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Thoughts on two states, two Americas
Oak Lawn (IL) Reporter ^ | 2/5/04 | Michael M. Bates

Posted on 02/03/2004 5:27:11 AM PST by mikeb704

This is written the day before this year’s first Super Tuesday. Voters in seven states will cast ballots for a challenger to President Bush.

John "Botox Boy" Kerry is, according to the pundits, the obvious front-runner. With enough victories tomorrow, he may have a lock on the nomination they say.

What makes Mr. Kerry the front-runner? Well, it’s mainly because he won both the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary and has rapidly gained strength because of that.

Howard Dean’s primal scream therapy may have played a role, but the principal reason for Mr. Kerry leading the pack is he won in those two states.

That doesn’t make much sense. Iowa sends a measly 45 delegates to the Democratic convention. That’s 45 out of the 2,161 delegates it takes to win the nomination.

Senator Kerry, who served in Vietnam and really should publicize that fact more because no one knows it, won a whopping 20 of those Iowa delegates.

That’s only part of the story. Iowa has close to 1.8 million registered voters. Less than seven percent of that number participated in the Democratic caucuses.

There’s a similar pattern in New Hampshire. It represents just 27 delegates of the necessary 2,161. John Kerry picked up 13 of them.

The Live Free or Die state has almost 700,000 registered voters. Less than a third voted in the Democratic primary.

Nevertheless, many in the media decided those two victories make John Kerry a heavy favorite. If, as expected, he wins most if not all of this week’s primaries, there’ll be no stopping him.

Voters got the media’s message and the Massachusetts senator, who ranked behind Al Sharpton in a CBS News poll six weeks ago, is enjoying a skyrocketing popularity. And not just among those lobbyists he’s taken so much money from over his long senate career.

Mr. Kerry has won a very small percentage of the delegates he needs for the nomination. Sure, the results from Iowa and New Hampshire have some significance, but must they be interpreted as make or break crucial? I don’t think so.

North Carolina’s John Edwards probably won’t be the Democrat’s selection for president this year, but he’s moved from obscurity to appearing on news programs more often than the Ditech commercials. Pretty hair isn’t all he’s got going for him.

His stump speech promises to end the "two Americas" that exist. We have two nations you see, one for the rich and one for everybody else.

Ah, the old class struggle routine again. It’s worked for Communists and their philosophical descendents, Leftist Democrats (forgive the redundancy), for many years. Still, it’s very thoughtful for Mr. Edwards, whose financial disclosure statements place his assets at as much as $36 million, to care about the rest of us.

Mr. Edwards harps on one particular statistic: There are, he moans over and over, 35 million Americans living in poverty.

That figure came from a Census Bureau report. As the Heritage Foundation points out, however, living in poverty in today’s America doesn’t necessarily mean the grinding destitution many people imagine.

A study released last month by the Washington think tank includes some interesting data from various government reports. Over forty percent of those households defined as poor own their own home. More than three-quarters have air conditioning. The "average" poor American has more living space than the "average" person living in Paris, London or Athens.

Better than three-quarters of poor households have a car and 97 percent own at least one color television. More than half subscribe to cable or satellite TV.

I’m not arguing that being poor is a day at the beach. What I am saying is that a considerable proportion of Americans living in what is defined as poverty has a living standard that would be envied by most of the world.

Undoubtedly there are people who struggle to make it from day to day. Through no fault of their own, they find themselves in distress and in need of help.

This in itself is an indictment of the Kennedy-Johnson war on poverty. Two generations and trillions of dollars later, we still have 35 million fellow citizens living in poverty.

Clearly, Washington is incapable of effectively tackling the problem. Perhaps Senator Edwards is right: we do have two Americas. The one that recognizes government isn’t the answer and the one, like John Edwards and his comrades, who haven’t figured it out yet.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Illinois
KEYWORDS: 2004; edwards; iowa; kerry; newhampshire; poverty; primaries
John Edwards is a real man of the people. Yeah, right.
1 posted on 02/03/2004 5:27:13 AM PST by mikeb704
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To: mikeb704
Focus

Keep the faith and hang in there,
We need you, don’t lose sight.
Your support and yes your vote,
Will make this come out right.
It’s early yet but time moves fast,
So please don’t wait too long.
Let’s pull together once again,
To keep our country strong.
Kerry, Clark, or Howard Dean,
Who knows which one will be.
The one the democrats will pick,
To be their nominee.
The lucky winner gets to run,
A race he must not win.
Yes come November Oh Oh Four,
George Bush it is again!

Conspiracy Guy 1/27/04
2 posted on 02/03/2004 5:31:13 AM PST by Conspiracy Guy (This tagline is made from 100% virtual material. Do not remove under penalty of law.)
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To: mikeb704
And I wonder by which means he intends to solve the "Two Americas" problem.

Being a Democrat, he probably means foced disarmament of the citizens, followed by shipping us to re-education camps in Alaska.

If he tries that, what he'll GET is armed revolt and rebellion.

3 posted on 02/03/2004 6:22:37 AM PST by FierceDraka (Service and Glory!)
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To: mikeb704
The real economic issue for Americans is their future and children's future outlook. Biggest concern is corporate outsourcing and illegal immigration. Both are depressing wages and opportunities. If the Dems leverage this issue they can win 2004 because the GOP is asking the average American to trust free markets managed mainly by corporate America. An entity that is educated in college that the concept of sovereign state is "old fashion" and that the future is globalism and internationalism. US corporations no longer open their meetings with the pledge of allegiance to the flag, the US flag is removed from most meetings because we do not want to offend non US stockholders. Symbolicly this is very important and represents the mindset of our CEO's. If the GOP keeps wedding themselves to corporate America, the Dems will use it to beat us over the head with.
4 posted on 02/03/2004 6:27:34 AM PST by Fee
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To: FierceDraka
"shipping us to re-education camps in Alaska".


