Brad Wardell's views about technology, politics, religion, world affairs, and all sorts of politically incorrect topics.
Tough love for the Democrats
Published on August 6, 2004 By Draginol In Politics

I find it amazing that the group of people most identified with worshipping the first amendment seem to be the ones most intolerant of opinions other than their own. For months we've seen left wing groups like MoveOn.org creating anti-Bush commercials that are only vaguely factual.  Celebrities have lent their voices to unseating George W. Bush.  Bruce Springsteen, for example, is currently doing a "Get Bush Out" concert tour (John Mellencamp wrote a song called "Bush is just another thug"). Heck, I can barely watch TV without some half-witted celebrity telling me that Bush needs to go.  This summer, we've had Fahrenheit 9/11 making over a hundred millions dollars and seen Michael Moore's mug on almost every magazine cover at one point or other.  In short, the left has certainly had its opportunity to get its views out.

But when conservatives try to get their message out, the left cries foul. Listening to the left, you'd think that Fox News was GOP TV.  In left-wing land, apparently, if the coverage isn't overtly left-wing it's GOP TV.  Sure, The Daily Show with John Stewart tends to be less sympathetic to conservatives than liberals.  And CNN, ABC, and NBC tend to prefer to cover social issues that are the strong points of the left.  And let's not forget the ridiculous media coverage of the Iraq war that's come from the New York Times and other "mainstream" media outlets.  But oh no! Bill O'Reilly at 8pm hates high taxes and is (gasp) a Catholic. It must be GOP TV! Those damn conservatives are able to get their message out on a cable news channel on top of AM radio! The sky is falling!

Meanwhile, conservatives have, for years, had to deal with the reality that most of the people who cover the news have political philosophies that are much different than their own. And while most of those who cover the news try to be fair, their own viewpoints inevitably creep into the news and especially in editorials. Conservatives have had to develop a sort of "Reality check" sense when listening to the news.  Liberals, by contrast, apparently are so thin skinned that people like Bill O'Reilly send them into fits of insanity. And don't get them started on Sean Hannity who CO-hosts a show with liberal Alan Colmes. Since when are conservatives allowed to speak at all? Isn't George Will's token appearance on "This Week" enough for those right wing nuts? Sure, "This Week" is hosted by Bill Clinton's former press secretary, but that's fine.

And now this week, the left is going berzerk over the Swift Boat veterans. Cries of unfairness ring loud and clear from the left. Well, as someone who's had to listen to Moore-ons all summer ranting their erroneous "facts" across the net and TV all summer. And had to see snippets of MoveOn.org's venom on TV I say, deal with it.  If Kerry hadn't made the cornerstone of his campaign about the 4 months he served in Vietname he wouldn't be vulnerable to the fact that most of the people who served with him don't support him.  Are the charges of the Swift Boat veterans unfair? Possibly. But compare that to the whole Bush went AWOL nonsense. Was that fair? At least this is based on some semblance of reality.

The first amendment means that all sides get to speak out.  Not just those who hold "correct" opinions.  Those people demanding that Bush or conservatives condemn the Swift Boat veterans and what not should be also demanding that Kerry and his supporters condemn Michael Moore and his ilk along with MoveOn.org.  But don't expect that to happen. Kerry, after, all, complemented hollywood stars such as Whoopi Goldberg, who, in his presence, made vulgar sexual references to Bush. 

So if the left things they're getting treated rough now, then they have no idea what rough behavior is. Perhaps they should start looking at the sewage their supporters have been heaping on the American public for the past half year.


Comments (Page 5)
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on Aug 09, 2004
Um... are you answering my post or just making your own point? I mean, there's nothing in your post #62 which addresses what I was wondering about, or that I disagree with (except for the shock part, I don't see why you were surprised). But it's addressed to me.

To repeat, Kerry's war record has been scrutinized in a whole bunch of elections. Even before Kerry was ever elected to be anything, Nixon was trying to destroy his career. Remember Kerry was the face of the anti-war movement. If Kerry's war record was suspect, I think it would have come out then. Nixon was clever and ruthless, perhaps more so than any other modern president, and since Kerry as an antiwar activist was famous and influential because of his service record--if he wasn't a vet, he'd never have been testifying in front of the Senate--Nixon would of course have targeted his service record if there was anything to target. Heck, Nixon even made some *false* charges against him... he'd never have done that if there were true ones ready to hand.

