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Key Group Endorses Dem
Security Moms? Phooey. By Ed Moltzen · 30 September 2004
The Left's "Rathergate"
There's a lot of self-congratulatory back-patting going on among some lefty bloggers for MSNBC's decision to drop Republican pollster Frank Luntz from its presidential debate coverage. (Luntz was going to perform a live "focus group" meeting measuring response of voters to the debate in its aftermath.) A few liberals complained to the network that Luntz might not be impartial. Unlike Dan Rather at CBS, though, nobody seemed to present any actual problems with Luntz's work product - past or present (just Luntz's connections and party registration.) If anything, Luntz's work in the recent past seemed somewhat accurate. No word from CNN on whether it will drop James Carville and/or Paul Begala - now advisors to Sen. John Kerry's presidential campaign - from its campaign coverage; or from MSNBC on whether it will drop Chris Matthews, a former aide to the late Tip O'Neill, the legendary Democratic speaker of the House; or from ABC News on whether it will drop former top aide to President Clinton, George Stephanopolous, from its coverage. By Ed Moltzen · 30 September 2004
NY Times Correction Du Jour
Well, The Times is now going to layer its corrections:
There's more, too. There will still be "Editor's Notes," which address "lapses in fairness." The paper doesn't say, but it's unlikely any changes will be made to the paper's corrections policy for opinion columnists. By Ed Moltzen · 30 September 2004
Scott Muni, RIP
Allan Sniffen at the New York Radio Message Board reports that New York radio legend Scott Muni died last night. Muni was, for years, the deep, velvet-throated voice behind album rock at WNEW-FM (in the pre-Opie & Anthony days.) MORE: Commenter Rob Jeantet left this on an earlier post regarding Muni's stroke last year:
By Ed Moltzen · 29 September 2004
If You Can't Bring The Apple To Hollywood...
Actually, the boys on the right are touting New York City's effort to lure the film and video industry into the Big Apple (with tax incentives and other regulatory help) - an effort that has landed production of Mel Brooks' "The Producers: The Movie Musical" production in the city starting later this year. The entertainment industry is responsible for about 100,000 jobs in New York City. Let's hope it's easier to get tickets for the movie. By Ed Moltzen · 29 September 2004
Soros Deconstructed
George Soros gave a speech today. How about a look-see? Here goes:
One could say "President Bush is endangering our safety." Or another way to put it: The people planning to blow us up are endangering our safety. The "vital interests" and "American values" themes will come up in more detail later.
Actually, Soros truncated Bush's foreign policy platform. During the 2000 debates with Gore, Bush said, "(O)ur nation stands alone right now in the world in terms of power, and that's why we have to be humble. And yet project strength in a way that promotes freedom." (Emphasis added.) Bush was very clear about the need to promote freedom - even before the events of 9/11.
That sounds like a lengthy way of saying, "surrender."
Around the world, with the exception of Iraq, Iran, Syria, etc.
It's a good thing that Soros doesn't have a blog, because he'd have to actually show, you know,proof or a link or a citation. A quick check at Project Vote Smart for all of President Bush's public statements doesn't show the incumbent ever using the word "unpatriotic."
Values, such as the ability to send unlimited quantities of untraceable cash to shadowy figures in Yemen, or use cell phones and email to plan terrorist attacks.
Remember this quote. Remember it every time you hear from MoveOn.org or MediaMatters or any other Soros financed project. "What we do to combat terrorism may also be wrong."
Sounds like Soros hasn't been paying attention to his own ventures or political allies. MoveOn.org has hosted ads likening President Bush to Hitler. Ted Kennedy has accused President Bush of concocting a war for political gain out of his ranch in Texas. Howard Dean raised tens of millions of dollars while running a campaign in which he called President Bush "the enemy here." That's suppressed dissent?
Does Soros believe that Iraq's invasion of Kuwait was justified? Or, after we kicked Iraq out of Kuwait, the set of rules that Saddam Hussein agreed to live by as a condition of ending Gulf War I? As far as a gift to bin Laden, here's how Abu Zarqawi described that gift: "By the Lord of the Ka`ba, [this] is suffocation and then wearing down the roads. "
And Soros is on record as saying the following about Saddam's mass graves and Chemical Ali's murder of 100,000 Kurds: That's right. Nada. And as far as stirring anger against America: Was the U.S. in major combat when the U.S.S. Cole was attacked? How about the Khobar Towers? Or the U.S. Embassy bombings in Africa? Or the first World Trade Center bombing? Or 9/11? Or the Iran Hostage Crisis? Seems like the terrorists were "angry" at the U.S. long before Operation Iraqi Freedom.
