| Topic: |
Politics > Politics-USA |
| User: |
"Abu Graib" |
| Date: |
13 Oct 2004 09:01:48 AM |
| Object: |
Neocon "Patriot Police" Attack Crawford, Texas Newspaper |
Yup, Bush's hometown paper endorses Kerry.
Neocons are up in arms over this blatant
act of Freedom of Speech. Did they ever
stop & think that maybe they should run
a candidate worthy of support?
http://www.sltrib.com/nationworld/ci_2426558
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| User: "Anemic Combatant" |
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| Title: Re: Neocon "Patriot Police" Attack Crawford, Texas Newspaper |
13 Oct 2004 09:41:02 AM |
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"Abu Graib" <geneva.convention@foxnews.com> a écrit dans le message de
news:MPG.1bd6d52cb175fd55989d75@netnews.comcast.net...
Yup, Bush's hometown paper endorses Kerry.
Neocons are up in arms over this blatant
act of Freedom of Speech. Did they ever
stop & think that maybe they should run
a candidate worthy of support?
http://www.sltrib.com/nationworld/ci_2426558
---------------------------------------------
Brown Shirts at work; history is repeating again.
Anemic Combatant
.
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| User: "Harvey" |
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| Title: Re: Neocon "Patriot Police" Attack Crawford, Texas Newspaper |
13 Oct 2004 10:00:33 AM |
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"Anemic Combatant" <coterich@megantic.net> wrote in message
news:28bbd.36939$663.18959@edtnps84...
"Abu Graib" <geneva.convention@foxnews.com> a écrit dans le message de
news:MPG.1bd6d52cb175fd55989d75@netnews.comcast.net...
Yup, Bush's hometown paper endorses Kerry.
Neocons are up in arms over this blatant
act of Freedom of Speech. Did they ever
stop & think that maybe they should run
a candidate worthy of support?
http://www.sltrib.com/nationworld/ci_2426558
---------------------------------------------
Brown Shirts at work; history is repeating again.
Ya think it'll again repeat again?
Anemic Combatant
.
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| User: "Abd-er-Rahman III" |
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| Title: Re: Neocon "Patriot Police" Attack Crawford, Texas Newspaper |
13 Oct 2004 02:05:28 PM |
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Bush is getting more fascist everyday!
What a dangerous angery little man....
The madness of George
The Bush campaign was once happy to use 'angry' as a term of abuse -
but that was before the US public met Furious George, writes US
political blogger Markos Moulitsas
Markos Moulitsas
Tuesday October 12, 2004
The Guardian
The evolution of George Bush's persona over the past few weeks is
startling for even the most casual observers. Only a short while ago,
Bush was a strong, decisive leader and Kerry was a weak, flip-flopping
Massachusetts liberal. The Bush campaign expected those images to
carry them through the November elections: it had cost them more than
$200m (£112m) to build those caricatures and they had every reason to
expect a solid return on their investment.
But those images were built on a carefully crafted stage. Despite all
the flaws in the US electoral process we still force the candidates to
exit that bubble a handful of times during the election, and it is
some credit to the system that those three 90-minute debates can still
determine the fate of an election. This year, they have helped
introduce the nation to Furious George.
Bush's political operators have worked overtime to make "angry" a
pejorative term this political cycle. They wielded the "too angry"
attack against Howard Dean in the primaries, when it seemed Dean would
be the Democratic nominee, and it helped destroy Dean's candidacy.
Republicans again shouted "too angry" to discredit Al Gore's series of
impassioned anti-Bush speeches earlier this year.
The "too angry" claims successfully marginalised the content of those
speeches - blistering indictments of an incompetent administration.
But what happens when your best attack line is a double-edged sword?
Bush's operation has taken stage management to extremes. His handlers
have figured - correctly - that the press conference format suits
their man poorly and is to be avoided at all costs. His last primetime
press conference was in April 2004, and he has had only two with the
White House press corps since late August - both of them with the
Iraqi prime minister, Ayad Allawi, at his side. (The Bush campaign
actually wrote Allawi's speech in order to squeeze out precious
political points.)
Bush's campaign appearances are not much better. While Kerry's events
are open to the public, Bush's affairs require the signing of a
"loyalty oath". Quietly wearing an anti-Bush T-shirt or badge is
grounds for expulsion.
