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No lie: Kerry's just a wannabe
Chicago Sun Times ^ | 4/4/04 | Mark Steyn

Posted on 04/04/2004 7:42:26 AM PDT by chiller

For a year or so now, I've woken up to a ton of e-mails each morning with the subject marked BUSH LIED! -- or, to be more precise, BUSH LIED!!!!!!! I'm not one who thinks it helpful to characterize a policy difference as a ''lie.'' So, when John Kerry says he supports the Kyoto Treaty even though he voted for a bill that declared the United States would never ever ratify it, that doesn't mean he's a ''liar,'' it just means that, well, to be honest, I haven't a clue what it means, you better to take it up with him, now he's out of the hospital after his elective surgery. ''Elective surgery" means you vote to have the operation, and then spend the next year insisting you've always been strongly opposed to the operation.

Anyway, as I said, I wouldn't call Sen. Kerry a liar. But I did get the vague feeling in the following exchange that, if it had gone on a minute or two longer, the candidate's nose would have cracked my TV screen, extended across the coffee table and pinned me to the wall.

The time: last month; the place: MTV. The interviewer asks: ''Well, we know that you were into rock 'n' roll when you were in high school, and we know that you play the guitar now. Are there any trends out there in music, or even in popular culture in general, that have piqued your interest?''

''Oh sure. I follow and I'm interested,'' says John Kerry. ''I'm fascinated by rap and by hip-hop. I think there's a lot of poetry in it. There's a lot of anger, a lot of social energy in it. And I think you'd better listen to it pretty carefully, 'cause it's important . . . I'm still listening because I know that it's a reflection of the street and it's a reflection of life.''

Really? You're ''fascinated'' by rap and ''listening'' to hip-hop? You're America's first flip-flopper hip-hopper?

The best riposte to Kerry came from an encounter a few years ago between his predecessor Al Gore and Courtney Love, lead singer of the popular beat combo Hole, when they chanced to run into each other at a Democratic party night in Hollywood.

''I'm a really big fan,'' gushed the vice president.

''Yeah, right. Name a song,'' scoffed Courtney. The panicked vice panderer floundered helplessly. Fortunately, his Secret Service guys moved in before he wound up completely riddled by Hole. As wise old campaign consultants always say, the politician's First Rule of Holes is: When you're in one, stop digging. Al introduced us to a Second Rule: When you're with one, stop pretending to dig her.

If only that MTV guy had said to Kerry, ''Yeah, right. Name a song.'' Think Kerry could've? Reckon if you bust into his pad and riffled through his and Teresa's CD collection you'd find a single rap album? Of course, you wouldn't find any in George and Laura's CD collection either. The difference is that President Bush doesn't feel the need to pretend.

Margaret Thatcher didn't either. Interviewed by disc jockeys on London radio stations and invited to name her favorite pop song, she'd choose the Beverly Sisters' British cover version of ''How Much Is That Doggie in the Window?'' or the Australian didgeridoo virtuoso Rolf Harris' ''Two Little Boys.'' The title of ''How Much Is That Doggie in the Window?'' is the very definition of compassionate conservatism -- the vocalist's compassion for the confined puppy shrewdly tempered by cost-benefit analysis. As for ''Two Little Boys,'' that was written in 1902 and seemed kinda hokey even then:

''Two Little Boys

Had two little toys

Each had a wooden horse

Gaily they'd play

Each summer's day

Warriors both of course''

To the old taunt ''Be there or be square,'' Thatcher replies, ''Go ahead, punk/hip-hopper/techno-industrial-garage-house-wraparound-porch beatnik, make my day. I'll be there and be square.'' That's much cooler than a 60-year old Botoxicated Brahmin from the U.S. Senate recycling a lot of 20-year-old cliches about rap being the authentic voice of the streets.

By comparison, here's Gov. Bush four years ago being given a ''verbal Rorschach'' test on American pop culture by Glamour magazine: What comes to mind, David France wanted to know, when you think of Madonna?

