Category Archives: Dump Duhbya

Stop

the Radical Right!

Republicans Staying On Message for 44 Years

A short video from the Republican National Convention: gopconstrm.mov (video/quicktime Object)

Editing can make anything better or worse than it might otherwise seem. Still, this short film shows how consistent the Republican message is.

In fact, I was interested to hear a quote from 44 years ago from Richard Nixon during his debate with Kennedy in which he talked about a danger like never before from a ruthless enemy (while implying Kennedy was too soft to stand up to the threat). Of course, he meant our current friends, the Russians. There will always be enemies, which makes them such a reliable campaign tool. Fear wins votes, as Nixon showed again in ’68 & ’72. mjh

Very Long Portrait of Kerry

President KerryKerry’s Undeclared War By MATT BAI, NYTimes

When I asked Kerry what it would take for Americans to feel safe again, he displayed a much less apocalyptic worldview. ”We have to get back to the place we were, where terrorists are not the focus of our lives, but they’re a nuisance,” Kerry said. ”As a former law-enforcement person, I know we’re never going to end prostitution. We’re never going to end illegal gambling. But we’re going to reduce it, organized crime, to a level where it isn’t on the rise. It isn’t threatening people’s lives every day, and fundamentally, it’s something that you continue to fight, but it’s not threatening the fabric of your life.’

This analogy struck me as remarkable, if only because it seemed to throw down a big orange marker between Kerry’s philosophy and the president’s. Kerry, a former prosecutor, was suggesting that the war, if one could call it that, was, if not winnable, then at least controllable. If mobsters could be chased into the back rooms of seedy clubs, then so, too, could terrorists be sent scurrying for their lives into remote caves where they wouldn’t harm us. Bush had continually cast himself as the optimist in the race, asserting that he alone saw the liberating potential of American might, and yet his dark vision of unending war suddenly seemed far less hopeful than Kerry’s notion that all of this horror — planes flying into buildings, anxiety about suicide bombers and chemicals in the subway — could somehow be made to recede until it was barely in our thoughts. …

Theoretically, Kerry could still find a way to wrap his ideas into some bold and cohesive construct for the next half-century — a Kerry Doctrine, perhaps, or a campaign against chaos, rather than a war on terror — that people will understand and relate to. But he has always been a man who prides himself on appreciating the subtleties of public policy, and everything in his experience has conditioned him to avoid unsubtle constructs and grand designs. His aversion to Big Think has resulted in one of the campaign’s oddities: it is Bush, the man vilified by liberals as intellectually vapid, who has emerged as the de facto visionary in the campaign, trying to impose some long-term thematic order on a dangerous and disorderly world, while Kerry carves the globe into a series of discrete problems with specific solutions.

When Kerry first told me that Sept. 11 had not changed him, I was surprised. I assumed everyone in America — and certainly in Washington — had been changed by that day. I assumed he was being overly cautious, afraid of providing his opponents with yet another cheap opportunity to call him a flip-flopper. What I came to understand was that, in fact, the attacks really had not changed the way Kerry viewed or talked about terrorism — which is exactly why he has come across, to some voters, as less of a leader than he could be. He may well have understood the threat from Al Qaeda long before the rest of us. And he may well be right, despite the ridicule from Cheney and others, when he says that a multinational, law-enforcement-like approach can be more effective in fighting terrorists. But his less lofty vision might have seemed more satisfying — and would have been easier to talk about in a political campaign — in a world where the twin towers still stood.

Kerry’s Not Even in the Top Ten Most Liberal List

Daily Howler: No one but the New York Times shows such woeful bad judgment. Also: Bush-Kerry II!

It’s embarrassing to see a president stoop to the type of deception displayed Friday evening. In the first half of the Great Debate, Bush was faring rather poorly. And so, in answer to Question 9 (of 18), he turned to a potent, discredited claim. “Let me see where to start,”� he mused. And then he had it! He knew where to start! He started with a fake old deception:

BUSH (10/8/04): Let me see where to start here. First, the National Journal named Senator Kennedy [sic] the most liberal senator — of all! And that’s saying something with that bunch. You might say that took a lot of hard work.

Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ! Except Kerry isn’t “the most liberal senator” and the National Journal hasn’t said otherwise. Indeed, how misleading was the president’s claim? When Bush began making this claim back in March, the Journal quickly published an article noting that the claim was vastly misleading. Indeed, Kerry’s lifetime voting record doesn’t place him among the Journal’s ten most liberal senators, as the mag pointed out (see THE DAILY HOWLER, 8/6/04). But so what? Facing disaster on Question 9, Bush went ahead and pimped the charge anyway.

A Letter to My Mother-in-Law

I’ve been meaning to write you for quite some time about the election. I’ll make some points and attach some articles. In the end, if you are still unpersuaded, I will do one more thing: I will BEG you to vote for Kerry. Please vote for Kerry. There is a chance Tennessee will go for Kerry.

