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| Author |
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| 25 new of 536 responses total. |
remmers
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response 424 of 536:
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Dec 11 17:15 UTC 2003 |
(We can hope...)
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klg
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response 425 of 536:
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Dec 11 17:24 UTC 2003 |
One word for Mr. richard: George McGovern
(Go, How-weird! Go, Weasley! Our "dream ticket.")
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rcurl
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response 426 of 536:
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Dec 12 02:07 UTC 2003 |
Don't you wish.....
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bhoward
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response 427 of 536:
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Dec 12 03:19 UTC 2003 |
So which word was it Mr. Klg, "George" or "McGovern"?
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klg
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response 428 of 536:
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Dec 12 03:32 UTC 2003 |
(Hey. We ought to know. We campaigned for him.)
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remmers
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response 429 of 536:
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Dec 12 15:18 UTC 2003 |
(Yet more confirmation of my long-standing observation that ex-liberals
make the most tiresome conservatives. ;-)
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gull
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response 430 of 536:
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Dec 12 15:20 UTC 2003 |
Not surprising. The most annoying and overly evangelistic religious
people are always the freshly converted, as well.
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klg
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response 431 of 536:
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Dec 12 17:09 UTC 2003 |
(We gotta make up for the foolishness of our youth.)
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klg
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response 432 of 536:
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Dec 12 17:41 UTC 2003 |
(and for the foolishness of those who do not realize theirs)
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willcome
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response 433 of 536:
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Dec 12 19:22 UTC 2003 |
Have you made up for Christopher Hitchens's?
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remmers
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response 434 of 536:
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Dec 12 20:52 UTC 2003 |
I am curious about the reasons for Kerry's switch.
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richard
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response 435 of 536:
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Dec 14 07:43 UTC 2003 |
1. McGovern ran a poor campaign, and had a disastrous convention, and then
three weeks later his runningmate Thomas Eagleton had to resign from the
ticket when it was revealed he'd had electroshock therapy.
2. McGovern ran out of money, went completely broke. That won't happen
with Dean, his campaign is and will continue to be extremely well funded.
3. Dean isn't as liberal as McGovern. Dean is a fiscal consevative who
is a strong advocate of balancing budgets instead of defecit spending.
Also as a governor of a rural state, he takes the view of his Vermont
constituents that gun control laws are a state issue. Consequently the
NRA gives him a pretty good rating, which tells you he's no McGovern.
4. McGovern's opponent was Richard Nixon, who broke laws and went to all
extents legal and otherwise to win (Watergate-- sound familiar?) Dean
won't have such slimeball tactics done to him. Oh wait, then again,
Dean would be running against Bush and his right hand men, Karl "The
Hatchet Man" Rove and "Dirty Dick" Cheney, so you never know right...
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klg
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response 436 of 536:
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Dec 15 03:53 UTC 2003 |
1. The backbone of Dean's campaign is younger neophytes. If/when the
pros want to take over, it is likely to get messy.
2. The campaign may have been poorly funded, but even that doesn't
excuse the final electoral count.
3. The country has shifted to be more conservative than it was back
then.
4. McGovern was, at least, consistent in his stands. For example, he
didn't (as How-weird does) claim to have been against the war "from
the start" when the facts show otherwise.
5. McGovern was a war hero. He was no Dean.
6. No matter how often you repeat your childish/outlandish/untrue
accusations against President Bush and his staff, the country won't
believe you.
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scott
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response 437 of 536:
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Dec 15 05:05 UTC 2003 |
5... are you planning on putting Bush's war record up for debate, klg?
I didn't think you had the guts, or were that stupid.
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rcurl
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response 438 of 536:
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Dec 15 06:40 UTC 2003 |
I read 6. as a cry of desperation.
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twenex
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response 439 of 536:
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Dec 15 09:11 UTC 2003 |
Re: 438. Heh heh heh, heh. MWAHAHAAAH!
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klg
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response 440 of 536:
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Dec 15 17:07 UTC 2003 |
re: "#437 (scott): 5... are you planning on putting Bush's war record
up for debate, klg? I didn't think you had the guts, or were that
stupid."
(Come, now, Mr. scott! You really do think we are that stupid.) But,
actually, it was in response to Mr. richard's comparison of Messrs.
Dean & McGovern. President Bush's service is not involved.
re: "438 (rcurl): I read 6. as a cry of desperation."
(Illiteracy is a terrible thing.)
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gull
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response 441 of 536:
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Dec 15 17:22 UTC 2003 |
I'm not sure being consistent in your stands gets you anywhere in a
campaign these days. Bush clearly doesn't think so.
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bru
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response 442 of 536:
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Dec 15 19:08 UTC 2003 |
nor does Howard Dean apparently after his foreign policy speech today...
