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"Kerry is everything George Bush is not"
Toronto Sun ^ | March 7, 2004 | Eric Margolis, Paleocon

Posted on 03/15/2004 8:37:11 PM PST by Frank T

March 7, 2004 Kerry is everything George Bush is not By ERIC MARGOLIS -- Contributing Foreign Editor

MINNEAPOLIS -- Struggling to find the worst thing he could say about Sen. John Kerry, a senior member of the Bush administration proclaimed last year, "He looks so ... so ... French!"

By "French," the Bushite must have meant well educated, articulate, dignified, sophisticated, worldly - everything President George W. Bush, who likes to play tough Texas Ranger, is not.

However, being educated and sophisticated is not a political asset in America's heartland - parts of the midwest, mountain states, and south, where Bush is often venerated with the kind of mindless adulation North Koreans shower on their "Beloved Leader," Kim Jong-il.

The United States is unique among advanced nations in demanding wealthy career politicians running for high office pretend they are simple working-class fellows who drink beer and bowl.

Members of the Soviet ruling elite, who secretly lived like Turkish pashas, used to also claim they were simple factory workers fulfilling their civic duty to the Motherland.

Last week's "Super Tuesday" primaries here in Minnesota and nine other states, confirmed that this fall, the "Frenchman" will be the Democratic party candidate to oppose Bush, of Crawford, Texas.

From Buenos Aires to Beijing, people are asking, if Kerry were to win election, how would his foreign policies differ from that of the Bush administration, which, Kerry charges, "has run the most inept, reckless, arrogant and ideological foreign policy in the modern history of our country"?

Kerry is absolutely right. Remember, when Bush was running for president, he promised a "humble" foreign policy that would be "low-key" and avoid foreign entanglements. At the time, Bush showed himself shockingly ignorant of foreign affairs, and did not even know the name of Pakistan's leader.

But once in office, the Bush administration, even before 9/11, embarked on plans to invade Iraq and Afghanistan. It adopted a confrontational policy with Europe, a major arms buildup, and threw U.S. support behind Israel's right-wing leader, Ariel Sharon.

Cheney's no moderate

Vice President Dick Cheney, formerly viewed as a moderate, revealed himself to be an extreme rightist who packed the administration's security and foreign policy ranks with fellow ideologues.

Kerry may be counted on to return the U.S. to its pre-Bush foreign policy, beginning by improving relations with Europe's core nations, France and Germany. To the horror of many Bushites, whose preferred language appears to be speaking in tongues, the Boston senator reportedly speaks ... French.

Sen. Kerry calls for more co-operation with the UN and other world bodies. He vows to end the Bush administration's militarization of U.S. foreign policy and its aggressive behaviour toward nations that fail to comply with the White House's diktat.

Kerry supports the Kyoto environmental treaty, though Congress will be unlikely to ever accept it in its present form.

But if elected, Kerry will face powerful institutional forces opposed to any change in policy direction, particularly in the Mideast, Washington's biggest foreign policy headache.

Bush and his neo-con mentors blundered the U.S. into twin hornets' nests in Afghanistan and Iraq.

It's unlikely Washington will be able to fully impose its political will on either nation, given growing armed resistance and civil chaos. These neo-colonial misadventures are costing over $6 billion monthly and tie down almost half the U.S. Army.

Any efforts to withdraw from these fiascos will produce storms of protests about "loss of credibility" and "abetting terrorism." The military-industrial-petroleum complex, which benefits greatly from these wars and Bush's reckless military spending, will strain every sinew to keep U.S. forces engaged abroad.

Washington's pro-Israel lobby is already putting pressure on Kerry to agree to block any viable Palestinian state and he is being urged to appoint strongly pro-Israel Mideast advisers.

The only hopeful sign is that Kerry may bring back Clinton-era advisers aligned with Israel's moderate Labour Party - like Dennis Ross and Sandy Berger - to replace some of the Likud party's American supporters, notably Paul Wolfowitz, Douglas Feith, Richard Perle and Elliot Abrams, who now help to run U.S. Mideast policy.