Kerry's also been through a couple decades of elections since then, some of which were quite negative. Vietnam became an issue in some (not all) of them. No one's found any Vietnam dirt that stuck.
on Aug 09, 2004
No, I have answered your post twice. I would do so again, but I think it is pointless. You either can't or won't understand.

on Aug 09, 2004
Charming. You are correct: I cannot understand your post's relevance. Good day.
on Aug 09, 2004

Human activity has been shown to have increased the amount of these gasses by a significant amount.

No, it has been ASSERTED that human activity has increased the amount of these gasses by a significant amount.  Similarly, "scientists" have asserted at various times that Noah's arc has been found.  Assertions are easy to make.

I could probably be convinced that human "activity" has increased CO2 content in the atmsophere but I think there'd be debate as to which kinds of activity.

on Aug 09, 2004
"To repeat, Kerry's war record has been scrutinized in a whole bunch of elections."


Oh? I think you'll find if you look back at his Senate campaigns that these questions have been around a long time. Forgive me if you follow Massachusetts' politics closely and overlooked it...

Though futile, let me try again... You say, "Why now?", and the obvious answer is what Kerry himself is doing NOW.

This isn't a "call", it is a "response". Do you really expect people not to rebut glorified versions of his service as in: "John Kerry: A Biography "? The backlash has never been so strong because the "lash" has never been so strong.

Never before has Kerry run on a "strong military" ticket (after 20 years of being a staunchly anti-military legislator). Never before has he stood in front of the Democratic Party, saluted and said "Reporting for duty." Never before have his opponents faced him purporting a pro-war stance. Never before have his opponents found him to be banking on a "guts and glory" version of his short time in Vietnam. And..most importantly, never before have pro-Kerry 527s so heinously lauded four months of questionable service. Some people find his stance and claims questionable.

So, never before have these veterans been so motivated to refute his claims.

You have to see this as what it is. It isn't an "attack"; it is a response to claims that Kerry, himself, is making. His own re-invention is what is spurring this rebuttal. Kerry has made his career being *vastly critical* of his OWN ROLE, and that of his "Band of Brothers", in Vietnam, and now for some reason he is touting the same as his calling card.
on Aug 10, 2004
"Similarly, "scientists" have asserted at various times that Noah's arc has been found."


Has there ever been a major manipulation of human behavior and practice in the last, say, 250 years that wasn't spurred by the assertion of some scientist (social or otherwise)? I'll avoid "Godwin-ing", but frankly scientists have been dead-sure of what they assert ever since they were drilling holes in people's heads and *mathmatically* proving (wit' 'dem thar fancy e-quashuns) that the sound barrier couldn't be surpassed.
on Aug 10, 2004

that would be a lot more comprehensible or believable if it wasnt for the very similar attack campaign against mccain in 2000.   one needn't look back 30+ years to find the bush campaign has a consistent record of this kind of crap


according to an article in the Dallas Morning News (December 2, 1999), "Rivals again fault Bush over rumors":


"In recent weeks, the Bush campaign has been accused of - and has denied - spreading rumors that Mr. McCain may be unstable as a result of being tortured while a prisoner of war in North Vietnam. Several Senate Republicans, among them party leaders who favor Mr. Bush for president, have been identified in published reports as being responsible for privately pushing the allegations. Also, James B. Stockdale, a former prisoner of war in Vietnam who ran as Ross Perot's running mate in 1992, said he got a call from a friend close to the Bush campaign soliciting comments on Mr. McCain's 'weakness.'"

on Aug 10, 2004
kingbee: you are offering unsubstantiated rumor as proof of a conspiracy. Do you believe in UFOs? Ross Perot also stated that black ops agents infiltrated his estate and other fantastic Sir Peter-esqe fantasies. Saturday Night Live even panned Stockdale as a loon...

As a matter of fact, didn't several Democrats question McCain's mental state after he called his captors "Gooks" and refused to withdraw the epithet? Not to sound like vincible, but did you believe Perot's statements against Bush at the time, or are they just good arguments now? I find it hard to believe that you would offer such spurious material.

No, I wouldn't call that a bit "similar".
on Aug 10, 2004

this is excerpted directly from worldnetdaily.com (which i remember you accepting as a plausible source for one of the initial attacks against kerry's service about 2 weeks ago).  it's basically a cleaned up version of garbage originated by ted sampley working with marge spaeth. 


McCain was awarded a Silver Star, a Legion of Merit for Valor, a Distinguished Flying Cross, three Bronze Stars, two Commendation medals, two Purple Hearts and a dozen service awards. Unfortunately the narratives for the awards only speak of his having undergone extreme mental and physical cruelties at the hands of his captors, and were described as "boilerplate" and "part of an SOP medal package given to repatriated (Vietnam-era) POWs" by Naval officers Hack interviewed. The medals were basically given out for being there, not for heroism.