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richard
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response 443 of 536:
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Dec 17 02:12 UTC 2003 |
Dean has never been inconsistent in his opposition to the war in Iraq.
He was never against removing Saddam Hussein, he was against the means
used to justify the ends. Is there a cost that is so high that
something isn't worth doing? This is an excerpt from Dean's foreign
policy speech he gave yesterday:
Howard Dean:
"I want to talk about Iraq in the context of all our security
challenges ahead. Saddam s capture offers the Iraqi people, the United
States, and the international community an opportunity to move ahead.
But it is only an opportunity, not a guarantee.
Let me be clear: My position on the war has not changed.
The difficulties and tragedies we have faced in Iraq show that the
administration launched the war in the wrong way, at the wrong time,
with inadequate planning, insufficient help, and at unbelievable cost.
An administration prepared to work with others in true partnership
might have been able, if it found no alternative to Saddam s ouster, to
then rebuild Iraq with far less cost and risk.
As our military commanders said, and the President acknowledged
yesterday, the capture of Saddam does not end the difficulties from the
aftermath of the administration s war to oust him. There is the
continuing challenge of securing Iraq, protecting the safety of our
personnel, and helping that country get on the path to stability. There
is the need to repair our alliances and regain global support for
American goals.
Nor, as the president also seemed to acknowledge yesterday, does
Saddam s capture move us toward defeating enemies who pose an even
greater danger: al Qaeda and its terrorist allies. And, nor, it seems,
does Saturday s capture address the urgent need to halt the spread of
weapons of mass destruction and the risk that terrorists will acquire
them.
When I become president, addressing these critical and interlocking
threats terrorism and weapons of mass destruction -- will be
America s highest priority.
To meet these and other important security challenges, including Iraq,
I will bring to bear all the instruments of power that will keep our
citizens secure and our nation strong.
Empowered by the American people, I will work to restore:
The legitimacy that comes from the rule of law;
The credibility that comes from telling the truth;
The knowledge that comes from first-rate intelligence, undiluted by
ideology;
The strength that comes from robust alliances and vigorous diplomacy;
And, of course, I will call on the most powerful armed forces the world
has ever known to ensure the security of this nation. "
Everyone's applauding Bush now that Saddam's captured, and even the
other Democratic candidates are mostly saying they agree with him.
What did Dean say in above excerpt yesterday,
"The difficulties and tragedies we have faced in Iraq show that the
administration launched the war in the wrong way, at the wrong time,
with inadequate planning, insufficient help, and at unbelievable cost."
Dean said that a year ago, six months ago, and yesterday, the day after
Saddam's capture. Dean has not changed his view and, unlike his
opponents, he is still speaking out.
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richard
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response 444 of 536:
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Dec 17 02:31 UTC 2003 |
And klg, cut the "howeird" crap, you know that nobody, especially not
people who live their life making speeches and taking positions every
day, is going to end up being 100% consistent. You are asking for
clinical perfection, you don't want a human being as president, you
want a robot. Bush the Sr. and Reagan and Carter, Clinton, Nixon and
all previous presidents had inconsistencies in their record. Sometimes
it just signified they changed their mind on a view, which is their
right to do. It could have signified that their views matured as they
matured and gave more consideration to matters.
It is one thing to ask for total consistency in your religious leaders,
to whom you are asked to give your faith, and that as we've found is
increasingly unrealistic too. But we are electing a president, not a
Pope or a minister.
What we need to look for is not clinical perfection, but for what kind
of a person this is and whether we are comfortable with their overrall
views and who they seem to be as a human being. That is more important
than whether you agree with a candidate on every single view, or
whether a candidate's views have evolved from what they were in the
past. Heck, Bush's father, Bush the Sr., used to be a pro-choice
Eisenhower Republican. The Reaganites hated him. But he changed
views, he became more conservative. That was his prerogative. That
didn't mean it was necessary to start calling him George H. Weird Bush
did it? So drop the crap klg, and keep the debate focused on the
issues. This is a presidential campaign, not a debate team event.
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klg
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response 445 of 536:
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Dec 17 03:19 UTC 2003 |
Oh, yeah, Mr. richard??? "Never inconsistent"???? What say you to
this:
Thecarpetbaggerreport.com
December 11, 2003
Exactly how anti-war was Howard Dean?
. . .Dean's statements about the war in Iraq warrant a closer
look. . . Dean's record is not as clear as the conventional wisdom
would have us believe.. . .
On the September 29, 2002, episode of Face the Nation, Dean
said, "There's no question that Saddam Hussein is a threat to the
United States and to our allies."
Then, in February 2003, Dean agreed with Bush that the Iraqi threat
was real. . . Dean said, "(H)e has tried to build a nuclear
bomb.. . . So I want to be clear. Saddam Hussein must disarm. This is
not a debate; it is a given."
