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Deep Throat and Genocide
The American Spectator ^ | 6-1-05 | Ben Stein

Posted on 06/01/2005 5:55:15 AM PDT by veronica

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To: Mo1
It's about the extra e in potato.

I heard it discussed on CSPIN this morning. An irate caller chastised the media for it's nitpicking and brought up Milbank's comments in his article.

161 posted on 06/01/2005 1:32:53 PM PDT by OldFriend (MAJOR TAMMY DUCKWORTH.....INSPIRATIONAL)
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To: TexasCajun
I think Sissy Matthews actually had a wet-dream on camera while idolizing one of his lifetime heroes.

Remember how the Old Media treated leaker Linda Tripp?

I would thank Olds Media for making Watergate the center of national discussion, enabling conservatives to finally deconstruct the myth of Watergate, except Olds Media didn't have conservative's best interest in mind when they did it.


                                       Olds Media sits and spins when the wheels come off.

162 posted on 06/01/2005 1:34:13 PM PDT by Milhous
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To: kabar

Dear kabar,

"I am always leery of using the WP as a source for anything especially anything to do with Watergate."

I don't blame you, but I've seen much of this reported elsewhere.

"I read the article and nowhere does it state that CREEP influenced the selection of the Dem nominee nor does it mention McGovern."

It certainly points to an attempt to influence the selection of the Democrat nominee:

"Law enforcement sources said that probably the best example of the sabotage was the fabrication by a White House aide -- of a celebrated letter to the editor alleging that Sen. Edmund S. Muskie (D-Maine) condoned a racial slur on Americans of French-Canadian descent as 'Canucks.'"

At the time, Mr. Muskie was the front-runner, and this clearly was an attempt to damage Mr. Muskie's candidacy. Did it have much of an effect? I don't know. Was it clearly an attempt to do so? Sure looks like it to me.

"All this article proves is that the GOP engaged in operations research against possible Dem opponents, the same way they do against Rep candidates."

Well, not quite. Even the part you cut and pasted, and then highlighted, belies that assertion:

"But federal investigators said what they uncovered being done by the Nixon forces is unprecedented in scope and intensity."

However, the assertion of the article is that it went beyond intelligence gathering:

"One federal investigative official said that Segretti played the role of 'just a small fish in a big pond.' According to FBI reports, at least 50 undercover Nixon operatives traveled throughout the country trying to disrupt and spy on Democratic campaigns.

"Both at the White House and within the President's re-election committee, the intelligence-sabotage operation was commonly called the 'offensive security' program of the Nixon forces, according to investigators."

Note, "DISRUPT and spy..." Disruption goes beyond intelligence-gathering.

And of course, we actually know that the CREEP resorted to illegal bugging for "intelligence-gathering" as well. If one wishes to say that others before did it, I won't disagree. Nonetheless, it is illegal, and it was part of a coordinated effort by the CREEP.

"You decide to use these three elections for analysis, but why not add 1976 to the mix to establish a longer term trend."

I chose 1964 and 1972 first because they were the closest to 1968, and thus would be most relevant to discussing trends. But also, 1964 showed great erosion in the "Solid South" for the Democrats, a trend that has continued to the present day, only interrupted by the Southern Democrat candidates - Mr. Carter and Mr. Clinton. That's why I didn't use 1976, as I'd stated elsewhere that southern states tend to return to the Democrat ticket when a Southerner heads the ticket, although Mr. Carter's first term was so disastrous that he oculdn't do even that.

Regarding some of the election results, by state, that you cite, I'll generally say just a few things. First, it's quite possible that without the influence of Mr. Wallace, states may have tipped differently. However, in some of the states that you cite, Mr. Wallace's voters would have had to have come at a very high cost to Mr. Humphrey. Let's look at Illinois. To say that Mr. Humphrey would have won if Mr. Wallace hadn't run, one must assume that Mr. Humphrey would have received about 70% of the votes that Mr. Wallace actually received.

In California, Mr. Humphrey would have needed more than 70% of Mr. Wallace's votes. Although I wouldn't entirely discount the possibility of that, these weren't Southern states where Mr. Wallace was stealing traditional Southern Democrat votes, but rather Northern and Western states that had often gone Republican.

