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Camworld builds Farenheit 911 community

Fahrenheit 9/11 Discussion Community

I spent most of the past week building out a discussion forum community for Michael Moore's new movie, Fahrenheit 9/11, which hits theatres on June 25.

http://www.fh911.com/

Why did I build this? For a variety of reasons:

  1. Other than the popular Rotten Tomatoes and IMdb forums, I found very few discussion forums dedicated to a single cause, like Moore's new movie
  2. I realized that this movie is going to be HUGE and I wanted there to be a place online for fans (and critics) to talk about this movie on equal terms.
  3. Moore's Internet people never emailed me back - even after several attempts - so I can only assume they have no plans for building an online community into fahrenheit911.com
  4. I wanted to see how easy it would be to add/modify a Forums module to the Content Management Framework I'm learning
  5. I wanted a showpiece community site for my new company, BlogLabs, Inc.

Feel free to use the site, but assume that over the next day or two that small things on the site will change as I iron out any more bugs I find. For instance, I haven't tested the site completely in IE/Windows. Any bugs can be reported in the comments for this entry or sent to me through my contact form.

Quoted from camworld
comment (0) posted at 06/25/2004 03:39:10 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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Restoring F*****g Dignity to the White House
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Vice President Dick Cheney blurted out the "F word" at Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont during a heated exchange on the Senate floor, congressional aides said on Thursday.

The incident occurred on Tuesday in a terse discussion between the two that touched on politics, religion and money, with Cheney finally telling Leahy to "f--- off" or "go f--- yourself," the aides said.

"I think he was just having a bad day," Leahy was quoted as saying on CNN, which first reported the incident. "I was kind of shocked to hear that kind of language on the floor."

Go forth and conjugate thyself, maternal mounter!

comment (0) posted at 06/25/2004 03:36:11 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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Firestorm over Fahrenheit 9/11
Director's attack of Bush brings heated commentary, pro and con

 
PHOTO
Director Michael Moore promoting his film in Toronto. (Aaron Harris/The Associated Press)

By Sean P. Means
The Salt Lake Tribune


    In the run-up to today's nationwide opening of "Fahrenheit 9/11," Michael Moore has done what a filmmaker is supposed to do with a new film: promoted it relentlessly.
    To sell tickets for his cinematic pounding of George W. Bush's war policy, Moore has appeared on Letterman, "The Today Show" and "This Week with George Stephanolopoulos" -- and was scheduled for last night's "The Daily Show" and today's "The Early Show." He loudly protested Disney's order to Miramax not to distribute the film (Lions Gate and IFC took on the job), and loudly (to no avail) appealed the MPAA's R rating.
    Others, intentionally or not, are also drumming up publicity. A former California legislator started a Web campaign, Move America Forward, that urged people to e-mail theater owners urging them not to show a movie it calls "a political advertisement that defames our military, insults our troops and attempts to undermine the public's support for the War on Terror." On the other end of the Web's political spectrum, the progressive group MoveOn.org is arranging house parties across the country Monday night to mobilize Moore's fans.

Read More about what Ray Bradbury says about it!

comment (0) posted at 06/25/2004 03:33:42 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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Bush Convinced He's "King of the Universe," Worried Aides Warn

 

Cosmic Monarch Role Spells Trouble

by Michael K. Smith

President George W. Bush's increasingly erratic God-intoxication and wide mood swings has the halls of the West Wing buzzing lately as aides express growing concern the president has snapped.

"We always knew he was one taco short of a combination plate," said one White House intern, "but lately he makes Nixon look like a rock of stable integrity." In meetings the President goes from spouting the Bible to obscene tantrums against the media, Democrats, France, the Pope, and the Dixie chicks, classifying them all as "enemies of freedom."

Worried White House aides paint a portrait of a man over the edge, contemptuous of those who question his Divinity and paranoid of a public that stubbornly refuses to get enthusiastic about permanent war and fiscal catastrophe. In interviews with a number of hostages on the White House staff, a picture of an administration under siege has emerged, led by a man who declares his decisions to be "God's will" and instructs aides to "fuck over" opponents of the administration. Anyone who fails to swoon at his mindless incantations is subjected to a public tongue lashing, dismissed as "unpatriotic,""anti-American," and increasingly, "fucking assholes."

"We're at war, there's no doubt about it," says a troubled White House aide. "Bush has a battalion of secretaries drawing up enemies lists. They're all logging 90 hour weeks and still the president screams at them that the lists are incomplete. It's not enough to list every Democrat who ever lived, they've also got to name everyone who ever 'harbored' a Democrat for an overnight stay or an evening meal. The task is endless."

Aides also say the President gets hung up on minor details, like sequencing his next dozen wars and arguing the finer points of his "Leave No Tree Behind" Act. Then he kisses off meetings on economic policy, yelling that "we can always invade Japan and Germany" if they stop funding our deficits. Aides who raise questions quickly find themselves cleaning cowchips off the White House carpet. Colin Powell is reportedly running elevators at the State Department.

