Kerry Insults Troops.

Quote from Doubter:
You guys crack me up.

It's all black and white, huh.

It's either all up or all down... It's either all right or all wrong...

All you hard-core clowns love drawing clear lines in the sand.

I'll be a happy man when sensibility comes back into our Country's descriptor.
What happen to being Americans first? Geez.

-kt
 
Keep it up you little pea-brained Rove-ots. This kind of silly sht will no doubt help you, but gad what a tempest in a teapot.

If you turn off the AM radio hate shows, you might actually have some original thoughts.

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As the final week of the campaign began, the Bush White House and Republican spinners were not focusing on Iraq, gay marriage or illegal immigrants. They were zeroing in on a muffed joke that Kerry had made during a campaign rally on Monday. The Massachusetts Democrat had told students that if "you study hard, do your homework and make an effort to be smart, you can do well. If you don't, you get stuck in Iraq." (He meant to say, according to his prepared text, that if you don't work hard in school, "you end up getting us stuck in a war in Iraq. Just ask President Bush.")

The Republicans had a field day with Kerry's quip - even if there was some truth to his actual remark. After all, US troops are "stuck" in Iraq, and many young Americans join the military because they do not have the career opportunities that would come with a better education. Still, Republicans in search of an issue attacked Kerry, claiming he had suggested US soldiers were dumb, and they demanded an apology, which Kerry, who is not up for reelection this year, eventually provided (after canceling several campaign appearances with Democratic congressional candidates).

What was absurd about this chapter was that Kerry's comment drew more media attention than a New York Times story that disclosed an October 18 classified briefing of the US Central Command reporting that Iraq was edging toward "chaos".

A week after that briefing, Bush had declared publicly that the United States was "winning" in Iraq. This revelation - and the contradiction between Bush's rosy statement and Central Command's pessimistic view - should have been driving the news. Yet Tony Snow, Bush's press secretary, spent far more time at the White House daily briefing, assailing Kerry than responding to questions about the bad-news briefing.

And when Vice President Dick Cheney appeared at a Wednesday campaign rally for Senator Conrad Burns - an endangered Montana Republican linked to convicted Republican lobbyist Jack Abramoff - he did not feel compelled to address the Times story. Instead, Cheney's brief remarks about the Iraq war focused mainly on Kerry's comment. He used Kerry's misdelivered joke to attack all Democrats for wanting to leave Iraq "before the job is done" and thus validating the "al Qaeda strategy".

For two days, the Kerry matter dominated cable news coverage of the elections. On Thursday, it was the lead story in The Washington Post. That edition of the Post had nothing on the front page about what was happening with the actual war in Iraq.

Republicans have little to say about Bush's policy in Iraq, for there is little to the policy. Bush's attempt last week to assuage public concern by announcing there will be "benchmarks" in Iraq fell flat, for the White House could not define the benchmarks and Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki immediately dismissed the notion of creating hard-and-fast markers. Days later, Maliki even assailed US military efforts to set up security checkpoints in a Shiite stronghold in Baghdad. So when it comes to Iraq, Republican candidates are left mainly with rhetoric, certainly not results.

Meanwhile, Republicans are buckling under the weight of serial scandals - beyond the congressional page affair. A Republican congressman running for governor in Nevada (Jim Gibbons) was accused by a cocktail waitress of assaulting her. A Republican congressman running for reelection in upstate New York (John Sweeney) has had to answer questions about a leaked police report alleging he beat up his wife. (He claims the report is a fake.) A Republican congresswoman running for reelection in Wyoming (Barbara Cubin) told an opponent with multiple sclerosis who is in a wheelchair that she wanted to slap him. And campaign aides to Republican Senator George Allen - who has imperiled his own election by using a racist term and engaging in other bone-headed moves - tackled and punched a blogger who had asked Allen an indelicate question about his first marriage. (The divorce records are sealed.)

...

David Corn
 
frontback.htm


Nothing like having a few million New Yorker's see THIS front page........
 

Attachments

Quote from Arnie:
There is no way you can view that video and come to any other conclusion than he said what he said. It's an insult to the troops and their families. Imagine having lost a son or daughter over there and then watching that video. I think this is going to backfire on the Dems big time.
Any idiot understands that Kerry was talking about Dubbaya. He's the one stuck in Iraq.
 
Quote from ZZZzzzzzzz:

We are talking about not drafted Vets, which was Kerry's point, dopehead...


Then I'm sure you know that Kerry, like the troops in Iraq, enlisted in the Navy. He wanted to volunteer because if drafted he would've probably wound up in the dreaded infantry.
 
Kerry volunteered in order to avoid the infantry, agree.

He wasn't able to pull strings like Bush or get the necessary deferments like Cheney.

He was talking to young men and woman who currently have a choice to get an education and good jobs....or go an possibly die for a bogus war.

Tell the truth, if you were 21 years old, would you want to go to Iraq and die for Bush's stupid war?

Quote from Pa(b)st Prime:

Then I'm sure you know that Kerry, like the troops in Iraq, enlisted in the Navy. He wanted to volunteer because if drafted he would've probably wound up in the dreaded infantry.
 
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