Bush faces only adoring audiences vetted by the campaign's enforcers.
At his town hall events, questions are planted for maximum political
effect. At one, a veteran merely got up and requested permission to
salute his commander in chief. Compelling visuals? Perhaps. But it
does little to acquaint Bush with reality.
Campaign commercials do their best to paint an alternative reality in
which Bush is an effective leader and Kerry is anything but. Entire
media networks, such as Fox News and Sinclair Broadcasting, prop up
Bush in a way that would make their fellow propagandists in North
Korea and Cuba proud. Sinclair, in fact, will pre-empt local
programming on its 62 stations to air an anti-Kerry movie days before
the election - unless a blog-led boycott forces a reversal.
Given the force of Republican efforts to deify Bush, his debate
performances came as a big shock to many Americans. They showed a Bush
quick to anger, indecisiveness, pettiness and petulance. The sheltered
Bush was clearly unprepared for the debate and unprepared to face
criticism. In fact, it seemed to take him by surprise. No one seemed
to have told him he had critics.
After his first debate performance, Bush was in a quandary. He had to
stem his erosion in the polls, but to do so would require attacking
Kerry and furthering the perception that he was too angry to be
president.
So how did he respond? By getting even more angry. He not only
viciously attacked Kerry but also took out the moderator and several
questioners in the process. Someone, somewhere, labelled Bush Furious
George - a clever turn on HA Rey's Curious George children's books and
an appellation that took firm hold in the online and, increasingly,
offline worlds.
Bush acted like the proverbial ugly American trying to be understood
in a foreign land, cranking up the volume and shrillness to make his
points while Kerry sat by serenely. The contrast was impossible to
miss as Bush became increasingly unhinged. Even on the road, Bush's
desperation is palpable as the rhetoric soars to angrier heights.
Bush is now hemmed in. With poll after poll showing small Kerry leads,
he needs to do something to regain the momentum. His campaign's attack
ads have kept him in the game but he is not pulling away. Furthermore,
he is well below the 50% mark in most key battleground state polls - a
mark of political vulnerability.
If he cannot convince people to vote for him, he will have to convince
people to vote against Kerry, and to do that he has to attack, attack,
attack. And since it takes more skill than Bush possesses to attack
without appearing angry, well, he's in a real bind.
Bush's political operation has conditioned the electorate to distrust
"anger". It has made the charge a cornerstone of its smear effort
against Democrats such as Dean and Gore. For a campaign that lives by
the smear, it is poetic justice to see the tables turned. Furious
George is here to stay.
· Markos Moulitsas runs the dailykos.com US political blog, and Our
Congress, a blog tracking the hottest congressional races
http://www.democrats.org/action/200410120001.html
.
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| User: "Bryan" |
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| Title: Re: Neocon "Patriot Police" Attack Crawford, Texas Newspaper |
13 Oct 2004 05:44:38 PM |
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Keep reciting the message. I'm sure most Liberals and the generally
ignorant will agree with you.
Abd-er-Rahman III wrote:
Bush is getting more fascist everyday!
What a dangerous angery little man....
The madness of George
The Bush campaign was once happy to use 'angry' as a term of abuse -
but that was before the US public met Furious George, writes US
political blogger Markos Moulitsas
Markos Moulitsas
Tuesday October 12, 2004
The Guardian
The evolution of George Bush's persona over the past few weeks is
startling for even the most casual observers. Only a short while ago,
Bush was a strong, decisive leader and Kerry was a weak, flip-flopping
Massachusetts liberal. The Bush campaign expected those images to
carry them through the November elections: it had cost them more than
$200m (£112m) to build those caricatures and they had every reason to
expect a solid return on their investment.
But those images were built on a carefully crafted stage. Despite all
the flaws in the US electoral process we still force the candidates to
exit that bubble a handful of times during the election, and it is
some credit to the system that those three 90-minute debates can still
determine the fate of an election. This year, they have helped
introduce the nation to Furious George.
Bush's political operators have worked overtime to make "angry" a
pejorative term this political cycle. They wielded the "too angry"
attack against Howard Dean in the primaries, when it seemed Dean would
be the Democratic nominee, and it helped destroy Dean's candidacy.
Republicans again shouted "too angry" to discredit Al Gore's series of
impassioned anti-Bush speeches earlier this year.