According to experts in deviant psychology, Bush's world view is straight out of the Dark Ages. Everything boils down to a conflict of God versus the Devil. People who don't devote themselves to making him happy are defined as "evil" and "against God." People who shower him with praise and cash are seen as embodiments of the Soul, Church, and God. Because Bush has been unable to ignite the kind of mass hysteria common to the Middle Ages he is more convinced than ever that the Devil has taken control of this"permissive" society.

In Bush's mind the solution is obvious: exorcise the Devil embodied in the Bill of Rights, the "liberal media" and the proliferating citizen movements against injustice. He calls this Compassionate Exorcism. The president classifies all human behavior and the workings of the universe - stars, planets, tricky pretzels, and unfavorable polls - as God-given or Devil-ridden. To question or explore deeper reasons for things is heresy and evil. To further confirm and explain the Divinity of George W. Bush is the only legitimate scholarship, journalism, and politics. Everything else is witchcraft and will be punished by Ashcroft and the secret tribunals.

Unlike Salem, though, this time the burnings at the stake will not be public.

© Copyright 2004 The Daily Demon

Michael K. Smith is the author of "The Madness of King George" (illustrations by Matt Wuerker) from Common Courage Press

comment (0) posted at 06/19/2004 20:32:45 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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Bush Hailed As Stand-Up Comic of the Year

 

President Is "A Genius" Comedians Insist

by Michael K. Smith

Thanks to the brilliant surrealist language that has become his trademark, President Bush was rated the top stand-up comic in the country by a panel of comedians today, which hailed his stand-up routine as the work of genius.

"There's no question, he's the best in the business," said an awestruck Robin Williams. "I can't come close to that level of material." George Carlin concurred, calling Bush the greatest ever. "I've said in that sometimes a little brain-damage can help in this business. But just look at what LOTS of brain damage has done!" A despondent Will Durst saw little point in continuing his career: "I can't watch him anymore. He's just too good. I feel so inadequate after seeing him work an audience. If he steals another four years it may be time for me to call it quits."

Bush keeps his audiences in stitches with brilliantly innovative material that appears to be limitless. While most comedians settle for thirty minutes of solid material as the basis of their performing career, Bush has stored up hours of hilarious punchlines on every conceivable political topic. And comedians insist that his impersonation of a brain-dead automaton who becomes president is nearly flawless.

Among Bush's side-splitting punchlines reaping major public attention are the following:

"I know how hard it is to put food on your family."

----- GW on the struggle to make ends meet

"[A] pretty good political handbook."

-----GW on the Bible

"This CRUSADE, this war on terrorism is going to take a while."

-----GW soothing the Muslim world just before attacking Afghanistan

"Kim Jong Il is a pygmy."

-----GW showing his penchant for diplomacy (with North Korea)

"I hope this [Iraq situation] will not require military action."

----- GW as he prepared to invade Iraq

"Feels good!"

-----GW pumping his fist and launching the invasion of Iraq.

"The responsibility to show up and do your job."

-----GW, on what the National Guard taught him. His whereabouts for the last year-and-a-half of his Texas Air National Guard duty are unknown.

"This [Iraq] regime is seeking a nuclear bomb and, with fissile material, could build one within a year."

-----GW in September 2002. Iraq had dismantled its nuclear program years before.

"No comment, asshole."

----GW expressing an early form of compassionate conservatism to reporters during his father's run for the presidency

"Laura and I really don't realize how bright our children is sometimes until we get an objective analysis."

-----GW on education, 2000

"Incarceration is rehabilitation."

-----GW on his crime policy as Governor of Texas

"It's going to take a while to transition to a system where personal savings accounts are the predominant part of the investment vehicle. This [plan to privatize Social Security] is a step toward a completely different world . . ."

-----GW in May 2000

"The Healthy Forests Initiative."

-----GW on his policy of converting forests to tree stumps

"The Clear Skies Initiative."

-----GW on his policy of freeing polluters from regulations on air quality

"No Child Left Behind."

-----GW on his unfunded education mandate, which leaves EVERY child behind.

"I value you as a person and I value you as a human being, and I want you to know, Glen, that what I say publicly about gay people doesn't pertain to you."

-----GW as Governor of Texas, explaining his gay-bashing to Texas state representative Glen Maxey

"Incredibly positive news."

-----GW on his ballooning federal deficits, theorizing that trillions of dollars in red ink would restrain government spending on social programs

"We will not pass along our problems to other Congresses, to other presidents, and other generations."

-----GW in his 2003 State of the Union address. His own administration projects a $44 trillion shortfall in revenues as a result of his fiscal policy.

"By far the vast majority of the help goes to the people at the bottom end of the economic ladder."

-----GW on his tax cuts for the rich, second debate with Al Gore, 2000

"Those in the greatest need should receive the greatest help."

-----GW displaying his "big lie" technique while running for president. In his tax plan, those in the greatest need turn out to be people with annual incomes exceeding $373,000.

" . . . intended to promote work . . ."

-----The Bush Administration explaining its motive behind proposing a raise in rents in public housing.

Michael K. Smith is the author of "The Madness of King George" (illustrations by Matt Wuerker) available from Common Courage Press

comment (0) posted at 06/18/2004 19:42:42 by fedup | PermaLink
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Bruce and the Republican Convention
Dear Bruce:

We the undersigned need you.