U.S. soldiers are battling terrorists on foreign land, not on U.S. soil. And, to correct Mr. Soros, the "people who are willing to risk their lives to kill Americans" are called "terrorists."
Actually, President Bush said it would be a struggle that would be lengthy - as the U.S. is fighting an enemy different from any others we've fought in the past. It will continue for most of our lifetimes. The only way we won't be at war for a long time is, again, if we surrender.
Good thing President Bush took an oath to uphold his right to say it!
As opposed to the collective misconception, fostered by the Clinton Administration and its predecessors that the U.S. was invulnerable to mass terror attacks.
Why let the facts get in the way of a good urban myth? One of the two ranking military commanders of the Afghanistan conflict spells out why this statement is an out-and-out falsehood in his recent interview with The Command Post.
Vicious circle? Well, some of Soros critics might say that circle is exactly what it looks like when a billionaire chases his own tail. And for the record: setting up an improvised explosive device on an Iraqi back road at night, and then hiding in the bushes to wait for a coalition truck to drive by, doesn't exactly constitute "willing to risk their lives." It might constitute "terrorism," though.
Ah. The Abu Grhaib card. Except an independent panel reviewed the entire case and concluded that Rumsfeld condoned no wrongdoing. The panel found, indeed, it was "the work of a few bad apples."
Soros must have forgotten the weeks after 9/11. Most of New York walked around grief-stricken, dazed - emotionally paralyzed. Fears and rumors about the next attack spread like wildfire. Slowly - very slowly - people started getting back to normal. Then, during the 2001 World Series that President Bush took to the mound at Yankee Stadium and threw a perfect strike to New York Yankee Todd Greene, in the open air, in front of 57,000 people, while Osama bin Laden hid in a cave. Bush showed pretty much the whole world that Americans didn't have to live in fear; that they could get on with their lives. Though parts of the video were a bit schmaltzy, The Pitch (which can be found here), portrays it pretty well. President Bush didn't tell or show the country that it had to live in fear. He did quite the opposite. But he also let it be known that were had to continue to fight for freedom like other American generations.
President Bush has never said - not a single time - that Iraq was involved in 9/11. Although, the 9/11 Commission report didn't "definitely establish" anything about a connection or non-connection. It found what's been said all along: no smoking gun has been found linking Saddam to the attacks. But Saddam wasn't overthrown for that reason.
But instead of shouting from the Mountain Tops, he's contributed lavishly to MoveOn.org and other anti-Bush organizations. They do all the shouting for him.
It's a good thing Soros doesn't believe in factless, ad hominum attacks. Otherwise he might make a lot of unattributed, sweeping assertions.
Which inspections? The ones where Saddam's scientists refused to be interviewed? The ones where he refused to permit U.S. intelligence overflights? The ones where he submitted a 12,000-page WMD declaration, dated 1973, that was written in Microsoft Word? And which sanctions? The Oil-For-Food Program? Can someone help Late Final out; there's not enough bandwidth here to list all the links to material detailing how crooked, corrupt and dangerous to American interests that was.
Or you could believe David Kay, who told this to Congress: "We have discovered hundreds of cases, based on both documents, physical evidence and the testimony of Iraqis, of activities that were prohibited under the initial U.N. Resolution 687 and that should have been reported under 1441, with Iraqi testimony that not only did they not tell the U.N. about this, they were instructed not to do it and they hid material. So much for successful inspections...
Well, unless you count that little skirmish that started in 1776. Actually, the real reason for going to war is that Saddam Hussein invaded and raped Kuwait, lost the war when the U.S. got involved, made a bunch of promises so we'd stop shooting at them, and then reneged on every single promise. The onus was on Saddam to prove he didn't have WMD, not on the U.S. to prove he didn't have them.
That's right. Only Western should be permitted a shot at democracy, liberty and freedom.
That summarizes the anti-war left's entire discussion of the toppling of Saddam.
Or troops could have been in place to make sure there were no atrocities, no millions of refugees flooding into Iran, Jordan or oil fields set ablaze causing a monumental environmental disaster. Not that Soros would want to Monday morning quarterback or anything...
Again, according to retired Gen. Mike DeLong, they were a shambles before U.S. troops ever got there. Saddam never spent a nickel on infrastructure. Nothing had been updated since 1979.
Three words: "Thank you, America."
