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Can the world withstand 4 more years of Bush?
Published on February 3, 2004 By Calor In Politics

    Bush and the Republicans have betrayed their own neo-con brethren. And for what? Do they think progressive America is gullible enough not to see their clumsy attempts to buy their votes? Prescription drug benefit? How about just a big government hand out to the drug companies? Help for farmers? More like subsidies for agribusiness. Tax cuts to stimulate the economy? More like a huge hand out to rich people to cover their losses from when they screwed the pooch during the dot-com-bomb. How about a tax cut for the working people at Enron.

    Brad argues in his articles that those who pay lots of taxes are mostly Republicans. Okay. Good. I'm sure Ken Lay and the other Enron executives are mostly Republican and that a large percentage of their victims are Democrats. I'm comfortable with that. You can have them, Brad. They're all yours. I'll spend my day with hard working Americans any day over a bunch of greedy scumbags who steal from the the middle class. But hey, these modern day robbers can't be all bad right? They pay taxes so they're just fine.

    At John Edwards correctly points out, we are seeing an emergence of two Americas. One America can be represented by the Ken Lays of the world, their stooges, and those gullible enough to believe that one day they can really make it on their own through hard work. The other America is busting its ass trying to pay the bills while their rich Republican bosses scheme for ways to move their company overseas in order to avoid having to comply with the various humane working condition laws imposed on them in the United States.

    Not everyone has a rich connected dad who can buy them an oil company to run into the ground like George W. Bush had. And sure, there is going to be some small percentage of "losers" receiving government assistance who probably don't deserve it but at least can use it to live. But I'm a lot more comfortable with those "losers" getting a few bucks to live on than I am with the same percentage of "losers" who got rich by screwing everyone else for their dollars.

    This Fall we will see which America will win. The America that thinks it's not okay for the US to run around invading countries on a whim. Or the America that chooses to use 9/11 as an excuse to impose our will and culture on millions of people in the middle east.  The America that believes in working hard, playing by the rules, and respecting international law. Or the America that would stuff a Walmart on every corner in every city on earth while calling its opponents unpatriotic even as they ship jobs of to communist China.  The America that thinks that ensuring every American, rich or poor, should be provided with basic health care. Or the America whose response to the sick and elderly is to proclaim the importance of natural selection even as they try to restrict its teaching in public schools in favor of creationism.

    I don't know if Kerry or whomever will be able to beat Bush. Bush has $200 million and rising waiting to attack Kerry with. And Bush has the support of supporters who seem not to care at all about what their leader does to their country. Our grand children will be paying off the debts created by this President. This President, handed the largest budget surplus in the history of the world has, in the course of 4 years, turned it into the largest deficit in human history. And in doing so has caused 2 million jobs to disappear. Jobs that won't come back because they're being shipped off to China and India. But Bush and his friends don't care, they see a day in which their kind is managing foreign workers while the rest of America can go to hell as far as they're concerned.

    This election will be a turning point not just for the United States but the world. With all the damage this man and his Republican cohorts in congress have caused, I am not sure the world can withstand an additional 4 years.

 


Comments (Page 1)
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on Feb 03, 2004
Great article.

Serious question though - as someone who is not living in this circus that is the lead up to the elections... does anyone else have an honest chance in your opinion?
on Feb 03, 2004
Both parties are pandering. Makes one not even want to vote.
on Feb 03, 2004
Sometimes I have this urge to vote for Bush in a You Made Your Bed Now Lie In It way. Is that wrong?

...god she looks hot in that T-Shirt...

I always try to keep in perspective - The particular party-du-jour is less important than the system that is "America(tm)". The pendulum swings, left to right, sometimes it seems to swing extraordinarily far, but, just like the little girl on the swing with the pig tails - she ain't gonna go over the top, and eventually it'll come back down.

So I try to be passionate about the system - access to voting, fair elections, the growing control of lobbists, etc. Well - but sometimes it's hard with a Shrub and worse, once and awhile my libertarian friends actually sound reasonable!

(It's too late and I should be working anyway)
on Feb 03, 2004
In truth, i find the American system rather daunting and frightening, but its all about checks and balances right?

When i grow up, i want to be a benevolant dictator.
on Feb 03, 2004
I'll tell you, the way that both candidates are courting both left and right votes, if they get much closer, it's going to come down to a coin toss.

I'm a registered Independant.

The way the Politicals sway back and forth, I didn't want to label myself with either party.
on Feb 04, 2004
do you have to 'register' you political leanings?

Thats stupid.
on Feb 04, 2004
You have to register for a party so that you can vote for party primaries. The candidates are close in many ways, but if there's a strike, a Republican will try to break it and a Democrat will support it. Only a Democrat could have done welfare reform. Only a Republican could have opened relations with China. The fact that the parties are close together is good. Extreme swings create an even more divided country. The problem is the apathy of those who don't vote but complain that nothing changes.
on Feb 04, 2004
Calor, do you actually..you know..believe what you wrote, or were you just looking for a sensational arguement to stir up crap?

"Can the world withstand 4 more years of Bush"?..Ha, I didn't vote him in the first time..but I sure will this time! (maybe, subject to vary at whim)..Just to piss people off.

Wait: Is there any president running on the platform to blow the world up as soon as he is elected? Sign me up!
on Feb 04, 2004
One can register as an independant and not be tied to any party platform or ballot. I am registered independent and will not vote for Bush, but I don't see Kerry having the same charisma that the average Joe would pick up on. Not a bad guy, but don't think he can swing the Bushites.

I see the country as a whole swinging furter to the right, which will even itself out eventually. What scares me more is the religeous right growth of power in this country. They appear to be firmly planted in Texas politics and are making strides elsewhere, so much for secularism...
on Feb 04, 2004
That article is sooo laughable. News flash... Ken Lay does NOT represent all or even most Republicans / Conservatives.

There are plenty of poor / not rich Republicans / Conservatives (R/C) that are part of the "hard working" America.

Yep, not everyone has a rich dad, not even every R/C.

The "two Americas" cannot simply be divided into the "good ones" on my side and the "bad ones" on your side. There is only one America, with people of many differing viewpoints. The author of this is very divisive.

There is NOTHING ominously decisive about either party winning, least of the balance of the whole world.

This is fear-mongering at it's best.

VES
on Feb 04, 2004
Didn't John Kerry marry into an inherited family fortune?

those gullible enough to believe that one day they can really make it on their own through hard work

I think that says it all.

on Feb 05, 2004
What scares me more is the religeous right growth of power in this country.


Which is probably a pendulum effect of all the liberal (left) growth that this country has pretty much endured since the 60's. I agree with that part of what a previous poster mentioned. The country swings back and forth, usually changing directions when enough people think it's gone "too far" in one direction. Sometimes liberals aren't happy, sometimes conservatives aren't happy. That's life.

VES
on Feb 05, 2004
This is the Senator's second marriage to a forture. The Heinz family worth about $700 million. His first marriage was to a Thorne, worth about $300 million. He has two children by his first wife. Just for info.

I hope his idea for helping the middle class is showing me where I can find a rich wife. : )
on Feb 05, 2004
The reverborating echos of just another whinning shameless leftover loser from the election of 2000.. If you feel so strongly about your premise, then stop your childlike rantings and get behind the candidate of your choice and do everything you can to insure his victory, successful or not. In the meantime give the rest of us a break! Echoing only cliches and overworked slogans are really boring. Get it?
on Feb 06, 2004
An article of generalities and plain fiction. Next.
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