Our country's leadership is in desperate need of change.

On September 1, the Republicans will hold their convention in New York City and will nominate George Bush for President. Many people will see this event as it will be broadcast on all the major television networks. However, an opportunity exists at that time to make it clear to Americans that they can choose an alternative to George Bush.

I have put Giants Stadium on hold on September 1 in the hope that you will lead the music industry in coming together and perform in a concert for change. Once it is known that you are involved, many other artists will want to perform with you. Together your collective voices and music will send a clear message to all Americans that our country needs their vote to create change. The event is called VoteAid: "Concert for Change" and we think that it has the potential to become the largest concert in history. We would like the money that this concert generates to go to support voter registration and participation throughout the country, but more importantly your decision to play at exactly the same time George Bush is being nominated will focus all Americans on the importance in this election for their future as well as the future of the world.

I have asked the undersigned to join me in signing this letter.

We need you.

Andrew Rasiej
Contact: andrew@draftbruce.com.

from

http://draftbruce.com

comment (0) posted at 06/18/2004 19:33:46 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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Draft Bruce, sez Camworld

camworld sayeth:

June 17, 2004

Draft Bruce

A few weeks ago I was asked by Josh Lerner and Andrew Rasiej to design a one-page web site to be used as the basis of an online petition to draft Bruce Springsteen to play a benefit concert at Giants Stadium in New Jersey on September 1, 2004 - the same day George Bush accepts the RNC nomination in New York City.

I threw a design together and passed it to Josh, who implemented the form and set up the web server. The site launched this morning and the Democratic activist community has embraced the idea, linking to the petition from their web sites and blogs.

No one knows if this draft idea will work but it's common knowledge that Bruce Springsteen does not like George Bush and recently complained to the Bush campaign about them using his 1984 "Born in the U.S.A." song as one of their campaign theme songs. (Not coincidentally, I based the site design on this album cover, where Bruce is standing in front of a flag.)

Check it out: http://www.draftbruce.com/

comment (0) posted at 06/18/2004 19:28:49 by fedup | PermaLink
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Unpardonable
nHOME: JUNE 11, 2004: NEWS: UNPARDONABLE

Unpardonable

The Bush record of 'compassion' began long before his sojourn in D.C.


Sharon Stewart spent five years in TDCJ on a 90-day sentence.
photo by Jana Birchum

 

It's an interesting theory – but very difficult to document from the actual Bush record.

It's conventional among some Texans to say that George W. Bush became more extreme as president than he had been as governor. He didn't try to invade Mexico on his Texas watch, after all. He didn't brazenly curtail civil liberties in the state, nor try to ban abortion, did he? According to bar talk and casual philosophizing, W.'s more extreme tendencies were held in check at the Texas Capitol by the last men standing in the Democratic leadership. With their remaining strength, Texas Dems kept W., people say, from being W. – that is, what we see in the White House, a WASP avenging angel, determined to smite the infidel and right liberal wrongs.

the rest of the story

comment (0) posted at 06/16/2004 12:05:43 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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Bush gives Clinton folks a tasty spread

The president plays cordial host at a
ceremony for the Clintons' White House portraits.
He even plugs that new book.

By BILL ADAIR, Times Staff Writer
Published June 15, 2004

[AP photo]
With a bow, former President Bill Clinton joins his wife, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, in a White House unveiling of their portraits Monday.

 

WASHINGTON - As the alumni from the Clinton administration gathered at the White House on Monday, they whispered about the menu. Would they get shrimp?

The Bush administration invited more than 100 Clintonites to see the unveiling of the official portraits of President Bill Clinton and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton. Afterward, the group was treated to lunch in the State Dining Room.

At the White House, like so many places, food tells you where you stand in the pecking order. Some people only merit cold cuts and a bowl of punch. Others get a full buffet with shrimp. The Clintonites didn't get shrimp, but they did get an elegant buffet that included salmon and crab cakes.

"Many of us noted that the lunch offering was quite lavish and quite generous," said Thurgood Marshall Jr., a former Clinton aide.

The event - and the cuisine - symbolized a momentary thaw in the frigid relations between the Bush White House and the Democrats.

At the unveiling ceremony, Bush offered a glowing tribute to Clinton, who defeated President Bush's father to win the White House in 1992. Clinton was also the man to whom the younger Bush had referred when he promised to "to restore honor and dignity" to the presidency.

But all that was a distant memory Monday.

Instead, Bush said the Democrat "showed a deep and far-ranging knowledge of public policy, a great compassion for people in need, and the forward-looking spirit that Americans like in a president."

Bush praised Clinton's determination and optimism, noting that he had run the presidential campaign for liberal George McGovern in the conservative state of Texas. Bush joked that, "You've got to be optimistic to give six months of your life running the McGovern campaign in Texas."

Bush even gave a plug for Clinton's memoirs, which will be published next week.

"I could tell you more of the story," Bush said with a smile, "but it's coming out in fine bookstores all over America."