"The 1964 civil rights act had an impact. It is problematic to extrapolate that impact to 1968."

Yes, it did. But it isn't at all difficult to extrapolate the impact to 1968 and beyond. Even though Republicans voted for the civil rights bills in higher proportions than Democrats, at a national level, a lot of folks who opposed these bills in the South punished the national Democrats, not the Republicans.

The dominance by the Republican Party in the South (except when Southerners lead the Democrat ticket) is in part a legacy of the reaction against the civil rights legislation of the 1960s.

"Informed of the general contents of this article, The White House referred all comment to The Committee for the Re-election of the President. A spokesman there said, 'The Post story is not only fiction but a collection of absurdities.'"

Well, unfortunately, in light of all that eventually came to light, this has even less credibility than articles from the Washington Post.

"'Their vote for Mr. Wallace may be seen as an aberration of that trend (accentuated since then, except when a Southern Democrat runs).'

"Not really. ALA, Miss, GA, AK and LA went for Stevenson in 1952 and again for Stevenson in 1956..."

Excuse me. I should have made clear that the trend was one that largely got going in 1964, and has continued to the present day.

"'As for Tennessee, Virginia, and Florida, Mr. Goldwater ran much stronger in these states than in the country as a whole. Had the national race not been as lopsided as it was, it is quite possible that Mr. Goldwater would have taken these states. In Florida, he took nearly 49% of the vote against President Johnson.'

"That is pure speculation."

Certainly it's speculation. LOL. What is any of this?? ;-)

But the point is that Florida did run far ahead of the country in 1964 for the Republican candidate. It may be speculation, but it is an entirely reasonable, plausible speculation that should Mr. Goldwater have lost, let's say, 55% - 45%, instead of 61% - 39%, that he may have eaked out an extra couple of percent in Florida (After all, the additional votes would have had to come from somewhere, and certainly some number would have come from Florida.).

"We will agree to disagree."

Okay.

"Nixon won a national election in 1968 by 500,000 votes."

Actually, I think he won by over 800,000 votes. Mr. Wallace received around 9.5 million votes, or a little under 13%:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:ElectoralCollege1968-Large.png

Who he helped more is of course a debatable point. Like I said, I used to think it was Mr. Nixon, by taking votes from Mr. Humphrey. But I don't think that the evidence clearly points toward that conclusion, especially as the years have gone by, those places from which Mr. Wallace drew most heavily have mostly trended Republican.

"I was just referring to your statement, 'I also don't think that Mr. Nixon's minions did anything different than previous presidents.'"

Then I ask to amend my previous comment to, "I also don't think that Mr. Nixon's minions did anything different than the minions of at least some previous presidents."

"What we saw in the case of Nixon was a witch hunt and lynching with a disproportionate reaction and punishment for a President's loyalty to his subordinates."

Well, my view is that it was certainly part witch-hunt, but it was also an adamant refusal by national Republicans to retain a felon as president.

"Clinton was not punished appropriately for his more serious crimes and has been rewarded and fawned over by the MSM ever since finishing his term of office."

I agree. But as I said, we Republicans evict our felons, the Dammocraps enshrine theirs.

"Nixon became a political pariah until he died."

I think that Mr. Nixon had achieved significant rehabilitation by the time he died, although he was certainly not without some stigma even to his dying day, or even since.

"There is no moral equivalency between these two men."

I agree. Mr. Nixon was, in the final analysis, a patriot who loved his country, however flawed he may have been. Mr. Clinton is a narcissist who loves only himself, in spite of whatever intellectual and political gifts he may have.

"And certainly, Nixon's performance in office dwarfs Clinton's pitiful achievements as President."

I don't know that I agree with that. Mr. Clinton took a lesson from the 1994 Republican takeover of Congress, and significantly trimmed his sails thereafter. By abdication, in many ways, he governed almost as a centrist Republican, especially on economic issues.

Mr. Nixon, however, was a vigorous president, and in retrospect, I take issue with any number of the things he did, including wage and price controls, controls on oil pricing in the aftermath of the 1973 Arab oil embargo, the EPA, affirmative action (started in the federal govt under Mr. Nixon), his handling of the Vietnam War, detente with the Soviet Union, the suggestion to provide every family with a guaranteed income (which some have pointed out eventually morphed into the Earned Income Tax Credit), and his cavalier treatment of the Fourth Amendment (which ultimately what all this bugging & stuff gets down to).