''I'm not into pop music,'' replied Bush.

Boy, that MTV special would have been a short one. Stunned by the candidate's ignorance, Maureen Dowd, the New York Times' elderly schoolgirl, wrote a column mocking him for never having heard of ''Sex and the City,'' beginning as follows:

''W. may have gone too far this time.

''Americans can forgive him not knowing that Gen. Pervez Musharraf seized power in Pakistan.

''But can we forgive him not knowing that Sarah Jessica Parker quaffs Cosmopolitans in Manhattan?''

Answer: Yes. Unlike Dowd, Americans are apparently willing to cut him some slack on this vital question. Some may even feel that his cheerful admission that ''I'm not into pop music'' is the sign of a man secure in his sense of himself.

This isn't entirely a matter of trivialities. The fads and fashions of the world aren't confined to the Billboard Hot 100. All over the planet, men in late middle age are pretending to like stuff just 'cause it's what the likes of Maureen Dowd tell them people want to hear. John Kerry pretends to like gangsta rap. Russia pretends it supports the Kyoto Accord. The European Union pretends Yasser Arafat is committed to peace with Israel. The Security Council pretends its resolutions mean something. Kofi Annan pretends the Oil-for-Fraud program is a humanitarian aid effort for the Iraqi people. The International Atomic Energy Authority pretends the mullahs in Tehran are good-faith negotiators on the matter of Iranian nukes.

It's easy to pander to fashion -- whether on pop music, the environment, the Middle East ''peace process'' or sentimental transnationalism. But on MTV, Kerry wasn't done yet. After coming out for hip-hop, he managed to blame the Bush administration's ''behavior'' for making terrorists become terrorists. I guess that terrorism's just a ''reflection of the street,'' too. Doubtless there's ''a lot of anger, a lot of social energy in it.'' The MTV crowd loved the line, and no doubt Jacques Chirac and the Arab League will as well. Welcome to John Kerry's hip-hop foreign policy: Ask the multilateral gang what's hip, and hop to it.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: kerry; marksteyn; steyn
Some Steyn classic lines within. Classic.
1 posted on 04/04/2004 7:42:27 AM PDT by chiller
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To: chiller
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2 posted on 04/04/2004 7:43:11 AM PDT by glock rocks (Only YOU can stop fundraisers. Small monthly donations from each of us can do it !!)
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To: chiller; Dog Gone; okie01; PhiKapMom; Miss Marple; sinkspur; BibChr; Sabertooth; Robert Teesdale
This is one of his best columns yet. Although I imagine that Steyn would be the first to admit that this year's Dems, liberals, anti-war nutbars and international "leaders" presents an incredibly target-rich environment.
3 posted on 04/04/2004 7:48:56 AM PDT by dirtboy (Howard, we hardly knew ye. Not that we're complaining, mind you...)
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To: chiller
Welcome to John Kerry's hip-hop foreign policy: Ask the multilateral gang what's hip, and hop to it.
Excellent.
4 posted on 04/04/2004 8:03:53 AM PDT by samtheman
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To: chiller
John Kerry, War Hero(www.larrythecableguy.com/commentary/2004/february/0204a.htm)

Well it looks like the Democrats got their man. John Kerry, a decorated war hero. And don't think he won't tell ya about it. He brings up his military record like a bulimic after noon lunch! What ya won¹t hear him tell ya is that he voted for all the base closings during the porno administration. He also boasts that he threw out his own medals cause he didn't agree with the war in Vietnam. Which is all in his right, but apparently he threw away his buddy's medals and actually kept his. What else won't he tell ya? He won't tell ya that in a speech 10 years ago when he was running for office is that he thought we should run on issues and not military service. Now that's all he talks about. Gee, how times have changed. I guess Bush was only in the National Guard. Apparently John Kerry and his buddies think only pussies and retards join the National Guard. Therefore, Bush and everybody that has joined the Guard must be pussies. Ask all them National Guardsmen kicking rag head's ass over in sand land if only pussies join the guard. Ask other troops that have been helped out by guardsmen taking enemy fire if they think they're pussies. Look, God bless John Kerry for serving in Vietnam but that don't make him the next John Wayne or Fonzie. Ya think terrorist care about who served where or who shot who? Hell no! For being in the National Guard Bush sure kicked the camel crap outta them sumbitches! God bless the National Guard. These boys leave their families behind to help protect our freedoms but apparently John Kerry thinks there not on the same level as him and his medals. And don't think he won't tell ya about em! Like John Kerry said to a friend, "Hey, did I mention I'm a war hero?"