To put the hub-bub over Prime Minister Allawi to bed: Iraqi leaders consented to his appointment. Ayatollah Sistani consented - otherwise there would be real unrest in Iraq now. In fact, the only ones who didn't consent were the terrorists. Now, three more words: Elections in January.
Some might say it was dire when Saddam was filling mass graves with dissidents or prisons with children.
Security is good enough to allow elections, now, in 15 of 18 provinces in Iraq, according to Iraqis running the country now. In New York City during the Dinkins Administration, they would have loved if three boroughs had that kind of security.
As opposed to, say, billionaires giving fact-free speeches that say, in words or in substance, that the U.S. is losing?
Looks like Libya didn't get that memo.
True. It's a sovereign country about to elect it's own leadership in about 10 days. Then the country will be in control of its own destiny.
Pakistan is an ally. It developed the bomb, however, during the Clinton Administration.
Soros might be a billionaire, but he's not so good at math. There were more than 16 U.N. resolutions condemning Iraq and demanding it conform to the will of the world community. He snubbed each one. By mistreating and even torturing prisoners, we violated the Geneva conventions. It's not clear that Geneva conventions would have even applied. Many of those Iraqis and terrorists in custody weren't uniformed soldiers on a field of battle - a key qualifier for the Geneva conventions. But, still, all agreed that Abu Ghraib was bad.
Actually, the terrorists have endangered U.S. security, and the security of troops. That's why we're at war.
Actually, Bush opposes a draft while Democrats are pushing it. And as far as morale, it might be better if they listened less to Soros and more to President Bush who told them this earlier this month: "Tonight I want to speak to all of them and to their families: You are involved in a struggle of historic proportion. "Because of your service and sacrifice, we are defeating the terrorists where they live and plan, and making America safer. Because of you, women in Afghanistan are no longer shot in a sports stadium. Because of you, the people of Iraq no longer fear being executed and left in mass graves. Because of you, the world is more just and will be more peaceful. "We owe you our thanks, and we owe you something more. We will give you all the resources, all the tools, and all the support you need for victory."
And because of an attack on one day - Sept. 11 - the cost to one city - New York - was $95 billion. An enormous sum.
The "Q" word. And Soros can't provide any more details about what to do differently than Kerry has...
Many also predicted higher casualties. (Barry McCaffrey: “[W]e could take, bluntly, a couple to 3,000 casualties.”)
(Currently ranked 4,376 at Amazon.com)
He asked the U.S. Congress for support. It was given. He asked the U.N. for a resolution; Resolution 1441 was unanimous. And anyone who believes the war wasn't fully debated beforehand must not have a television, radio or access to the Internet. Yet, for some reason, Soros continues to say discussion of the war beforehand was suppressed.
Well, 50 million voters in 50 states and the U.S. Constitution say he is qualified. And some might say that it was Saddam Hussein - who invaded Kuwait, then lost the Gulf War, then ignored the obligations of his surrender - got the U.S. into the war.
Yes, we know. (4,376)
That will have to wait for another post.
Hey, even if a lot of people don't find your arguments worth considering, they'll share them! It's the age of the Internet, fisking and PhotoShop!