A month later on Meet the Press, Dean said he believed that Iraq "is
automatically an imminent threat to the countries that surround it
because of the possession of these weapons."
Dean may have thought there was "no question" that Hussein was a
threat before the war, but looking back now, his hindsight is telling
him the opposite. Just this week, for example, Dean mentioned at the
DNC's New Hampshire debate "that there was no serious threat to the
United States from Saddam Hussein."
. . . (T)he New York Times reported today that Dean said, plainly, "I
never said Saddam was a danger to the United States, ever." In light
of the Face the Nation quote from 2002, we know that's just not
correct.
While Dean has repeatedly emphasized his belief that war efforts
should be pursued through the U.N., Dean has also appeared willing, at
times, to accept unilateral war in Iraq.
As recently as February 2003 . . . Dean appeared to accept a
unilateral approach in Iraq as a necessary evil.
According to an interview with Salon's Jake Tapper . . . Dean
said . . . (i)f the U.N. in the end chooses not to enforce its own
resolutions, then the U.S. should give Saddam 30 to 60 days to
disarm . . and if he doesn't, unilateral action is a regrettable, but
unavoidable, choice.
. . . (A)ccording to a Des Moines Register report on October 6, 2002,
Dean said, "It's conceivable we would have to act unilaterally [in
Iraq], but that should not be our first option."
On January 31, 2003, Dean told the LA Times' Ron Brownstein that "if
Bush presents what he considered to be persuasive evidence that Iraq
still had weapons of mass destruction, he would support military
action, even without U.N. authorization."
Since then, however, Dean has insisted that unilateral war is wholly
unacceptable. . .
. . . But before the war, Dean was far more receptive to the
possibility that Bush deserved the benefit of the doubt. . . . U.S.
News & World Report's Gloria Borger asked Dean in September
2002, "Governor, what exactly does the president then have to prove to
you [regarding Iraq]?"
Dean, who now argues that he saw through Bush's charade from the
beginning, said . . ., "I don't think he really has to prove
anything. I think that most Americans, including myself, will take
the president's word for it."
. . .
(H)e told Roll Call earlier this year, "I would be surprised if
[Hussein] didn't have [chemical and biological weapons.]"
Appearing on Meet the Press on March 9, 2003 . . . Dean spoke with
some certainty about Hussein's dangerous arsenal.
. . . Dean said he believed that Iraq "is automatically an imminent
threat to the countries that surround it because of the possession of
these weapons."
. . . (Dean)endorsed a congressional effort . . . that was very
similar . . . to the resolution that passed both chambers in
Congress. . . The Biden-Lugar resolution authorized Bush to use force
in Iraq -- unilaterally, if necessary -- if a diplomatic solution
could not be reached at the United Nations.
Dean has argued that Biden-Lugar would have forced Bush to return to
Congress . . . to seek congressional support for a military
invasion. . . Actually, Biden-Lugar doesn't appear to have made such a
condition at all. The resolution . . simply required Bush to "make
available" to Congress his "determination" that the Iraqi threat "is
so grave that the use of force is necessary." . . .
Dean . . . publicly endorsed it, despite the fact that it allowed Bush
to pursue war in Iraq, without U.N. support, and without a second
congressional resolution. As Ryan Lizza noted last month in The New
Republic, "[T]he war resolution Howard Dean supported would probably
have led to exactly the same outcome -- a unilateral war with Iraq."
. . . (T)he important point to be learned, as far as I'm concerned, is
that Dean's record on Iraq isn't too-terribly-different from that of
Kerry, Edwards, Gephardt, and Clark.
(Go How-weird!!)
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klg
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response 446 of 536:
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Dec 17 03:20 UTC 2003 |
(Note: Go How-weird!! was not in the original article.)
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rcurl
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response 447 of 536:
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Dec 17 04:01 UTC 2003 |
Re #446: what seems to be overlooked in all that is that prior to the war
Dean was responding on the basis of what Bush said about Iraq acquiring
nuclear weapons, and definitely having WMD, were true. Why should he have
assumed then that Bush was lying? We only learned afterward that Bush had
been lying.
I think this post-factor hesaid/shesaid argumentation is rather
irrelevant. Before the war not only Dean but everyone was not only largely
in the dark about what the administration knew or thought they knew, the
administration was actively lying. That's much worse than any
tentativeness Dean might have had about the situation.
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klg
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response 448 of 536:
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Dec 17 04:18 UTC 2003 |
So, in response, Dean lies about his previous position?? Someone
worthy of Mr. richard's vote should at the very least be honest about
his flip/flop. But we certainly won't let that get in the way of our
enthusiasm for his candidacy for the nomination. (By the way, Mr.
rcurl, we would appreciate you not stating that President Bush lied
until after we have positively determined whether he, in fact, did
so. Thank you.)
(Go How-weird!!)
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