There is really so much against Bush. I’m sure you are aware of much of it. Bottom line: he is secretive, he is stubborn and, more than likely, he is deceitful to a degree that exceeds Kerry and prior Presidents (and I hated Nixon just as much). Furthermore, he is a strange version of conservative and an evangelical Christian who believes his Christianity makes him a better American than you or I. Finally, because he’s not interested in all sides of an issue (close-minded), he is probably at the mercy of his inner circle, which is a frightening group of people.

Does this mean I have nothing good to say about Kerry? Not at all. Kerry is clearly smart, thoughtful, considerate, and serious. Kerry is a lawyer (and ours is a nation of laws). He’s a former prosecutor (which isn’t actually a plus to me, but might be to law-and-order types). Of course we know too much about his service in Vietnam (in contrast to Bush’s evasions). Some are troubled, even angry, about him coming back from the Vietnam War and becoming a protestor (and an activist – not just a protestor, but someone working for change). I think it shows he’s capable of recognizing a mistake and working for change; and for standing up for principles. I have no idea what he will accomplish as President. I don’t see how he can easily ‘fix’ Iraq or defeat the terrorists. But I see Bush doing more of the same OR WORSE, and Kerry looking for alternatives – that’s what we need.

As for Edwards, he’s at least as qualified to be Vice President as Quayle was; more than Spiro Agnew was. He’s smart and another lawyer (Republicans hate the thought of two lawyers in charge; Lincoln was a trial lawyer). He balances and complements Kerry in so many ways.

When it comes time to appoint two to four new Supreme Court justices, I want two lawyers who will read all of the opinions written by any potential nominees deciding who to nominate. Not a guy who will depend on a one-page Executive Summary. This is not the only issue, but it’s one that will affect the rest of my life.

Please, please, please vote for Kerry. Don’t be turned off by my hatred of Bush or my whining plea. Look beyond that to the real choice between a guy who had his chance and screwed up in so many, many ways – and has not learned from his mistakes, in part because he doesn’t believe he’s made any – versus a guy who is at least qualified and capable and more respectful of other views and the law. mjh

http://www.DumpBushBlog.com/

Convince Your Mom.com

Conservative Media Attacks

Anti-Kerry film slated to air on eve of election By Elizabeth Jensen, Los Angeles Times

The conservative-leaning Sinclair Broadcast Group, whose television outlets reach nearly a quarter of the nation’s homes with TV, is ordering its stations to preempt regular programming just days before the Nov. 2 election to air a film that attacks Senator John F. Kerry’s activism against the Vietnam War, network and station executives familiar with the plan said Friday.

Sinclair’s programming plan, communicated to executives in recent days and coming in the thick of a close and intense presidential race, is highly unusual even in a political season that has been marked by media controversies.

Sinclair has told its stations — many of them in political swing states such as Ohio and Florida — to air ”Stolen Honor: Wounds That Never Heal,” sources said. The film, funded by Pennsylvania veterans and produced by a veteran and former Washington Times reporter, features former POWs accusing Kerry — a decorated Navy veteran turned war protester — of worsening their ordeal by prolonging the war. Sinclair will preempt regular prime-time programming from the networks to show the film, which may be classified as news programming, according to TV executives familiar with the plan.

Recall that Sinclair blocked the broadcast of Nightline’s reading of the names of war dead. The Radical Right and its corporations will do anything to retain power. YOU have the power to boot them out. mjh

BOYCOTT SINCLAIR ADVERTISERS

Democratic Talk Radio ACTION ALERT

Bush Distortions

Political Memo: In New Attacks, Bush Pushes Limit on the Facts By ADAM NAGOURNEY
and RICHARD W. STEVENSON

From the beginning of the year, the White House has charted new ground with the sweep of its negative campaigning, starting with an $80 million wave of attack advertisements directed at Senator John Kerry that began the moment he effectively won his party’s nomination last spring.

But the scathing indictment that Mr. Bush offered of Mr. Kerry over the past two days – on the eve of the second presidential debate and with polls showing the race tightening – took these attacks to a blistering new level. In the process, several analysts say, Mr. Bush pushed the limits of subjective interpretation and offered exaggerated or what some Democrats said were distorted accounts of Mr. Kerry’s positions on health care, tax cuts, the Iraq war and foreign policy. …

[A]nalysts, including some Republicans, said Mr. Bush was repeatedly taking phrases and sentences out of context, or cherry-picking votes, to provide an unfavorable case against Mr. Kerry.

“So much of what they are indicting is taken out of context,” said Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvania, and the author of a book on negative campaigning. “It’s a matter of taking sentences out of context or parts of sentences out of context. And it’s hard for journalists to write the context back in because it takes time.” …

The latest line of attacks by Mr. Bush comes during what has been a tumultuous week for him, amid signs that a once swaggering White House was getting worried.

“[Karl] Rove and [Ralph] Reed were schooled by Lee [Atwater] and he told them that what you do is you rip the bark off liberals.” said Marshall Wittman, a former senior aide to Senator John McCain, the Arizona Republican, and is registered as an independent. “Even if they’re not liberals you rip the bark off them. That’s what they are doing.