The "too angry" claims successfully marginalised the content of those
speeches - blistering indictments of an incompetent administration.
But what happens when your best attack line is a double-edged sword?
Bush's operation has taken stage management to extremes. His handlers
have figured - correctly - that the press conference format suits
their man poorly and is to be avoided at all costs. His last primetime
press conference was in April 2004, and he has had only two with the
White House press corps since late August - both of them with the
Iraqi prime minister, Ayad Allawi, at his side. (The Bush campaign
actually wrote Allawi's speech in order to squeeze out precious
political points.)
Bush's campaign appearances are not much better. While Kerry's events
are open to the public, Bush's affairs require the signing of a
"loyalty oath". Quietly wearing an anti-Bush T-shirt or badge is
grounds for expulsion.
Bush faces only adoring audiences vetted by the campaign's enforcers.
At his town hall events, questions are planted for maximum political
effect. At one, a veteran merely got up and requested permission to
salute his commander in chief. Compelling visuals? Perhaps. But it
does little to acquaint Bush with reality.
Campaign commercials do their best to paint an alternative reality in
which Bush is an effective leader and Kerry is anything but. Entire
media networks, such as Fox News and Sinclair Broadcasting, prop up
Bush in a way that would make their fellow propagandists in North
Korea and Cuba proud. Sinclair, in fact, will pre-empt local
programming on its 62 stations to air an anti-Kerry movie days before
the election - unless a blog-led boycott forces a reversal.
Given the force of Republican efforts to deify Bush, his debate
performances came as a big shock to many Americans. They showed a Bush
quick to anger, indecisiveness, pettiness and petulance. The sheltered
Bush was clearly unprepared for the debate and unprepared to face
criticism. In fact, it seemed to take him by surprise. No one seemed
to have told him he had critics.
After his first debate performance, Bush was in a quandary. He had to
stem his erosion in the polls, but to do so would require attacking
Kerry and furthering the perception that he was too angry to be
president.
So how did he respond? By getting even more angry. He not only
viciously attacked Kerry but also took out the moderator and several
questioners in the process. Someone, somewhere, labelled Bush Furious
George - a clever turn on HA Rey's Curious George children's books and
an appellation that took firm hold in the online and, increasingly,
offline worlds.
Bush acted like the proverbial ugly American trying to be understood
in a foreign land, cranking up the volume and shrillness to make his
points while Kerry sat by serenely. The contrast was impossible to
miss as Bush became increasingly unhinged. Even on the road, Bush's
desperation is palpable as the rhetoric soars to angrier heights.
Bush is now hemmed in. With poll after poll showing small Kerry leads,
he needs to do something to regain the momentum. His campaign's attack
ads have kept him in the game but he is not pulling away. Furthermore,
he is well below the 50% mark in most key battleground state polls - a
mark of political vulnerability.
If he cannot convince people to vote for him, he will have to convince
people to vote against Kerry, and to do that he has to attack, attack,
attack. And since it takes more skill than Bush possesses to attack
without appearing angry, well, he's in a real bind.
Bush's political operation has conditioned the electorate to distrust
"anger". It has made the charge a cornerstone of its smear effort
against Democrats such as Dean and Gore. For a campaign that lives by
the smear, it is poetic justice to see the tables turned. Furious
George is here to stay.
· Markos Moulitsas runs the dailykos.com US political blog, and Our
Congress, a blog tracking the hottest congressional races
http://www.democrats.org/action/200410120001.html
.
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| User: "mhirtes" |
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| Title: Re: Neocon "Patriot Police" Attack Crawford, Texas Newspaper |
13 Oct 2004 07:19:53 PM |
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In article <28bbd.36939$663.18959@edtnps84>,
"Anemic Combatant" <coterich@megantic.net> wrote:
"Abu Graib" <geneva.convention@foxnews.com> a écrit dans le message de
news:MPG.1bd6d52cb175fd55989d75@netnews.comcast.net...
Yup, Bush's hometown paper endorses Kerry.
Neocons are up in arms over this blatant
act of Freedom of Speech. Did they ever
stop & think that maybe they should run
a candidate worthy of support?
http://www.sltrib.com/nationworld/ci_2426558
---------------------------------------------
Brown Shirts at work; history is repeating again.