Clinton, stepping to the familiar White House podium after the portraits were unveiled, recalled how editorial cartoonists had depicted him over his career. When he was a young governor in Arkansas, he was shown in a baby carriage, then riding a tricycle and then a bicycle.

When he became president, the cartoonist "put Hillary and me in a pickup truck with a huntin' dog."

Clinton made it clear how unusual it was to have a cease-fire in the partisan battles.

He said, "I hope that I will live long enough to see American politics return to vigorous debates, where we argue who's right and wrong, not who's good and bad."

Hundreds of more articles on this

comment (0) posted at 06/15/2004 12:42:53 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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Bush praises Clinton




SHOCKWAVES reverberated through US politics yesterday when Bill Clinton and George W. Bush went out of their way to be nice to each other.

Mr Clinton and wife Hillary were guests of honour at the White House for the unveiling of their official portraits that will hang alongside those of all former US presidents and first ladies.

Mr Bush has never been fond of Mr Clinton personally, has disparaged his political and social values, and ran for office in 2000 promising to restore honour and dignity after the Clinton years.

But he was nothing but complimentary yesterday, beginning his speech by greeting the former first couple with a "welcome home" and calling Mr Clinton a man of enthusiasm and warmth.

"Bill Clinton could always see a better day ahead and Americans knew he was working hard to bring that day closer," Mr Bush said.

"Over eight years it was clear that Bill Clinton loved the job of the presidency. He filled this house with energy and joy.

"He showed a deep and far-ranging knowledge of public policy, a great compassion for people in need and the forward-looking spirit that Americans like in a president."

Mr Bush similarly praised Mrs Clinton, now a Democrat senator who spends much of her time criticising Mr Bush and is an object of hate for Republicans.

"She inspires respect and loyalty from those who know her, and it was a good day in both their lives when they met at the library at Yale Law School," Mr Bush said.

Mr Clinton, at the White House for the first time since departing in January 2001, is about to hit the trail to promote his hugely anticipated memoir, My Life, out next week. Conscious the massive publicity blitz surrounding the launch will steal oxygen from Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry, Mr Clinton will devote much of his national book tour to spruiking for Senator Kerry and criticising Mr Bush.

But yesterday he, too, maintained the civility with his remarks, saying Mr Bush's "generous words" proved "we are held together by this grand system of ours that permits us to debate and struggle and fight for what we believe is right".

An uneasy calm has hung over the US election campaign since last week when Republicans and Democrats called a ceasefire out of deference to Ronald Reagan.

Yesterday, after the White House ceremony, it was business as usual.

Mr Bush, unveiled a two-week, 19-state advertising blitz to plug his economic polices and paint Senator Kerry as a pessimist and then headed to the swing state of Missouri.

Senator Kerry, who is still to announce his vice-presidential running mate, has accepted Mr Clinton's offer to campaign on his behalf.

more

comment (0) posted at 06/15/2004 12:40:33 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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Upstaged, Again and Again and Again
Monday, Jun 14, 2004; 9:08 AM
 
 
President Bush spent last week in the shadow of Ronald Reagan.
 
 Then he spent the weekend in the shadow of his father, who turned 80
 by throwing himself a big party and jumping out of a plane.
 
 And today, Bush is the warm-up guy for Bill Clinton, who kicks off a
 massive book tour and publicity blitz by storming into the White House
 for the unveiling of his official portrait.
 
 Normally, when you're president, you're the star of the show. But
 again and again this month, Bush is being upstaged by his predecessors.
 
 Journalists and other pundits continue to debate whether the week-long
 swoon over Reagan underscored what Bush and Reagan had in common, or
 ways in which Bush falls short.
 
 But Bush neither relishes nor has much to gain from comparisons to his
 father. Obliged to show up at the birthday festivities, Bush gave a
 speech that must rank among his shortest and least lofty, and features
 what may be his lamest joke ever.
 
 And now, enter the Clintons. There's no margin there for Bush at all.
 Bill is Back
 
 <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/politics/administration/whbriefing/>
comment (0) posted at 06/14/2004 06:56:54 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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Film and Election Politics Cross in 'Fahrenheit 9/11'
 Film and Election Politics Cross in 'Fahrenheit 9/11'
 By Michael Finnegan, Times Staff Writer
 
 There are movie campaigns and there are presidential campaigns, and
 usually you can tell the difference. One features a red carpet, the
 other a war room.
 
 But "Fahrenheit 9/11," Michael Moore's scathing new documentary about
 President Bush, has both.
 
 Its release later this month appears to mark the first time that a
 film slamming a major presidential candidate has opened on screens
 across the nation in the final months of a campaign. At the same time,
 the movie is producing a global publicity extravaganza for Moore and
 Miramax Film founders Harvey and Bob Weinstein, who bought the film
 after Walt Disney Co. refused to let Miramax release it.
 
 The scramble to bring the dark, often satirical film to U.S. movie
 screens is blending Hollywood and presidential politics in ways never
 seen in a race for the White House. While the filmmakers deny any overt
 effort to promote the candidacy of the presumed Democratic
 presidential nominee, Sen. John F. Kerry of Massachusetts, their
 efforts fall clearly in sync with the campaign to unseat Bush.
 