The problem here is not that McCain didn't have terrible things done to him for a long time -- he did. The problem is that neither he -- nor anybody else who was in prison camp -- had a choice about whether they were endangered. But medals for heroism are supposed to be given out for actual heroic action, taken willfully and at great personal risk. They shouldn't be awarded simply because someone survived an involuntary ordeal. And didn't survive it as well as many others. McCain was quoted as saying "O.K, I'll give you military information if you will take me to the hospital" four days after his capture and later signed a confession declaring himself a war criminal. And although McCain refused an early release, the word is that he was ordered to do so by his U.S. POW commander.


It was unquestionably a long, painful nightmare for McCain to log all that time in a North Vietnamese prison and, for that, he deserves genuine sympathy -- the kind of sympathy you reserve for someone who survived a five year battle with cancer. And the experience may (or may not) have made him a better person. But based on the facts, he's not a war hero. And it speaks poorly of him to let his handlers promote him to the public in that way."


and here's a memoir from richard h davis...mccain's former campaign manager published in the boston globe.


Having run Senator John McCain's campaign for president, I can recount a textbook example of a smear made against McCain in South Carolina during the 2000 presidential primary. We had just swept into the state from New Hampshire, where we had racked up a shocking, 19-point win over the heavily favored George W. Bush. What followed was a primary campaign that would make history for its negativity.


In South Carolina, Bush Republicans were facing an opponent who was popular for his straight talk and Vietnam war record. They knew that if McCain won in South Carolina, he would likely win the nomination. With few substantive differences between Bush and McCain, the campaign was bound to turn personal. The situation was ripe for a smear.


It didn't take much research to turn up a seemingly innocuous fact about the McCains: John and his wife, Cindy, have an adopted daughter named Bridget. Cindy found Bridget at Mother Theresa's orphanage in Bangladesh, brought her to the United States for medical treatment, and the family ultimately adopted her. Bridget has dark skin.


Anonymous opponents used "push polling" to suggest that McCain's Bangladeshi born daughter was his own, illegitimate black child. In push polling, a voter gets a call, ostensibly from a polling company, asking which candidate the voter supports. In this case, if the "pollster" determined that the person was a McCain supporter, he made statements designed to create doubt about the senator.


Thus, the "pollsters" asked McCain supporters if they would be more or less likely to vote for McCain if they knew he had fathered an illegitimate child who was black. In the conservative, race-conscious South, that's not a minor charge. We had no idea who made the phone calls, who paid for them, or how many calls were made. Effective and anonymous: the perfect smear campaign.


Some aspects of this smear were hardly so subtle. Bob Jones University professor Richard Hand sent an e-mail to "fellow South Carolinians" stating that McCain had "chosen to sire children without marriage." It didn't take long for mainstream media to carry the charge. CNN interviewed Hand and put him on the spot: "Professor, you say that this man had children out of wedlock. He did not have children out of wedlock." Hand replied, "Wait a minute, that's a universal negative. Can you prove that there aren't any?"


you may not call this similar either.   in a way it's not.  mccain is a credentialed conservative republican who should never have had this inflicted on him. "

on Aug 10, 2004
Okey, there is so much right-wing crap in this thread it would take me years to address all of it, so I will just start here.

Funny, all the right wingers post the political stuff on ether video game sites, or conservative sites, nowhere where their opinions could face serious opposition.
on Aug 10, 2004
kingbee: I dunno who the first writer is, but I disagree with him. I'm sure you could easily find asinine op-ed quotes from almost any publication, and that one seems particularly "Op". What was the date on that one, btw? Wa it when McCain was running? Honestly I don't blanket-approve of any particular publication. If it appears they've done their job and there is substance there, I'll quote them. I know better than to dump just anything that agrees with me, I've been hoisted on my own pitard far too often. That one I disagree with.

REGARDLESS, I don't see how it would effect his electability, since being a war hero means *dick* as far as I am concerned, unless he, himself calls upon it as demonstrative of his ability to lead. That was my point above. Kerry is stating that his behavior in Vietnam is reason to trust him as President. If McCain stepped up and said "I'll be a great President because I spent years as a POW", then, frankly, he should expect it, too, whether he deserves it or not.

The second quoted article is, again, all about dark, anonymous dirty tricks. I don't doubt there are people that stoop to this kind of thing, but I can't equate them because the swift boat vets are out in the open, telling what they consider to be the truth. I think the difference is that you assume that this is a black-and-white, lie-or-truth- situation. I don't think it is. I think those who were in and around Kerry interpereted Kerry's behavior in different ways, with the majority now apparantly expressing their doubts abou this performance.