By Ed Moltzen · 28 September 2004
NY Times Correction Du Jour
Just goes to show you: you can't always go by Senate attendance records alone:
By Ed Moltzen · 28 September 2004
Bad Day For Bad Guys
This report just moved out of CentCom:
It's a pretty good bet that this item won't make any of Sen. John Kerry's speeches this week or his remarks at Thursday night's debate. By Ed Moltzen · 28 September 2004
Death or Taxes
Folks on the left would much rather talk about death than taxes this year, and there is probably a good reason for that. According to the latest from (the subscriber section of) Rasmussen Reports, when asked "What if taxes are increased next year? Will higher taxes help the economy, hurt the economy or have no impact on the economy?," 61 percent said it would hurt the economy, while 20 percent said tax increases would help. So, from this perspective, the Kerry Campaign and the senator's supporters have succeeded wildly in keeping the focus on the war and bodies, rather than on tax cuts, the economy and the economic rebound. By Ed Moltzen · 25 September 2004
"We Must Do What's Right And Wise"
Did John Kerry make a case for unilateral, pre-emptive action against Iraq during a 1997 "Crossfire" appearance? No one seems to know for sure. But here's what he said in the well of the Senate, in 1997, on the same topic:
He sure knows how to get to the point, doesn't he? The full text of his speech appears to be classic Kerry: Saddam's a monumental threat; we must get rid of that threat quickly; but we need to rally the U.N.; but the U.N. might not go along; but we need to get rid of the threat; U.N.; threat; U.N.; threat; Well, in the end, we gotta do what we gotta do. (But only if it makes sense.) So, uh, in that regard it appears the John Kerry today is entirely consistent with the John Kerry of 1997. By Ed Moltzen · 25 September 2004
Quote Of The Day
"What can I say -- just tip my hat and call the Yankees my daddy." - Boston Red Sox pitcher Pedro Martinez, after losing to the New York Yankees last night, 6-4. By Ed Moltzen · 25 September 2004
The War We Can't Lose
Because of the need for many countries to work together against terrorism, he said, the coalition has become - and still is - more important than the war itself. Tapped by Gen. Tommy Franks as the second-in-command of the busiest unit in the U.S. military, Gen. Michael "Rifle" DeLong had one of the toughest tasks in the country after the 9/11 attacks. He and Franks had to prepare the country to fight a war where, just years earlier, the Soviet Union lost 15,000 men in its worst quagmire ever. After Iraq snubbed U.N. ultimatums to come clean about its weapons programs, Franks and DeLong had to prepare a second front - in Iraq. And once hostilities started in each place, he had to hear the critiques of "armchair generals" on CNN, MSNBC, Fox News and elsewhere who, he said, were often out of the loop and speculating blindly about what the troops were doing. "Inside CentCom" is no partisan book. DeLong is no partisan; he's been praised by both Franks (who has endorsed President Bush's re-election) and retired Gen. Anthony Zinni, the retired CentCom commander (a leading critic of Bush.) In 240 pages, including a lengthy appendix, DeLong manages to pack in a number of eye-popping details - including where he thinks Osama bin Laden is hiding, why he believes the Chinese, Russians, Germans and French opposed the Iraqi war (substantial financial interests, which he details), and the quick transformation of the U.S. military into a speedy, flexible fighting force that coordinated its various branches as a single, cohesive team. He also writes that he came face-to-face with a jailed Chemical Ali, came to believe Iraq most definitely had WMD and says he believes he knows where they put them, and that about 80 percent of Iraqis like Americans. As DeLong told The Command Post:
He also cautions that, because of animosity between the various ethnic and Islamic groups in Iraq, there is still a chance of civil war and that attaining a democratic society is still an uphill battle there. DeLong's book lives up to its title: it's unvarnished, and it's a deep look into the inner workings of the Central Command and America's war-fighting apparatus. He not only talks about the successes of the quick, overwhelming military battles in Afghanistan and Iraq, but of the miscalculations and thorny political and diplomatic issues, as well. And the release of "Inside CentCom" - officially scheduled for Saturday though some bookstores are selling it now - comes in the middle of a heated presidential election and a critical time for restoring the peace and stability in Iraq. But as DeLong also told The Command Post, one of the reasons he wrote the book was to give Americans a look at what's happening behind-the-scenes and what the stakes truly are:
DeLong now works for a private, U.S.-based company that is working to re-build Iraq's infrastructure and, after a few stops on his book publicity tour this week, was headed back to that country to resume his work. For anyone interested in the military's war on terror, behind-the-scenes, "Inside CentCom" is essential reading. By Ed Moltzen · 24 September 2004
Point-Counterpoint
Eric Jay points to this contrast: "The wrong war in the wrong place at the wrong time." John Kerry Sept. 6, 2004. "Thank you America...Your decision to go into Iraq was not an easy one, but it was the right one." Ayad Allawi, Sept. 23, 2004, before a joint session of Congress. Guess who got the standing ovation by both Republicans and Democrats... By Ed Moltzen · 23 September 2004
Ralph Nader Is Not Happy