I don't think these were particularly conservative, or particularly good for the United States.

But I give him credit for being imaginative, creative, and trying hard to do right by his country.


sitetest


163 posted on 06/01/2005 1:54:24 PM PDT by sitetest (If Roe is not overturned, no unborn child will ever be protected in law.)
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To: veronica

bttt


164 posted on 06/01/2005 2:00:04 PM PDT by TEXOKIE
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To: arasina
"Ben Stein says it best."

He certainly did in this case...

Nixon's communist and media antagonists set out to politically impugn, slander and assassinate him -- AND the country they hate in the process.

As has already been proven as a constant, Democrats Kennedy, Johnson, Carter, and Clinton were corrupt, inept, and sloppy with running the country into the ground with nary a peep from the media, but a Republican had been be picture perfect OR strong like Reagan to be unaffected.

That Republicans must seemingly walk on eggshells or yield on principle, OR be driven out has not changed, has it?

MORE of a reason the steamroll the Democrats AND RINOs at EVERY opportunity (Hello Senate Pubbies)

165 posted on 06/01/2005 2:16:37 PM PDT by F16Fighter
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To: CIB-173RDABN

I agree with everything you say here. We were weakened as a nation. CArter came in and made it worse. Of course we can only blame ourselves because the republicans ran Jerry Ford and not Reagan.

I agree with some posts here that imply that Felt could hav been spying for Russia. I mean he effectively disposed of a president who was tough on the Russians and at the time was cozying up to China.

I think this should be looked into.

nav


166 posted on 06/01/2005 2:17:10 PM PDT by nikos1121
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To: sitetest
I don't blame you, but I've seen much of this reported elsewhere.

You persist in using the WP article as gospel and accept their characterization as being correct. Why? In the article, I quoted you something rather important, i.e., Informed of the general contents of this article, "The White House referred all comment to The Committee for the Re-election of the President. A spokesman there said, "The Post story is not only fiction but a collection of absurdities."

The WP was pushing a political agenda. They hated Nixon for a host of reasons. The article you cited was written by Woodward and Bernstein for God's sake. Do you consider them objective observers? It was written about a month before the 1972 election. Could it be possible they were trying to pull a Dan Rather? Your citing of the loaded words proves my point. This was a hit piece against the GOP and Nixon.

I chose 1964 and 1972 first because they were the closest to 1968, and thus would be most relevant to discussing trends. But also, 1964 showed great erosion in the "Solid South" for the Democrats, ...although Mr. Carter's first term was so disastrous that he oculdn't do even that.

My point is that three election cycles is not sufficient to see a trend. Clinton and Carter may or may not be blips in the long run. There are a number of variables that affect an election including the candidates, issues, events, and demographics. Things change.

1964 was a critical year for the Dems and the South. As I mentioned, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was a watershed event for the South. Upon signing the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Lyndon Johnson is said to have told aide Bill Moyers, "I think we have just delivered the South to the Republican Party for a long time to come." In 1968 Richard Nixon pursued the famous "Southern strategy," and the region split its votes between him and segregationist Democrat George Wallace, running on the populist American Independent ticket. Hubert Humphrey carried only one Southern state, LBJ's Texas.

The narrative breaks down, however, in 1976. That year Jimmy Carter, a pro-civil rights former governor of Georgia, carried every Southern state but Virginia. Mr. Carter would have lost without the South; the rest of the country gave Gerald Ford 228 electoral votes, to just 170 for Mr. Carter.

By 1976 there was a strong national consensus in favor of the Civil Rights Act. Not only was there never a serious movement to repeal it, but President Nixon had signed an executive order in 1971 expanding the use of racial preferences to provide opportunities for minorities in federal contracting.

Regarding some of the election results, by state, that you cite, I'll generally say just a few things. First, it's quite possible that without the influence of Mr. Wallace, states may have tipped differently. However, in some of the states that you cite, Mr. Wallace's voters would have had to have come at a very high cost to Mr. Humphrey.