 To anticipate and fend off the criticism that already is brewing,
 Moore has set up a "war room" populated by former Clinton White House
 operatives plotting swift counterattacks on Bush supporters who
 question the film's credibility.
 
 To lead the effort, Moore has hired Chris Lehane and Mark Fabiani,
 former political advisors to Bill Clinton and Al Gore. "Employing the
 Clinton strategy of '92, we will allow no attack on this film to go
 without a response immediately," Moore said Thursday. "And we will go
 after anyone who slanders me or my work, and we will do it without
 mercy. And when you think 'without mercy,' you think Chris Lehane."
 
 More:
 http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/2004/la-et-moore11jun11,1,1854646.story?coll=la-home-headlines
comment (0) posted at 06/14/2004 05:51:17 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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Wash with Warm Water
A label from a laptop computer bag that is made by a small American company for overseas customers:

Here is the translation from the French:

Wash with warm water.
Use mild soap.
Dry flat.
Do not use bleach.
Do not dry in the dryer.
Do not iron.
We are sorry that our President is an idiot.
We did not vote for him.
via Corpus Callosum
comment (0) posted at 06/14/2004 05:39:31 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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Bush and Reagan

Saving Graces: What George W. Bush Could–But Probably Won't–Learn From Ronald Reagan

Bush Reagan compared

And yet--even if we considered a much longer list of Reagan's "accomplishments"--I cannot avoid the feeling that even Reagan was a much less dangerous president than the current incumbent.

Reagan funded military shenanigans around the world (including the "freedom fighters" in Afghanistan who later mutated into the Taliban and Al-Qaeda) and showed contempt for international law, yet never committed American soldiers to a major war abroad or launched a systematic campaign to deceive the American people to win approval for major military action.

Likewise, Reagan gutted numerous domestic programs while slashing taxes for the rich, yet he never seriously challenged the basic pillars of the New Deal (including Social Security) in the way that Karl Rove and like-minded members of the reigning conservative coalition now envision.

Most importantly, as president Reagan demonstrated, in a mild but significant degree, one leadership quality which George W. Bush sorely lacks: namely, a capacity for maturation and moral growth.

comment (0) posted at 06/13/2004 11:08:23 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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George W. Bush Marshall Law Declaration

George W. Bush Declares Marshall Law

Rated 3.5 out of 5 (from 16 ratings)Rated 3.5 out of 5 (from 16 ratings)Rated 3.5 out of 5 (from 16 ratings)Rated 3.5 out of 5 (from 16 ratings)Rated 3.5 out of 5 (from 16 ratings) Written by Chuck Terzella

Two Spoof Writers are taken into Custody
President George W. Bush has taken the unique step of declaring Marshall Law without the country having either been attacked or being under imminent threat of attack. Administration Officials, concerned about falling public opinion polls and the real danger of losing the November elections, has authorized the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to take control of all Transportation Systems, Communications Systems, the Banking Industry and the McDonalds Corporation.
comment (0) posted at 06/13/2004 11:02:28 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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George W. Bush and Ronald W. Reagan
George W. Bush is no Ronald W. Reagan
Posted: June 11, 2004
1:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2004 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

One last time, Ronald Reagan has united this nation. As he'd done before – the Challenger explosion, the 40th anniversary of D-Day, the Berlin Wall – the former president lifted our hearts and brought us all together. This time in sorrow over his death and celebration of his extraordinary life.

Unfortunately, in the national chorus of tribute to former President Reagan, there was one discordant note. And it didn't come from Democrats – most of whom, like John Kerry, found nothing but good things to say about Reagan.

comment (0) posted at 06/13/2004 11:00:45 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change to make major announcement

National Press Club 'Morning Newsmaker': Diplomats, Military Commanders for Change on June 16

6/13/2004 10:44:00 AM


To: Assignment and National desks

Contact: Susan Roth, 301-330-2587 or 202-997-5672, or Connie Coopersmith, 202-408-4998 or 202-460-4156 or Peter J Hickman, pjhickman@hotmail.com, for the National Press Club

News Advisory:

Members of Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change, a group of retired career ambassadors and senior military officers, will release a statement and discuss the need for change in U.S. Foreign and Defense Policy.

WHO:

-- Ambassador Phyllis Oakley (spokesperson) (Former Asst. Sec of State for Intelligence and Research)

-- Ambassador Donald Easum (Former Asst. Sec of State for African Affairs)

-- Ambassador Chas. Freeman (Former Amb. to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia)

-- Ambassador Bill Harrop (Former Amb. To Guinea, Kenya and Seychelles, Zaire and Israel)

-- Ambassador Allen Holmes (Former Asst. Sec of Defense for Special Operations)

-- Ambassador Bob Keeley (Former Amb. to Mauritius, Zimbabwe and Greece)

-- Ambassador Princeton Lyman (Former Asst. Sec of State for Int. Organization Affairs)

-- Ambassador Don McHenry (Former Amb. and U.S. Permanent Rep. to the United Nations)

-- General Merrill A. "Tony" McPeak (Former Chief of Staff, U.S. Air Force)

-- Ambassador David Newsom (Former Sec. of State, ad interim, former Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs)

-- Ambassador Dan Phillips (Former Amb. to Burundi and the Republic of Congo)

-- Ambassador Mike Sterner (Former Amb. to the United Arab Emirates)

-- Ambassador Alexander F. Watson (Former Asst. Sec of State for Inter-American Affairs, Former Amb. to Peru

-- and other Ambassadors and retired military leaders who will be available via conference call and online interviews)

WHAT: News Conference and Q&A session

DETAILS: An unprecedented bipartisan coalition of 26 career chiefs of mission and retired four-star military leaders will launch a nationwide campaign to press for the need for change in U.S. foreign and defense policy because they are deeply concerned by the damage the Bush Administration has caused to our national and international interests.

