November 15, 2004

Condi

So it will surprise some of my friends on the left (you know who you are) that I'm not sure about this choice of Condi Rice at state.  I would have greatly preferred some reaching across the aisle for this position, perhaps Lieberman...but Condi?  Not sure.

I think Bush is going to end up giving Democrats small inconsequential cabinet spots.  Lincoln was a bit more bold, putting prominent Democrats in the thick of his cabinet -- he believed in the same thing the mafia does: keep your friends close, but your enemies closer. 

November 04, 2004

Great Article

Newsweek has a great article about Bush and Kerry.

It's funny, because the description of these two men is how I would describe a friend of mine from college and I (without the disdain, of course):

Bush did not remember Kerry but he knew the type: sanctimonious suck-ups who looked down on fun-loving fellows like George W. Bush. In the world according to Bush, guys like Kerry were not out just to ruin Yale. They wanted to take over the whole country, to impose the smug, know-it-all liberal ideology on regular, God-fearing, hardworking Americans. Kerry's regard for Bush was just as dismissive. Kerry may or may not have met Bush at Yale but he had met his kind before. At Kerry's prep school, boys like Bush were known as "regs," regular guys, the cool, sarcastic in-crowd that made awkward, too-eager-to-please boys like John F. Kerry feel low and left out. The regs were insular, stuck up, too sure of themselves to reach out to, or even see, the wider world.

November 03, 2004

Unhappy on the Left

Leslie cracks me up.

Oh YEAH

Okay, somebody pinch me. Bush wins AND Daschle loses? Suh-weet.

More later...right now I'm too giddy. Especially because MC is going to be taking me to Daniels for a really nice steak dinner.

November 01, 2004

It's Showtime

Well, the day has finally arrived. Tomorrow, this country will decide which direction it wants to head. Do we go the way of Europe and fade into history, or do we confront this new war head on, keeping our enemies on defense? It's a huge issue, and one that really tugs at me.

People have asked why I am so serious about this election. It's difficult for me to put into words, but I'll try. The people in history that I admire are the ones that knew the path they wanted to follow and against all advice pushed through only to be proven right by history.

In Abraham Lincoln's first cabinet meeting, he took a vote on whether or not to defend a fort in the south. His cabinet was against it, he was for it. He went with himself. Midway through the war, after numerous defeats when it appeared he had no idea what he was doing, when his own general ran against him, the country was divided -- let the south go, or keep fighting the war. History, of course, shows Lincoln to be right. McClellan, Lincoln's "John Kerry", complained about Lincoln's bumbling handling of the war, misguided goals, etc Lincoln pushed through.

FDR believed that America HAD to help fight the Nazi's. Americans were against it, however. But FDR kept pushing, finding any loophole in the law to make it happen because he knew in his heart he was RIGHT. History proves him correct.

Churchill stood alone, ridiculed by his peers as a warmonger. As it turns out, he was also right, and when the war was over, his reward was to be voted out of office.

Ronald Reagan took the Soviets on head first. Europeans and Americans alike (including John Kerry) thought he was a mad cowboy and would get us into a war. He didn't listen to them and pushed ahead because he knew he was right. History, including his opponent from the USSR, has shown that he was right.

And now we come to Bush. Again, his contemporaries are against his tactics, against his goals, believe him to be wrong. He believes himself to be right and does not waver in his convictions. While I have many issues with Bush and his policies, while I cannot stand a few of the people he has in his cabinet, I know that his heart is good, his character sound. History will prove him right.

History often deals people a tough hand. Lincoln was elected and presented with a civil war. Bush was elected and presented with terrorism arriving in full force. Nobody reading this blog understands the enormity of having that on your shoulders. Your decisions matter the most in those situations. One wrong move and you destroy a country, or have more die. Men who can stand up to that, be strong, and face it with dignity -- those people earn my respect.

Kerry has never struck me as one of those people. He wavers in his convictions. I believe he is admantly anti-war. I have no problem with that, except that he pretends he is not. He has said repeatedly that he wishes we had built a "true coalition" yet when we did have one back in 1991, one that included ARABS, Kerry still voted no. Kerry hates war, shaped by his experience in Viet Nam. I respect that -- he should live by it and be true to his self, not shape his words in order to be popular.

Say what you want about Bush -- he doesn't make decisions to get elected. If he did, he would not be in this situation right now.

See you at the polls.

October 29, 2004

Oh For Fuck's Sake

From an NBC interview with Kerry:

Brokaw: "If you had been President, Saddam Hussein would be in power."

Kerry: "Not necessarily."

Brokaw: "You said you wouldn't go to war against him."

Kerry: "That's not true. Because under the inspection process, Saddam Hussein was required to destroy those kinds of materials and weapons."

Brokaw: "But he wasn't destroying them."

Kerry: "That's what you have inspectors for. That's why I voted for the threat of force, because he only does things when you have a legitimate threat of force. It's irresponsible to suggest that if I were President, he wouldn't be gone. He might be gone, because if he hadn't complied, we might have had to go to war, but if we did, we would have gone with allies, so the American people weren't carrying the entire burden. And the entire world would understand why we did it."

Kerry is the KING of maybe I would, maybe I woiuld not. It's all about the maybe. Gray. He hadn't complied for a decade, what makes you think he was going to comply. His whole reason for being was thumbing his nose at the US. He knew that Bush wasn't fucking around and he still waited it out. To think he would be "more scared" by Kerry is ridiculous.

Just once, I would like Kerry to give a straight yes or no answer to a question. Just once. I am reminded of the Jon Stewart clip where Kerry is shown talking about which of his daughters is most like him:

"Well, sometimes it's this one, sometimes it's the other one."

Cut back to Stewart with his head on the table, hands around his ears shaking.

October 27, 2004

A Liberal for Bush

Much like Ed Koch, this really sums up how I feel in this election. I myself probably agree with a few more domestic policies than the person authoring this blog, but the core message sums up exactly how I feel right now.

Dave Winer & The President

So today I was reading Dave Winers' blog, as I do every day, and something caught my eye:


Now, to be perfectly straight, I don't think I could support a re-elected George Bush.

THAT, right there, is what it's all about. At least Dave is honest about it, but it's why right and left have such issues in this country. If Kerry is elected, do I hope he does a good job, and will I support him in doing it? Of course. Does it mean I will agree with all of his policies? Not a chance in hell, but at the end of the day, he's the President. I thought Clinton did the right thing in Kosovo, and I think Bush did the right thing in Iraq. I wish someone would do something about Africa (because the UN will not -- we know that already).

There is a small part of me that wants Kerry to win just to see how the world treats him, especially the countries that have been helping us in Iraq (the ones he called the bribed, not a real coalition, etc.). What if those countries bail out of Iraq and leave him holding the bag because of his rhetoric?

The dirty secret of this election, IMO, is this: people supported Bush up until it became election time. Senators who were with him, even Hawkish on Iraq (nee -- Kerry), slowly peeled away because they can't be praising the President and convince people to vote for themselves at the same time. It wouldn't make sense, so they HAVE to slam the President, no matter what. They want to win. This is why Zell is pissy: he thinks the war is more important than the individuals.

I still challenge my Kerry supporting friends to go back to the primaries and watch Kerry in those debates. He was a hawk. He disagreed completely with Dean. After he won, he took on the Dean message.

That should bother you.