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bobby78751
This letter (titled "He Looks French") from yesterday's Austin paper is an example of the stupidity of America...

QUOTE
I will not vote for John Kerry because: He has been in office 20 years. He is part of the problem. He got more awards and decorations in four months in Vietnam than \"grunts\" in the rice paddies and jungles got in two, one-year tours. He acts like a Kennedy. He looks French. He has too much hair. He is from up North. His wife is ultra-rich. Send him back to his mansions and excellent retirement benefits while the rest of us try to survive on the minimum.

BILL HOGLAN

Georgetown
The Link (registartion required)
Zeno
He speaks French but has stopped answering foreign reporters in French. Apparently he doesn't want to be caught on tape doing that since it might be not good for his image.
Denver Fan
What an idiot! He can't even come up with anything substantial to argue. Typical rant of an uneducated hick.
fantomas
It's especially stupid because Kerry doesn't look "French"; most of them are dark Mediterranean people (Latins), or Celts (the Bretons), or Germanic (the Alsatians) or Black or Arab, while he looks like a typical upper-class New England WASP (which he is on his mother's side). And aren't he and Bush BOTH descended from Charlemagne?

He received his medals because he earned them and was an OFFICER, not a grunt.

He acts like a Kennedy because his background is one of the most patrician we've ever had--his ancestors include the first governor of Massachusetts and one of the first governors of Connecticut.

His second wife is ultra-rich, but then George W. Bush HIMSELF is ultrarich, his father is ultrarich, his grandfather who traded with the Nazis was rich, and so was his great-grandfather. He just fakes being a regular shmo.

Kerry is from up north, but George W. Bush was born in Connecticut and his father was born in Massachusetts. Kerry was born in Colorado!

He does have a great head of hair; this guy needs to get over his follicle envy. Who doesn't want a great head of hair...on a man?

And I guess the idiot doesn't realize that Kerry, like W, wouldn't need "retirement benefits," since he's so "rich." But Kerry wants to ensure that this idiot has them, while W doesn't.... D'oh!

[ October 19, 2004, 08:30 AM: Message edited by: fantomas ]
sportinlife
QUOTE
fantomas:
He just fakes being a regular shmo.
Did you read the New York Times magazine article, I think by Susskind this past weekend? He's honed this act for some time, since he lost a race in Texas after being painted as a upperclass Yale carpetbagger in a race there.
rick bradford
Did anyone see the Detroit Free Press (or Detroit News) this morning? I read both and don't recall at the moment which one had it, but there was a letter from former Michigan Governor William Milliken (from my hometown of Traverse City MI), who states that he will be voting for a Democratic president for the first time! He says he doesn't recognize the current Republican party that he's been a member of his whole life.
OlympicFan
QUOTE
rick bradford:
Did anyone see the Detroit Free Press (or Detroit News) this morning?
Looks like it was in the Detroit News.
http://www.detnews.com/2004/politics/0410/.../a01-308120.htm
rick bradford
Thanks for posting the link. I don't know how to do that...yes, I'm relatively new to the computer game.
twin58
QUOTE
sportinlife
... New York Times magazine article, I think by Susskind this past weekend?
Without a Doubt

QUOTE
By RON SUSKIND

Published: October 17, 2004

Bruce Bartlett, a domestic policy adviser to Ronald Reagan and a treasury official for the first President Bush, told me recently that ''if Bush wins, there will be a civil war in the Republican Party starting on Nov. 3.'' The nature of that conflict, as Bartlett sees it? Essentially, the same as the one raging across much of the world: a battle between modernists and fundamentalists, pragmatists and true believers, reason and religion.

''Just in the past few months,'' Bartlett said, ''I think a light has gone off for people who've spent time up close to Bush: that this instinct he's always talking about is this sort of weird, Messianic idea of what he thinks God has told him to do.'' Bartlett, a 53-year-old columnist and self-described libertarian Republican who has lately been a champion for traditional Republicans concerned about Bush's governance, went on to say: ''This is why George W. Bush is so clear-eyed about Al Qaeda and the Islamic fundamentalist enemy. He believes you have to kill them all. They can't be persuaded, that they're extremists, driven by a dark vision. He understands them, because he's just like them. . . .

''This is why he dispenses with people who confront him with inconvenient facts,'' Bartlett went on to say. ''He truly believes he's on a mission from God.\"
....
gobar
Bush and Kerry are distantly related. I read that a while ago and I have no idea where to find a link on the lineage but if I come across it I'll post it.
gmginsfo
Here's more American \"stupidity,\" this time from a Cornell graduate student who writes a weekly column for her university's newspaper. Good to see that dissent is unstifled on at least some of our campuses!
fantomas
QUOTE
As anyone who spends any time on the campuses of the top American universities quickly realizes (and Cornell is one of the best schools in the world), right-wingers have no problems spouting off, in classes, at faculty meetings, at rallies, you name it.

And BTW, don't forget in all your crowing that W and Co. linked up with one of the most dangerous agents of Iran, Ahmad Chalabi. Or that he was photographed kissing up to that Islamic fanatic professor from Florida who is now in indefinite detention. Or that 9/11 happened on W's watch. Or that sleazoid Cheney did millions of dollars worth of business with Saddam while heading Halliburton, against US law. Or that Rumsfeld was the US liaison to Saddam. Or that Raygun and Bush I armed and financed Saddam for EIGHT YEARS. Or that W has yet to crack down on the home country of 15 of the 19 9/11 "suiciders," Saudi Arabia. Or that W, in a moment of candor (or a broken earpiece) admitted the War on terror was unwinnable. Or that...well, you get the gist of how onesided the young woman's argument is. W is the one with the "bad" record on all this crap....

"There'll be no casualties."-W to Pat Robertson

[ October 20, 2004, 09:35 AM: Message edited by: fantomas ]
DallasUNC
QUOTE
gmginsfo:
Here's more American \\"stupidity,\\" this time from a Cornell graduate student who writes a weekly column for her university's newspaper. Good to see that dissent is unstifled on at least some of our campuses!
Im glad the wannabe biochemist is free to speak. But its like shes reading off a laundry list of the Young Republicans.
BPT-336
QUOTE
gmginsfo:
Here's more American \\"stupidity,\\" this time from a Cornell graduate student who writes a weekly column for her university's newspaper. Good to see that dissent is unstifled on at least some of our campuses!
She's no Ann Coulter '85 that for sure... oh yeah I do believe I may have met the lovely Ms. Townsley at some point up there in Ithaca. eek! Scary... really.... A lot of the conservative commentaries just try to mimic the "lovely" Ms. Coulter. Some were ok, most just shrill. If you've clicked the link, do a search for some columns from Joe Sabia '97, you'll see what I mean. rolleyes.gif BPT336, Cornell Class of '96.
gobar
I love the way they twist around what was actually said. I think the quote was along the lines of "The hope is to make it so that terrorism is someday no more than a nuisance...not an all consuming obsession for Americans" Notice the nuance lost on the those with thick heads. Give her the "global test", I'm sure she wants to take it.
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