Sure, there may be lies floating around, and if there are, on either side, I'm sure they'll be ferrited out. Some will of course say that we shouldn't be delving into it at all, and I tend to agree. You have to expect Kerry's opposition to focus on his military service if he, himself makes it his calling card.


on Aug 10, 2004

not 10 minutes ago, the new abc news cable channel replayed monday's nightline showing adrian lonsdale (who appears in the swiftboatvets ad) appearing at a kerry rally in the 90s praising kerry's peformance in action.  unfortunately neither the transcript or the video is available at abc.com. 


in an online article by joe conason at salon.com,  marge spaeth is identified as one of a group three who are driving swift boat veterans for truth (the other 2 being john o'neill and roy hoffman, rear adm, ret-us navy).  conason reports:


In 2000, Spaeth participated in the most subterranean episode of the Republican primary contest when a shadowy group billed as "Republicans for Clean Air" produced television ads falsely attacking the environmental record of Sen. John McCain in California, New York and Ohio. While the identity of those funding the supposedly "independent" ads was carefully hidden, reporters soon learned that Republicans for Clean Air was simply Sam Wyly -- a big Bush contributor and beneficiary of Bush administration decisions in Texas -- and his brother, Charles, another Bush "Pioneer" contributor. (One of the Wyly family's private capital funds, Maverick Capital of Dallas, had been awarded a state contract to invest $90 million for the University of Texas endowment.)


When the secret emerged, spokeswoman Spaeth caught the flak for the Wylys, an experience she recalled to me as "horrible" and "awful." Her job was to assure reporters that there had been no illegal coordination between the Bush campaign and the Wyly brothers in arranging the McCain-trashing message. Not everyone believed her explanation, including the Arizona senator.


according to conason, o'neill approached spaeth last winter to discuss his "concerns about Sen. Kerry."


 "Spaeth heard O'Neill out, but told him, she says, that he "sounded like a crazed extremist" and should "button his lip" and avoid speaking with the press. But since Kerry clinched the Democratic nomination, Spaeth has changed her mind and decided to donate her public relations services on a "pro bono" basis to O'Neill's latest anti-Kerry effort. "About three weeks ago, four weeks ago," she said, the group's leaders "met in my office for about 12 hours" to prepare for their Washington debut. "


the reason this is germane is that it demonstrates the savage excesses to which the architects of previous bush campaigns have gone and links one directly to the swift boat vet nonsense.    while the service records of kerry and mccain are certainly open to interpretation, it's shameful for an administration prosecuting a war in which hundreds of thousands of service people are putting themselves in jeopardy to trash two men who are decorated combat heroes.  


much more important than what is being said about kerry is what it says about the ethics and character of a candidate who allows this type of shit to be done on his behalf.  

on Aug 10, 2004
"it's shameful for an administration prosecuting a war in which hundreds of thousands of service people are putting themselves in jeopardy to trash two men who are decorated combat heroes. "


Seriously, you are just proving Brad's point. You see this as a wrong now, but you tolerated it when third parties do such to Bush. It suits your purposes to call everyone that challenges Kerry "the administration", but when the same happens on the other side, it is "free speech".

Again, you can't seem to tell the difference between private individuals, 527s, and "administration". I hate to break it to ya, but Kerry is the soft money hog in this election, and has enjoyed the ability to run a "clean campaign" because of it.

So, where you have been all along when the same sort of people were trashing Bush's military service and comparing him to Hitler on moveon.org and elsewhere. George Soros has invested millions of dollars in Kerry's campaign, and has engineered a huge smear campaign online and off. Not the same thing? If it is the same thing, why choose now to start throwing fits about 527s? Why aren't you over there talking about "low blows"?

P.S. I think Brad has a 'swift boats' blog that this might be more in line with. Granted, the double-standard is right in line with the topic...
on Aug 10, 2004

Funny, all the right wingers post the political stuff on ether video game sites, or conservative sites, nowhere where their opinions could face serious opposition.

Yes, JoeUser is just such a "conservative" site. 

on Aug 10, 2004
never before have these veterans been so motivated to refute his claims.


Nixon was plenty motivated and powerful. And a senator is arguably the second-highest office in the land--there's lots of motivation there too. Senatorial campaigns are big enough to get some national coverage, and big enough that you have thorough oppostion research. Of course there's *more* now but I think there would have been sufficient motivation before. You obviously do not. Perhaps we should leave it at that.
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