5 posted on 04/04/2004 8:05:49 AM PDT by kinghorse
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To: chiller

Support Free Republic
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6 posted on 04/04/2004 8:23:24 AM PDT by Lady Jag (I dreamed I surfed all day in my monthly donor wonder bra.)
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To: sciencediet

7 posted on 04/04/2004 8:25:37 AM PDT by Lady Jag (I dreamed I surfed all day in my monthly donor wonder bra.)
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To: chiller
bump
8 posted on 04/04/2004 8:39:09 AM PDT by RippleFire
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To: dirtboy
Thanks for the ping. I wouldn't have wanted to miss this column.
9 posted on 04/04/2004 8:40:04 AM PDT by Dog Gone (End Freepathons. Join the Dollar a Day Club!)
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To: chiller
Steyn is correc, of course. You lie about what music you want to pander to the young and black vote, you will lie about taxes, marriage, abortion, judicial appointments, etc.

Oh, I loved it when Al Gore made a fool of himself (again) when this happened:

''I'm a really big fan,'' gushed the vice president.

''Yeah, right. Name a song,'' scoffed Courtney.

I don't know any of her "songs" either, but I could have guessed.

"Errr..hmmm...well, I really liked the tune of My Drug Dealer Lost His Pager and I enjoyed the lyrics of Stuff Your Dollars in my G-String, but overall Courtney my I guess my overall favorite is My 10 Year Old Daughter is More Mature Than I am

10 posted on 04/04/2004 8:41:50 AM PDT by SkyPilot
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To: Pan_Yans Wife
Slam Dunk Ping
11 posted on 04/04/2004 8:42:10 AM PDT by Pan_Yan
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To: chiller
You're America's first flip-flopper hip-hopper?

You gotta love it!

12 posted on 04/04/2004 8:42:35 AM PDT by sydbas
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To: chiller
Margaret Thatcher didn't either. Interviewed by disc jockeys on London radio stations and invited to name her favorite pop song, she'd choose the Beverly Sisters' British cover version of ''How Much Is That Doggie in the Window?'' or the Australian didgeridoo virtuoso Rolf Harris' ''Two Little Boys.'' The title of ''How Much Is That Doggie in the Window?'' is the very definition of compassionate conservatism -- the vocalist's compassion for the confined puppy shrewdly tempered by cost-benefit analysis.

LOL. And you haven't lived until you've heard Rolf Harris' version of Stairway to Heaven!

13 posted on 04/04/2004 8:56:36 AM PDT by ride the whirlwind (GOP - grace over pressure)
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To: kinghorse
Not only Kerry "dis" all those serving in the Guard, he had the temerity to "dis" our allies in the Iraqi theater as being an illegitmate coalition, meaning nothing is legitimate unless it has:
1. Corrupt UN approval
2. Approval from France while they were benefiting from lucrative oil for munitions contracts with Hussein
3. Ditto for Germany.
4. Ditto Russia (while they were helping Hussien hide his WMD programs)
If this is Kerry's legitimate coalition, I'm deeply anxious about this year's election. Why is half of our country so damn foolish? Are they so busy being ignorant, listening to MTV and listening to rap?
14 posted on 04/04/2004 9:25:47 AM PDT by LA Conservative (evil triumphs when good men do nothing)
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