate of the same party they backed in 2000.
(3) Current Electoral Vote Predictor 2004
EC totals – (1) – (2) – (3)
Bush – 153 – 214 – 238
Kerry 179 – 286 – 280
The Jackass Brays in New Mexico
Remarks by President Bush at Las Cruces, New Mexico Rally
In order to keep this country safer, stronger, and better put Dick and I back into office. (Applause.) …
See, I don’t think you can be — I don’t think you can be pro-patient and pro-doctor and pro-trial lawyer at the same time. (Applause.) I think you have to choose. My opponent made his choice and he put him on the ticket. I made my choice: I am for medical liability reform. (Applause.) …
There’s not enough money to tax the rich to pay for all his promises. If he gets elected, he’s going to tax you. But the good news is we’re not going to let him get elected. (Applause.) …
I want to thanks the Senator for clearing that up. (Applause.) There’s still a little over 60 days for him to change his mind again. (Laughter.) …
We received great bipartisan support for that important spending. Matter of fact, the support was so strong that only 12 members of the United States Senate voted against it. Two of them are my opponent and his running
mate.
AUDIENCE: Booo!
THE PRESIDENT: The Senator tried to explain his vote by saying this: “I actually did vote for the $87 billion before I voted against it.” Now, he’s offering a different explanation. Originally, he said he was proud of the vote. And then when pressed, he said it was just a complicated matter.
There’s nothing complicated about supporting our troops in combat. (Applause.)