Under Kerry, U.S. foreign policy may be less driven by the imperative to dominate oil, and more by traditional multilateralism. But the oil lobby has enormous influence over Congress and deep pockets. World oil reserves are depleting faster than expected.

If Canadians and non-Americans could vote in November, John Kerry would win in a landslide. George Bush is reviled around the world.

According to some polls, he is even regarded as a greater danger than Osama bin Laden. This is how low the U.S. has sunk in world esteem.

This makes many Americans shudder.

But Bush's heartland supporters couldn't care less about the rest of the world. To them, Bush is waging a holy war against Islamic terrorism, protecting civilization, and cutting taxes. They thrill to his flag-waving and ersatz patriotism.

Bush fans want a Texas Ranger as commander-in-chief, not a stuffy suit from Boston who doesn't even chew gum. That Kerry was a decorated veteran while Bush avoided service in Vietnam seems not to matter.

Besides, Kerry looks French.

Eric can be reached by e-mail at margolis@foreigncorrespondent.com


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: kerry; margolis; neocon; paleocon
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1 posted on 03/15/2004 8:37:11 PM PST by Frank T
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To: Frank T
And Margolis is a conservative? He's been on a Jihad against Bush and his administration for months.

The paleos have lost it if they've gone into LaRouche territory and embrace quasi-socialist Democrat leaders like John Kerry.
2 posted on 03/15/2004 8:40:22 PM PST by Frank T
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To: Frank T
However, being educated and sophisticated is not a political asset in America's heartland - parts of the midwest, mountain states, and south, where Bush is often venerated with the kind of mindless adulation North Koreans shower on their "Beloved Leader," Kim Jong-il.

Funny she should mention the NKs. They want Kerry to be president bad.

3 posted on 03/15/2004 8:42:34 PM PST by finnman69 (cum puella incedit minore medio corpore sub quo manifestus globus, inflammare animos)
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To: Frank T
All who lave our country should be extremely glad that Bush is not anything that John Kerry is. Now, if we could just get Bush to be what he is and stnd away from the smug culture that surrounds him.
4 posted on 03/15/2004 8:42:53 PM PST by AmericanVictory (Should we be more like them, or they like us?)
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To: Frank T
owever, being educated and sophisticated is not a political asset in America's heartland - parts of the midwest, mountain states, and south,...

Ultimate snobbery.

5 posted on 03/15/2004 8:43:18 PM PST by TankerKC (Clogged Arteries and Still Smilin'!)
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To: Frank T
LOL. I don't even get mad over articles like these anymore. It's not worth it.
6 posted on 03/15/2004 8:43:43 PM PST by ServesURight (FReecerely Yours,)
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To: Frank T
For Kerry to make such terrible remarks about the President's foreign policy during war is treasonous in my opinion. He can disagree with it, but the way he is running him down is just reprehensible, and hopefully the people of this nation will be turned off by it.
7 posted on 03/15/2004 8:44:27 PM PST by ladyinred (democrats have blood on their hands!)
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To: Frank T
By "French," the Bushite must have meant well educated, articulate, dignified, sophisticated, worldly -

ROFLMAO!!! I don't think I've ever heard that word used in that context.

8 posted on 03/15/2004 8:45:20 PM PST by PeoplesRepublicOfWashington
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To: Frank T
Bush and his neo-con mentors blundered the U.S. into twin hornets' nests in Afghanistan and Iraq

Whatever. "Blunder" is not the verb I would choose. "Everybody" except the terrorists supported the Afghan thing, and Iraq was a calulated risk taking operation, with high rewards if it works, and some payoff even if it does not. In any event, the latter was a great humaniarian gesture. And I support those kinds of "adventures." It is what makes this great land of ours so special and splendid.

9 posted on 03/15/2004 8:46:30 PM PST by Torie
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To: TankerKC
I think it is rather a mark of distinction that Dubya came away from Yale without sounding and acting like some effete pompous snob.

Everything Bush is not is EXACTLY right.
10 posted on 03/15/2004 8:47:13 PM PST by Frank_Discussion (May the wings of Liberty never lose a feather!)
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To: Frank T
"Kerry is everything George Bush is not"

True. But that's no compliment to Kerry.