I haven't gone through a detailed state by state analysis of the vote and how Wallace influenced it. Obviously, those states, which were won by Nixon in a close race would be the ones worthy of review along with those states won by Wallace or where he came in second in the voting. Wallace was a Democrat, so I have to assume that he received a higher proportion of Dem and Independent voters rather than GOP voters.

Actually, I think he won by over 800,000 votes. Mr. Wallace received around 9.5 million votes, or a little under 13%:

My reference shows about 500,000

1968 Election

Well, my view is that it was certainly part witch-hunt, but it was also an adamant refusal by national Republicans to retain a felon as president.

Should Ford have given him a pardon? He was not a felon until a court proves it.

The dominance by the Republican Party in the South (except when Southerners lead the Democrat ticket) is in part a legacy of the reaction against the civil rights legislation of the 1960s.

Does that hold true for Al Gore, Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter (the second time)? Virginia hasn't voted Democrat since 1964. It depends on what you call dominance and what constitutes the South. I find your exceptions meaningless.

I don't know that I agree with that. Mr. Clinton took a lesson from the 1994 Republican takeover of Congress, and significantly trimmed his sails thereafter. By abdication, in many ways, he governed almost as a centrist Republican, especially on economic issues.

Clinton's few accomplishments: welfare reform (he vetoed it three times), and deficit reduction were really the product of a GOP controlled Congress. While Clinton was preoccupied with satisfying his sexual urges in the Oval Office, al-Qaeda was attacking US targets repeatedly without any real response from us (including the East Africa embassy bombings, which killed or wounded 5,000 people), the North Koreans were developing nuclear weapons, and our military and intelligence capabilities were going to hell in a handbasket. Clinton was a disaster as far as foreign policy was concerned and we are still reaping the results. His pardons at the end of his administration were a disgrace.

Mr. Nixon, however, was a vigorous president, and in retrospect, I take issue with any number of the things he did, including wage and price controls, controls on oil pricing in the aftermath of the 1973 Arab oil embargo, the EPA, affirmative action (started in the federal govt under Mr. Nixon), his handling of the Vietnam War, detente with the Soviet Union, the suggestion to provide every family with a guaranteed income (which some have pointed out eventually morphed into the Earned Income Tax Credit), and his cavalier treatment of the Fourth Amendment (which ultimately what all this bugging & stuff gets down to).

I don't think these were particularly conservative, or particularly good for the United States.

I find it interesting that you can run down a litany of things you don't like about Nixon and say very little negatively about Clinton's performance. I think I understand where you are coming from. FWIW, I think Nixon was a far better President than Clinton, especially in foreign policy.

167 posted on 06/01/2005 3:16:21 PM PDT by kabar
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To: astounded; veronica

<< Nixon was not a ..."lying conniving seducer like Clinton...".

I think the correct phrase here is not "seducer" but "serial rapist". Clinton is a common criminal, not a good 'ol boy politician, who was indicted (by impeachment) but not convicted by the good 'ol boy network of cronies and thieves who comprise the US Senate. So, too, his "wife" is a criminal, who has yet to be indicted, but that would be too much to expect given her tentacles into too many folks. >>

Spot on.

Thank you.


168 posted on 06/01/2005 3:22:22 PM PDT by Brian Allen (The government solution to a problem is usually as bad as the problem -- Milton Friedman)
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To: veronica

Brilliant piece, V.

Thank you -- B A


169 posted on 06/01/2005 3:23:08 PM PDT by Brian Allen (The government solution to a problem is usually as bad as the problem -- Milton Friedman)
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To: A Jovial Cad; bejaykay

<< And would Nixon have prevented the killing fields? I tend to doubt it

Then your historical ignorance is the equal of your snarky arrogance.

EOM. >>

Well said -- B A


170 posted on 06/01/2005 3:24:42 PM PDT by Brian Allen (The government solution to a problem is usually as bad as the problem -- Milton Friedman)
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To: PISANO
Does anyone remember a certain someone whose entire life was ruined because SHE DID THE RIGHT THING and spilled the beans when proded by a friend to commit a felony to protect criminal PRESIDENT?