WHEN: Wednesday, June 16. Doors open 8 a.m. Conference begins 9 a.m.

WHERE: National Press Club, Zenger Room, 529 1th St. NW Washington, D.C. 20045 202-662-7525

Paid for by the Committee of Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change and not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee

comment (0) posted at 06/13/2004 08:30:58 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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Bush Calls For Reagan "Day of Remembrance"
President Battles National Alzheimer's

 

by Michael K. Smith

(GWB) President Bush hailed former President Reagan as a national hero yesterday, calling on Americans to review his life and never forget what he stood for.

Candid News Network (CNN) immediately filed this report on the Gipper: "He had only the foggiest idea what the policies of his own Administration were. When not programmed by his staff he talked nonstop about Hollywood or whiled away the days watching T.V.

Bored with his duties, he came to work reluctantly and nodded off in cabinet meetings or amused himself doodling. His solution for every problem was a dismissive one-liner and an amiable grin. . . .

"He came alive only for the camera, and appeared coherent thanks to the constant assistance of a Teleprompter. Unchoreographed moments left him babbling like a small child. With curious vehemence and farcical regularity his aides announced that he was in charge and understood what was going on. . . .

"He thought by anecdote and debated with sentimental homilies. He blotted out facts with self-justifying stereotypes: of Soviet beachheads, of sponging welfare queens, of educational aid recipients turned stock brokers, of voluntary ghettoes, of Communist hordes descending on Texas, of rich kids getting free school lunches. To mobilize support for unpopular budget cuts, he cited anonymous letters from altruistic blind, elderly, and disabled citizens urging him to slash their benefits for the good of the country. . . .

"One of his children disclosed the secret of his phenomenal success: 'He makes things up and believes them.'"

A FOND LOOK BACK: REAGAN IN HIS OWN WORDS

Vice President Cheney, eulogizing former President Reagan, stated that, "If Ronald Reagan ever uttered a cynical, or cruel, or selfish word, the moment went unrecorded." Of course, Big Dick is entitled to his opinion, but perhaps a trip down memory lane will lead the American people to a different conclusion. Many might consider his gas bombing of the UC Berkeley Campus during the People's Park crisis a bit cruel, and reasonable people could find it somewhat cynical that he thought the best way to handle campus militants was the following: "If it takes a bloodbath, let's get it over with."

Then there was Reagan's blessing of the genocidal Guatemalan General Efrain Rios-Montt in December 1982, extended in his usual charming, humorous, and polite way, of course. With Guatemalan security forces butchering tens of thousands of Indians Reagan traveled to Guatemala to pat his client on the back and declare that Rios-Montt was getting a "bum rap" and was "totally dedicated to democracy." That sounds a tad cynical to me.

A grateful Rios-Montt replied that, "We have no scorched earth policy - we have a policy of scorched Communists." This was just a few months after he had announced a state of siege so the government could "kill people legally." According to Amnesty International, the idealistic General had practiced "widespread killing, including extra-judicial execution of large numbers of rural noncombatants, including entire families as well as persons suspected of sympathy with violent or nonviolent opposition groups." This was the fruit of Reagan's much celebrated "optimism" and "Morning in America" philosophy.

But judge for yourself: Here is Reagan in his own words . . . . "I've just signed legislation outlawing the Russians forever. The bombing begins in five minutes." -----President Reagan, "joking" before a radio broadcast, unaware that he was connected to the press room.

"We should declare war on North Vietnam . . . We could pave the whole country and put parking stripes on it, and still be home by Christmas." -----Ronald Reagan, October 10, 1965.

Question: "Do you think there could be a battlefield [nuclear] exchange without having buttons pressed all the way up the line?" President Reagan: "Well, I would - if they realized that we - if we went back to that stalemate, only because our retaliatory power, our seconds, or our strike at them after their first strike would be so destructive that they couldn't afford it, that would hold them off." -----October 17, 1981.

"I could see where you could have the exchange of tactical [nuclear] weapons against troops in the field without it bringing either one of the major powers to pushing the button." -----President Reagan, explaining "winnable" nuclear war, October 17, 1981.

"Those [nuclear weapons] that are carried in ships of one kind or another, or submersibles, you are dealing there with a conventional type of weapon or instrument, and those instruments can be intercepted. They can be recalled." -----President Reagan, May 13, 1982.