11 posted on 03/15/2004 8:47:26 PM PST by nepdap
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To: Frank T
This is the most erudite piece of sarcasm I have ever read. Nobody could ever really write by French, the "bushite" must have meant educated, articulate, dignified, sophisticated, worldly....with a straight face and mean it.
12 posted on 03/15/2004 8:47:51 PM PST by vetvetdoug
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To: Frank T
But Bush's heartland supporters couldn't care less about the rest of the world.

Pretty much sums up the truth in this "article".

13 posted on 03/15/2004 8:48:42 PM PST by StevieB
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To: Frank T
By "French," the Bushite must have meant well educated, articulate, dignified, sophisticated, worldly - everything President George W. Bush, who likes to play tough Texas Ranger, is not.

The "French"? They are naive, cowardly, completely unable to acticulate a consistant argument other than surrender to anybody who threatens them.

Bush makes the French (by the way I am of French ancestry) look like the pretend intellectuals and genuine cowards they really are. They make me sick. I thank God every day that my ancestors escaped from France.

14 posted on 03/15/2004 8:50:11 PM PST by Jorge
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To: Frank T
How about by "French" the Bushite must have meant Kerry was arrogant, devoid of principles or morals, self-agrandizing and thinks he's better than everyone else. A "stuck-up sticky beak" as Monty Python would say. All the faults of the Poofters and none of their occasional charm.
15 posted on 03/15/2004 8:51:11 PM PST by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo [Gallia][Germania][Arabia] Esse Delendam --- Select One or More as needed)
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To: Frank T
owhhhh.... I taste bile!... sorry I allmost just hurled.
16 posted on 03/15/2004 8:53:50 PM PST by arly
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To: Frank T
The author is under the mistaken impression that 1. canada is held in high regard ANYWHERE 2. the french actually matter.

Seriously, Canada's esteeme is based on their irrelevance. Canada has and is nothing more than a usa anex created to deposit the loosers of the revolution. They should just end the canadian experiment http://www.unitednorthamerica.org

Remember people, these are the same wackos who reviled Reagan as he lead the US to victory in the cold war. Reagan was visonary in not just containing the commies but wiping them out.

Bush has reshaped the middleeast and has done more for the reagon's potential for a peaceful future than any nation.
17 posted on 03/15/2004 8:55:54 PM PST by longtermmemmory (Vote!)
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To: TankerKC
What I don't get is why he's ragging on the midwest, mountain area, the South, etc. For supposedly original conservatives, wouldn't a paleocon be an advocate for traditionalists from those regions? It just underscores how phoney these "conservatives" are, and their lack of credibility when they use the ill-defined term neoconservative.
18 posted on 03/15/2004 8:56:23 PM PST by Frank T
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To: Frank T
I dont know how he considers himself conservative. Sounds like the typical liberal "The democrat is brilliant, wise, worldly, and sophisticated and the republican is just a big dummy who doesnt understand the world" stuff.

Remember, the press has said made out every republican since at least 1964 put to be either a complete idiot, or totally evil.
Barry Goldwater: Evil lunatic
Richard Nixon: Evil genius
Gerald Ford: Stumbling idiot
Ronald Reagan: B-movie actor idiot whos monkey costar was smarter
George HW Bush: Can Barely put to sentences together
Bob Dole: Boring old stiff who doesnt get it (i.e. neo-idiot)
George W. Bush: Amazingly, Idiot AND Evil Genius

19 posted on 03/15/2004 8:56:40 PM PST by pepsi_junkie
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To: Frank T
The title of the article is absolutely correct.

Kerry is:
an unashamed liberal
coward
anti-American
pro-Communist
liar
crook
makes more waffles than an IHOP
terrorist appeaser
hates the military
loves the UN
anti-capitalism and staunchly pro-socialism
never met a tax he didn't like
never met a dictator he didn't like
despises the need to defend freedom
a strong, principled leader in a time of war

Feel free to add to the list - but in fact, Kerry is everything that Bush is not.

20 posted on 03/15/2004 8:58:26 PM PST by Ophiucus
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