Hmmm...L.T., Lawrence Taylor? ...Linda Tripp. :D

171 posted on 06/01/2005 4:09:07 PM PDT by skinkinthegrass (Just because you're paranoid, doesn't mean they aren't out to get you :^)
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To: veronica

Wage and Price controls...'nuff said


172 posted on 06/01/2005 4:10:53 PM PDT by Cruising Speed
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To: kabar
In 1972 Ted Kennedy was not even in the running for the Presidency. He had been in the Senate for 10 years and had no interest in running for President after having his two brothers assassinated. He was just 40 years old.

Agree...and he Sen. "Swimmer" (HIC!) Kennedy still had water in his ears, after "his little" swim off the (Chappaquiddick..7/18/69) Bridge in Martha VineYards.

173 posted on 06/01/2005 4:22:42 PM PDT by skinkinthegrass (Just because you're paranoid, doesn't mean they aren't out to get you :^)
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To: skinkinthegrass
Good point. I forgot how close that occurred to 1972. It is amazing he ever tried to run given that incident. Like Clinton, Kennedy has no shame.
174 posted on 06/01/2005 5:05:32 PM PDT by kabar
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To: Uhhuh35

Nixon didn't have anything to do with the break-in. Just the cover-up.


175 posted on 06/01/2005 5:05:49 PM PDT by No Longer Free State (As the Arabic saying has it: The caravan will continue its journey even if the wolves howl along the)
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To: Jedidah
Nixon campaigned on that same promise in 1968, saying that he had a "secret plan," but didn't get around to actually pulling troops out until the fall of '72. It was the October surprise of the 1972 election. That's four years of death in Vietnam under his watch.

May 14, 1969 - During his first TV speech on Vietnam, President Nixon presents a peace plan in which America and North Vietnam would simultaneously pull out of South Vietnam over the next year. The offer is rejected by Hanoi.

June 8, 1969 - President Nixon meets South Vietnam's President Nguyen Van Thieu at Midway Island and informs him U.S. troop levels are going to be sharply reduced. During a press briefing with Thieu, Nixon announces "Vietnamization" of the war and a U.S. troop withdrawal of 25,000 men.

June 27, 1969 - Life magazine displays portrait photos of all 242 Americans killed in Vietnam during the previous week, including the 46 killed at 'Hamburger Hill.' The photos have a stunning impact on Americans nationwide as they view the once smiling young faces of the dead.

July 1969 - President Nixon, through a French emissary, sends a secret letter to Ho Chi Minh urging him to settle the war, while at the same time threatening to resume bombing if peace talks remain stalled as of November 1. In August, Hanoi responds by repeating earlier demands for Viet Cong participation in a coalition government in South Vietnam.

July 8, 1969 - The very first U.S. troop withdrawal occurs as 800 men from the 9th Infantry Division are sent home. The phased troop withdrawal will occur in 14 stages from July 1969 through November 1972.

There were over 500,000 U.S. troops in and around South Vietnam in June 1969. Were we supposed to just pack up and leave, handing a victory to the communist after taking 30,000 dead for nothing? How would you have arranged a withdrawal from an ally in the South East Asia Treaty Organization during the Cold War? How old are you?

176 posted on 06/01/2005 5:13:55 PM PDT by neverdem (May you be in heaven a half hour before the devil knows that you're dead.)
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To: astounded

Don't guess the MSM really pays attention to such crimes as BODY COUNTS, rape, and other crimes that the Clinton's have in their closets. "Crime" is open to loose interpretation by some.


177 posted on 06/01/2005 5:17:37 PM PDT by cynblogger
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To: cuteconservativechick

Read this thread and you'll get the gist of what the MSM won't tell you....as to "why now".....I heard the family wants MONEY......AND, as to whether he's taking the Fall for someone else....I doubt it, but that's just ME.


178 posted on 06/01/2005 5:25:07 PM PDT by goodnesswins (Our military......the world's HEROES!)
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To: OldFriend

What is wrong with the word "hop?"


179 posted on 06/01/2005 5:26:17 PM PDT by goodnesswins (Our military......the world's HEROES!)
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To: OldFriend
Her heinous worked to deny Richard Nixon the right to have an attorney. This MUST become a major part of a 'Swift Boat Vets-type ad' if/when Hillary runs in 2008. It's a MAJOR item!

az

180 posted on 06/01/2005 5:29:08 PM PDT by Arizona
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