"The scriptures are on our side in this." -----President Reagan, citing Luke 14:31 to justify his massive nuclear weapons build-up.

"This whole progressive tax system is a foreign import - spawned by Karl Marx a century ago." -----Ronald Reagan, Screen Actor, 1959.

"Unemployment insurance is a pre-paid vacation for freeloaders." -----Ronald Reagan, April 28, 1966.

"Is it news that some fellow out in South Succotash someplace has just been laid off?" -----President Reagan, complaining of media coverage of the soaring unemployment rate, March 16, 1982.

"Fascism was really the basis for the New Deal." -----Candidate Reagan, August 17, 1980.

"They were victims, just as surely as the victims in the concentration camps." -----President Reagan, April 18, 1985, referring to Nazi soldiers and announcing his intention to lay a wreath in a military graveyard where 49 former members of the Nazi S.S. were buried.

"Approximately 80% of our air pollution stems from hydrocarbons released by vegetation, so let's not go overboard in setting and enforcing tough emission standards from man-made sources." -----President Reagan, accusing trees of polluting the air, September 10, 1980.

"Growing and decaying vegetation in this land are responsible for 93% of the oxides of nitrogen." -----President Reagan, sticking his foot in deeper, October 9, 1980.

"A tree's a tree. How many more do you need to look at?" -----Ronald Reagan, March 12, 1966.

"There is today in the United States as much forest as there was when Washington was at Valley Forge." -----President Reagan, failing to notice a 70% reduction in forest land, March 5, 1983.

"The people who are sleeping on the grates, the homeless who are homeless, you might say, by choice." -----President Reagan, explaining a sudden national preference for living in the Great Outdoors, January 31, 1984. "

Well, I learned a lot. . . . I went down [to Latin America] to find out from them and [learn] their views. You'd be surprised. They're all individual countries." -----President Reagan, December 6, 1982.

"The moral equivalent of the Founding Fathers and the brave men and women of the French resistance." -----President Reagan on the Nicaraguan "Contras," mostly ex-Somoza National Guardsmen famous for torture, rape, and murder, March 1, 1985.

"Reagan without an audience was . . . NOTHING."-----Reagan biographer Edmund Morris.

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Michael K. Smith is the author of "The Madness of King George" (illustrations by Matt Wuerker) from Common Courage Press

comment (0) posted at 06/07/2004 00:28:05 by fedup | PermaLink
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The Resident tosses one to the wolves...

The New York Times describes Dubya's announcement of the Tenet resignation thusly:

Mr. Bush announced the resignation in a way that was almost bizarre. He had just addressed reporters and photographers in a fairly innocuous Rose Garden session with Australia's prime minister, John Howard. Then the session was adjourned, as Mr. Bush apparently prepared to depart for nearby Andrews Air Force Base and his flight to Europe, where he is to take part in ceremonies marking the 60th anniversary of the Normady invasion and meet European leaders — some of whom have been sharply critical of the campaign in Iraq.

But minutes later, Mr. Bush reappeared on the sun-drenched White House lawn, stunning listeners with the news of Mr. Tenet's resignation, which the president said would be effective in mid-July. Until then, Mr. Bush said, the C.I.A.'s deputy director, John McLaughlin, will be acting director.

The president praised Mr. Tenet's qualities as a public servant, saying: "He's strong. He's resolute. He's served his nation as the director for seven years. He has been a strong and able leader at the agency. He's been a, he's been a strong leader in the war on terror, and I will miss him."

Then Mr. Bush walked away, declining to take questions or offer any insight into what Mr. Tenet's personal reasons might be.

the full Times story...

comment (0) posted at 06/04/2004 05:40:54 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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Electing a President and VP who agree

Shorter David Ignatius:
The McCain Choice 
The best way to unite the country is to elect a president and vice president who agree.

But this is not a normal political year, and it is emphatically not the time for politics as usual. The United States is in trouble. The country needs to pull together, across party lines, to handle one of its toughest tests since World War II.

The war in Iraq is unraveling, in ways that could harm America's interests for a generation. Every day brings new images of bloody disarray: more souvenirs of torture from Abu Ghraib; the severed head of an American civilian; the assassination of the president of Iraq's Governing Council; women and children killed by U.S. fire at what witnesses say was a wedding. Senior U.S. military officers are furious that their troops are being asked to pay the price for civilian mistakes.

 

comment (0) posted at 05/27/2004 17:49:51 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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Rundown in the Iraq War
May 25 , 6:53 AM
10 Greatest Mistakes of the Iraq War
by Barry Ritholtz

Gen. Anthony Zinni, USMC (Ret.) Remarks at CDI Board of Directors Dinner, May 12, 2004, presented a scathing critique as to the strategic and tactical failures which the Bush Administration committed in regards to the Iraq War:

1) the belief that containment as a policy doesn't work....  
2) the strategy was flawed....  
3) creating a false rationale for going in to get public support....  
4) failure to internationalize the effort....  
5) underestimating the task....  
6) (maybe the biggest one), propping up and trusting the exiles....  
7) lack of planning....  
8) insufficiency of military forces on the ground....  
9) the ad hoc organization we threw in there....  
10) a series of bad decisions on the ground....  

