Democrats For Bush/Thomas Sowell

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Registered: 04-05-2004
Democrats For Bush/Thomas Sowell
9
Fri, 09-03-2004 - 11:01am
Democratic Senator Zell Miller's electrifying speech at the Republican convention may overshadow the fact that another well-known Democrat -- New York's former mayor, Ed Koch -- has also crossed party lines to support and campaign for President George W. Bush.

Never a shrinking violet, Ed Koch says that he disagrees with President Bush on virtually all domestic issues, but that the over-riding issue of our time is the war on terrorism -- and that his own Democratic Party doesn't have the "stomach" (Koch's word) for the fight. Mayor Koch understands that if we don't win the war on terrorism, nothing else is going to matter.

Supporters of both political parties, as well as independent voters, all need to understand what Ed Koch understands: This election is about life and death, in an age when nuclear weapons can be developed and sold to terrorists.

This election is not even about who will be in the White House for the next four years. It is about a war that must be fought for more years than any given President will occupy the White House.

Just one weak administration can make the job harder for the administrations that follow -- and disastrous for the country.

No small part of the audacity of those who attacked this country on September 11th, 2001 resulted from the weakness of the Clinton years, when there were only token responses to acts of terrorism against Americans at home and abroad.

When the World Trade Center was first attacked, during the Clinton administration, that terrorist bombing by Islamic extremists was treated as a simple criminal matter and swept under the rug. Clinton similarly swept under the rug the bombing of our embassies abroad and bought off the North Koreans by helping them with their nuclear program, in exchange for promises that they never kept.

It was all about getting bad news off the front page and passing along the hard underlying problems to his successors. But the problem goes deeper than Bill Clinton.

Since 1972, when the far left took control of the Democratic Party, Congressional Democrats have regularly voted against military spending and against spending for the intelligence services. For nearly two decades, John Kerry has voted consistently against military preparedness and against money for the very intelligence agencies that he now so loudly criticizes.

When the Soviets put nuclear missiles in Eastern Europe, pointed at Western Europe, Ronald Reagan countered by putting American nuclear missiles in Western Europe, pointed at the Soviet Union. John Kerry advocated a "nuclear freeze" instead. In other words, freeze the Soviet advantage in place.

Some media pundits say that Senator Kerry's poor showing in the polls is due to his having followed the wrong political strategy in this campaign. They say he put too much emphasis on his Vietnam war record.

But what else did he have to put emphasis on?

Can you run for office during a war on terrorism by citing a voting record that includes being anti-military for decades? Can you even rely on a Senate record in favor of welfare state spending, at a time when handing out goodies takes a back seat to national security?

What was left for Senator Kerry, except trying to resurrect Vietnam, with his own spin on it, and making big promises for the future? Moreover, with the media on his side -- 12 to 1 inside the Beltway -- he had little to fear from that quarter.

How could Kerry know that the Swiftboat men who served with him in Vietnam would suddenly emerge to challenge his version of what happened there? Or that two prominent members of his own party would become so disgusted with him that they would throw their support to Bush?

The media have made such a bugaboo about "negative" statements or "attacks" that you might think political campaigns are supposed to be nothing but happy talk. But which is worse, that some unpleasant facts come out during a campaign or that someone is allowed to lie his way into the White House, with all our lives in his hands, on the basis of image and spin?

http://www.townhall.com/columnists/thomassowell/welcome.shtml



iVillage Member
Registered: 07-12-2001
Fri, 09-03-2004 - 11:59am
ITA!!!!! Yesterday someone (Janeigh, I think?) posted a link for another Web site called "Democrats For Bush" or something along those lines. Darned if I can find it, though. Must have gotten deleted along with all the mysteriously vanishing threads.

Bev

girl in chair
Avatar for schifferle
iVillage Member
Registered: 03-27-2003
Fri, 09-03-2004 - 12:09pm
Found what I think you were looking for: http://democrats4bush.com/
iVillage Member
Registered: 07-12-2001
Fri, 09-03-2004 - 12:11pm
Yup, that is it exactly .... thank you!!!!

Bev

girl in chair
iVillage Member
Registered: 07-12-2001
Fri, 09-03-2004 - 12:17pm
girl in chair
iVillage Member
Registered: 07-20-2003
Fri, 09-03-2004 - 12:49pm
"Mayor Koch understands that if we don't win the war on terrorism, nothing else is going to matter "

Then why is Koch backing Bush?

I heard Bush say on the Today Show he doesn't believe the war on terror can be won.

Imagine what that's gotta do to the morale of the troops.

iVillage Member
Registered: 06-17-2004
Sat, 09-04-2004 - 12:48am
Thomas Sowell rocks as always!

Renee ~~~

Renee ~~~

iVillage Member
Registered: 11-13-2003
Sat, 09-04-2004 - 7:26am


Hmm. Were you concerned about the effect Michael Moore's movie had on our troops?

Feel the hypocrisy.

Avatar for schifferle
iVillage Member
Registered: 03-27-2003
Sat, 09-04-2004 - 9:38am
How about a complete quote? Makes a big difference.

"Lauer: You said to me a second ago, one of the things you'll lay out in your vision for the next four years is how to go about winning the war on terror. That phrase strikes me a little bit. Do you really think we can win this war on terror in the next four years?

President Bush: I have never said we can win it in four years.

Lauer: So I’m just saying can we win it? Do you see that?

President Bush: I don’t think you can win it. But I think you can create conditions so that those who use terror as a tool are less acceptable in parts of the world — let's put it that way. I have a two-pronged strategy. On the one hand is to find them before they hurt us, and that's necessary. I’m telling you it's necessary. The country must never yield, must never show weakness and must continue to lead. To find Al-Qaeda affiliates who are hiding around the world and want to harm us and bring ’em to justice — we're doing a good job of it. I mean we are dismantling the Al Qaedaas we knew it. The longterm strategy is to spread freedom and liberty, and that's really kind of an interesting debate. There's some who say, ‘You know certain people can't self-govern and accept, you know, a formal democracy.’ I just strongly disagree with that. I believe that democracy can take hold in parts of the world that are now non-democratic and I think it's necessary in order to defeat the ideologies of hate. History has shown that it can work, that spreading liberty does work. After all, Japan is our close ally and my dad fought against the Japanese. Prime Minister Koizumi is one of the closest collaborators I have in working to make the world a more peaceful place."

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5866571/


iVillage Member
Registered: 06-17-2004
Sat, 09-04-2004 - 10:29am
Thanks for digging that up schifferle.

Renee ~~~

Renee ~~~