After Kerry is sworn in, can we declare Crawford to be the site of the
national nuclear waste dump?
I mean, how would the radiation effect the nearby citizens when they're
already horrible mutants?
.
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| User: "Bees Nest" |
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| Title: Re: Neocon "Patriot Police" Attack Crawford, Texas Newspaper |
13 Oct 2004 10:33:56 AM |
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On Wed, 13 Oct 2004 14:01:48 GMT, Abu Graib
<geneva.convention@foxnews.com> wrote:
Yup, Bush's hometown paper endorses Kerry.
Neocons are up in arms over this blatant
act of Freedom of Speech. Did they ever
stop & think that maybe they should run
a candidate worthy of support?
http://www.sltrib.com/nationworld/ci_2426558
I heard Kerry's hometown newspaper endorsed Bush. You don't see him
throwing a wussyfit.
The paid posters are working overtime. Oops, forgot,
Bush got rid of overtime for minimum wage earners.
Go Bush!
Go Diebold!
Rig those voting machines in Bushes Favor!
Let keep some Bush in the White House forever!
Lord knows he can't win on his own!!!!!!!!!!!
It's so simple even DUHbya could rig it, see for
yourself.
http://www.blackboxvoting.org/baxter/VNR92204.mov
Proof?
Diebold CEO Walden O'Dell has bundled $100,000 or more
in contributions for George W. Bush. O'Dell and his
wife have given $19,965 to GOP candidates and campaign
entities, nothing to Democrats. A letter was revealed
in which he said he was "committed to helping Ohio deliver
its electoral votes to the President"in November.
Where there is smoke there is fire!
http://www.wired.com/news/evote/
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&safe=off&q=voting+machines+owned+by+republicans&btnG=Search
I'll stop posting this when they install printers for these machines.
liberals suck but conservatives swallow.
Republicans whine and Republicans *****:
"Our rich are too poor, and our poor are too rich"
"The unaware are unaware that they are unaware."
Merril M.E. Jenkins Sr
"How fortunate for governments that the people they
administer don't think." Adolf Hitler
"The next time they give you all that civic *****
about voting, keep in mind that Hitler was elected in
a full, free democratic election" George Carlin
"God told me to strike at al-Qaeda and I struck them,
and then He instructed me to strike at Saddam, which
I did, and now I am determined to solve the problem
in the Middle East." George W Bush
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| User: "" |
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| Title: Re: Neocon "Patriot Police" Attack Crawford, Texas Newspaper |
13 Oct 2004 01:03:19 PM |
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On Wed, 13 Oct 2004 15:33:56 GMT, Bees Nest <abeesnest@holycrap.edu>
wrote:
I heard Kerry's hometown newspaper endorsed Bush. You don't see him
throwing a wussyfit.
Except of course the right got it wrong. Name Kerry's hometown (hint -
it's not Lowell)
____
"Russia does not have in its possession any trustworthy data that
would support the existence of nuclear weapons on any weapons of mass
destruction in Iraq, and we have not received from our partners such
information as yet," Putin told a press conference after his recent
meetings with Tony Blair in the Russian countryside, including the
British government's recently disclosed dossier that alleges Saddam
has weapons of mass destruction that he's ready to use.
Oct 17, 2002
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/DJ17Ak03.html
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| User: "Bees Nest" |
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| Title: Re: Neocon "Patriot Police" Attack Crawford, Texas Newspaper |
13 Oct 2004 02:33:35 PM |
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On Wed, 13 Oct 2004 18:03:19 GMT, wrote:
On Wed, 13 Oct 2004 15:33:56 GMT, Bees Nest <abeesnest@holycrap.edu>
wrote:
I heard Kerry's hometown newspaper endorsed Bush. You don't see him
throwing a wussyfit.
Except of course the right got it wrong. Name Kerry's hometown (hint -
it's not Lowell)
Nevermind, that was the one.
____
"Russia does not have in its possession any trustworthy data that
would support the existence of nuclear weapons on any weapons of mass
destruction in Iraq, and we have not received from our partners such
information as yet," Putin told a press conference after his recent
meetings with Tony Blair in the Russian countryside, including the
British government's recently disclosed dossier that alleges Saddam
has weapons of mass destruction that he's ready to use.
Oct 17, 2002
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/DJ17Ak03.html
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