LOL. Sounds like a Terminator novel I read by SM Stirling. Skynet was aided by liberal human hating hippies who rounded people up to Alaska.
5 posted on 02/03/2004 6:41:23 AM PST by LongsforReagan (Republicans for Sharpton!)
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Comment #6 Removed by Moderator

To: mikeb704
Ah, the old class struggle routine again. It’s worked for Communists and their philosophical descendents, Leftist Democrats (forgive the redundancy), for many years. Still, it’s very thoughtful for Mr. Edwards, whose financial disclosure statements place his assets at as much as $36 million, to care about the rest of us.

Ummm. WHICH redundancy? Communists and Leftists? Communists and Democrats? Or Leftists and Democrats? They're ALL redundant.

7 posted on 02/03/2004 8:09:08 AM PST by spacewarp (Visit the American Patriot Party and stay a while. http://www.patriotparty.us)
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To: mikeb704
Better than three-quarters of poor households have a car and 97 percent own at least one color television. More than half subscribe to cable or satellite TV.

The Left concludes that the poor are poor because the rich are rich, and that there is no possibility that ANY of the above described are where they are by CHOICE.

It also is beyond their understanding that targeting the rich (read entrepreneurs, investors, employers) inescapably has negative repercussions to the poor.

8 posted on 02/03/2004 8:29:03 AM PST by wayoverontheright
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To: mikeb704
A study released last month by the Washington think tank includes some interesting data from various government reports. Over forty percent of those households defined as poor own their own home. More than three-quarters have air conditioning. The "average" poor American has more living space than the "average" person living in Paris, London or Athens.

Better than three-quarters of poor households have a car and 97 percent own at least one color television. More than half subscribe to cable or satellite TV.

I’m not arguing that being poor is a day at the beach. What I am saying is that a considerable proportion of Americans living in what is defined as poverty has a living standard that would be envied by most of the world.

9 posted on 02/03/2004 9:29:38 AM PST by happygrl (We are Dar al-Harb* — and proud of it.)
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To: Fee
Nothing the Democrats espouse, with the possible exception of returning to Clinton's anti-terrorism strategies, is as confused, contradictory, and ridiculous as their sworn determination to destroy "Corporate America" and their solemn promise "bring back manufacturing jobs." Does it matter that manufacturing is just about entirely a large, corporate enterprise? No, it doesn't seem to.

The Democrats are bellowing to their base, and in the process insulting the intelligence of both their constituents and the swing voters they hope to attract. Would you believe any Republican rhetoric "distancing" the Bush administration from Corporate Capitalism? Would it help? Or would he just look as phony as the Democrats look now? There is no thinking going on in the Democrat mind, outside of conniving up the next way to deceive the public. We don't need any more of that kind of politics. Solutions to the problems posed by Globalism and outsourcing will not be found in protectionism, and Democrat style anti business recession. And those solutions certainly aren't to be found anywhere in the current sludge of political rhetoric.

10 posted on 02/03/2004 9:32:14 AM PST by Richard Axtell
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To: LongsforReagan; FierceDraka
"shipping us to re-education camps in Alaska".

This would be really annoying to those of us who know how wonderful Alaska is, and want it to remain that way.

11 posted on 02/03/2004 9:32:32 AM PST by happygrl (We are Dar al-Harb* — and proud of it.)
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To: FierceDraka
Or maybe he just wants to - has anyone ever tried this? - redistribute the wealth.

Believe it was Bastiat who said government was: "That legal fiction by which everyone attempts to live at the expense of everyone else."

12 posted on 02/03/2004 11:36:45 AM PST by mikeb704
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To: Fee
If the GOP keeps wedding themselves to corporate America, the Dems will use it to beat us over the head with.

The Dems have been doing that for decades, all the while scarfing up big bucks from the fat cats they claim are rock-ribbed Repubs.

13 posted on 02/03/2004 11:38:52 AM PST by mikeb704
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To: Conspiracy Guy
What's the tune that goes with that?
14 posted on 02/03/2004 11:39:22 AM PST by mikeb704
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To: spacewarp
Absolutely correct.
15 posted on 02/03/2004 11:40:29 AM PST by mikeb704
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To: wayoverontheright
It also is beyond their understanding that targeting the rich (read entrepreneurs, investors, employers) inescapably has negative repercussions to the poor.

Good point. I also think there's in some instances more than a little envy involved.

16 posted on 02/03/2004 11:42:25 AM PST by mikeb704
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To: mikeb704
It's a lyrical poem but I don't write music. Pick a tune and sing it.

CG
17 posted on 02/03/2004 11:56:34 AM PST by Conspiracy Guy (This tagline is made from 100% virtual material. Do not remove under penalty of law.)
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To: LongsforReagan
LOL. Sounds like a Terminator novel I read by SM Stirling. Skynet was aided by liberal human hating hippies who rounded people up to Alaska.

Rrreally... What was it called?

/big fan of Stirling's stuff (obviously)

18 posted on 02/03/2004 1:25:20 PM PST by FierceDraka (Service and Glory!)
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