 

"I just came back from giving a lecture at UCLA yesterday, and the lecture was on the Middle East.  I tried to ... for the students there, step back and take a more strategic view of the Middle East and the issues out there and maybe give them a perception of the problems and issues from the eyes of those that live with it day-to-day, the Arabs, Israelis, all those that make up the peoples of the Middle East. 

via Washinton Monthly

comment (0) posted at 05/25/2004 16:34:22 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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Run for President on Reality TV
 SHOWTIME becomes the campaign headquarters for American Candidate
 starting Summer 2004!
 
 Unscripted and unprecedented, American Candidate is a reality series
 in which the viewing public will select a People's Candidate who will
 then have the chance to run for president of the United States. The
 series will be executive produced by Academy Award®-nominated and
 Emmy®-winning documentary filmmaker R.J. Cutler ("The War Room,"
 "American High," "Freshman Diaries"), along with Jay Roach (director
 of "Austin Powers," "Meet the Parents") and Tom Lassally.
 
 The show will debut in Summer 2004 with 12 contestants from all walks
 of life. Over the course of the series, those 12 will face off against
 each other and will be narrowed down through audience participation.
 The final episode will be a showdown among the remaining contestants,
 and one person will emerge victorious – the "American Candidate."
 
 Have you ever wondered if you had what it took to be President of the
 United States? Now's your chance to find out! Click on the link below
 to sign up to receive your application, and you'll be on your way to
 living your dream.
 
 http://www.sho.com/site/americancandidate/home.do
 
comment (0) posted at 05/23/2004 16:05:08 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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GOP Outsources fundraising

 The Bush administration can't seem to make up its mind about the hot, swing-state topic of outsourcing. First, the White House tapped a pro-outsourcing manufacturing czar, only to change course when Democrats made an issue about the jobs-overseas policy. Now, we discover the Republican Party hired "125 agents working in seven teams soliciting financial contributions for the Republican Party" from New Delhi. That according to a recent article in the Hindustan Times and unearthed by Misleader.org.

According to the news account, for 14 months, between May 16, 2002, and July 22, 2003, the GOP hired India's Shiv Nadar-promoted HCL Technologies to make the cold calls trolling for dollars. (Actually, the GOP hired the Washington-based Capital Communications Group, which then tapped New Delhi for the job.) "The mandate for the teams was to mobilize support for President George W.
 Bush and solicit political contributions.

The voters' database was provided by the Republican National Committee (RNC), the party's
 premier political organization," reported the Times. The team of dialers contacted 200,000 voters in the States, with the paper concluding that, "Going by conservative estimates, at least funds worth
 $10 million were committed for President Bush through the [call] centers in India."
 
 -- Eric Boehlert
 
 http://www.salon.com/politics/war_room//index.html

comment (0) posted at 05/23/2004 15:59:38 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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Bloggers Use "Day After Tomorrow" to question Bush Enviro Stance

May 12, 2004

Fox Disses Celebrity Greens; Greens Bite Back

The Means of Expression - Media, Creativity and Experience

day_after.jpg Political activism around the release of "The Day After Tomorrow" gets a big boost today: the New York Times reports that Fox—owned by avid Bush supporter Rupert Murdoch—has been caught unprepared by groups using the movie to raise awareness and highlight Bush administration inaction on climate change.

Fox uninvited 2 celebrity enviros, Robert Kennedy Jr. and Laurie David, to a Manhattan premeire screening for Worldchanging's favorite upcoming climate-change disaster flick.

Then Fox re-invited them, apparently blindsided when these media-saavy, holy-fired environmentalists told the press about it.

In a telephone news conference on Tuesday former Vice President Al Gore compared the exaggeration of the film's premise to the approach of the Bush administration to global warming.

"There are two sets of fiction to deal with," Mr. Gore said. "One is the movie, the other is the Bush administration's presentation of global warming." He accused the White House of "trying to convince people there's no real problem, no degree of certainty from scientists about the issue." The news conference was organized by moveon.org, an Internet-based liberal advocacy group.

A Fox spokes man claims the studio is pleased by all the attention. "Clearly the movie is entertainment, but all of this activity creates additional interest, making it more topical," Jeffrey Godsick, the spokesman, said. "It's been wonderful." Godsick didn't know if Murdoch had yet seen the film.

comment (0) posted at 05/12/2004 20:36:15 by bush2004 | PermaLink
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Michael Moore Film blocked

Disney Forbidding Distribution of Film That Criticizes Bush

By JIM RUTENBERG

WASHINGTON, May 4 — The Walt Disney Company is blocking its Miramax division from distributing a new documentary by Michael Moore that harshly criticizes President Bush, executives at both Disney and Miramax said Tuesday.

The film, "Fahrenheit 911," links Mr. Bush and prominent Saudis — including the family of Osama bin Laden — and criticizes Mr. Bush's actions before and after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

Disney, which bought Miramax more than a decade ago, has a contractual agreement with the Miramax principals, Bob and Harvey Weinstein, allowing it to prevent the company from distributing films under certain circumstances, like an excessive budget or an NC-17 rating.