Ralph Nader's campaign just sent out an email to supporters with the subject line, " Gutless, spineless, dictatorial Dems." Says Nader:
And:
He says he'll still be on 36 state ballots on Nov. 2. But he doesn't appear to be too happy with the Democratic Party. By Ed Moltzen · 23 September 2004
Draft Politics
It's tough to link to James Lileks because, well, it seems like everybody everybody else does first. But today Lileks provides a glimpse at how the "draft argument" will eventually play out, and he gives a sneak preview of how the upcoming presidential debates will look. It you haven't read it yet, you're only cheating yourself. By Ed Moltzen · 23 September 2004
Law & Order & Changes
He takes over the partner function previously played by George Dzunda, then Paul Sorvino, then Jerry Orbach. (For those keeping track of Law & Order lineage.) As the nattily dressed, smooth-talking, ethically suspicious Det. Fontana, he'll do. During the show's 2004-2005 premier - a story line centered around an Iraqi woman who seeks revenge against a former U.S. military prison guard from Abu Ghraib - we got to see performances from big-screen veterans Farina, Fred Thompson and Ron Silver. (The presence of two speakers from the recent Republican National Convention - Thompson and Silver - made it possible to sit through the Abu Ghraib story line without feeling like it was a knee-jerk, liberal anti-war production.) It looked like a good start to what will hopefully be an interesting season. By Ed Moltzen · 23 September 2004
New Offering For Resource Junkies
A new, not-for-profit group has created the Terrorism Knowledge Base - which appears extensive and easy-to-use. The group behind it is the National Memorial Institute for the Prevention of Terrorism. In unveiling the site, it says, "MIPT firmly believes that the accurate dissemination of knowledge on terrorism is a critical ingredient for combating terrorism." By Ed Moltzen · 22 September 2004
Dueling Polls
Polls out of Zogby and American Research Group show a new "horse race" between President Bush and Sen. John Kerry. Rasmussen Reports, however, shows President Bush with about his highest lead yet in his bid for re-election. Whatever critique people have about Rasmussen's daily polling numbers, it's used the same methodology all year. And, because it's a daily poll, it frequently gives readers a look at trends a week or so before other polls come out. Last week, Rasmussen had Bush and Kerry within a point of each other but, today, Bush is back to a four-point lead. Here's a glance (via palette-challenged Microsoft Excel) at the two-month trendline between Bush and Kerry. You be the judge. (Click for a larger image) Source: Rasmussen Reports. By Ed Moltzen · 22 September 2004
Howard Stern Circa 1988
Via the New York Radio Message Board, here's a link to an interesting look at Howard Stern provided by "Mr. Pop History." As a bonus, it includes an "air check" from a show in 1988 where he has a lengthy interview with Abby Hoffman (as well as a Snapple commercial!) There are also a few references in the air check to Howard Stern's wife Allison - during their pre-divorce days - which may be uncomfortable or weird to hear. By Ed Moltzen · 22 September 2004
Dean Versus Falwell
During his ill-fated bid for the Democratic presidential nomination, Howard Dean would insert the name "Jerry Falwell" into a speech any time he wanted an applause line. Dean, now running Democracy for America, is still hitting that note and just sent out this fundraising email:
If Falwell and the "radical right" are still running the Republican Party, John McCain, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Christine Whitman, George Pataki, Rudy Giuliani, Chuck Hagel, Colin Powell, Arlen Spector and others must have missed the memo. By Ed Moltzen · 22 September 2004
Quagmire Update
Hamid Karzai, Afghanistan's president, in his address yesterday to the United Nations:
He said they still have a long battle fighting remnants of terrorist groups, as well as putting down the drug trade that finances terrorism. He said, "(Terrorists) But, he added, "These attacks have not stopped our people from crossing one milestone after another." This speech didn't get many headlines. But, remember, Afghanistan is about six months ahead of Iraq in the process of democratization so what happens there is worth noting. By Ed Moltzen · 22 September 2004
They Deal In Volume
If anyone was wondering: Yes, there are a lot of illegal immigrants trying to cross the border from Mexico, according to this news from the Department of Homeland Security:
That's almost 2,100 illegal immigrants per day - just along the Arizona border. (Or, in total, the same number of people who would fill six, sold-out games at Yankee Stadium.) And a lot of drugs. By Ed Moltzen · 22 September 2004
The Choice
President Bush on terrorism:
By Ed Moltzen · 22 September 2004
No, This Is Not Some Weird Blogging Dream
Snoop Dogg, on his blog, is linking to a Bill Safire column. By Ed Moltzen · 21 September 2004
Good News
Good news - well, for some people: The Federal Reserve Board raised the federal funds rate by a quarter point today, but noted some good momentum for the economy:
Growing job market: check. It's looking more and more like the "soft patch" in July was very closely related to the rise in energy prices - a temporary spike that's now settling back down after the summer. Elsewhere in the news, Sen. John Kerry has decided to abandon discussion of the economy in favor of talking about Iraq through Election Day. By Ed Moltzen · 21 September 2004
The Latest from Gallup
Gallup goes inside it's latest polling results in the presidential race pitting President Bush against Sen. John Kerry. (Bush leads Kerry by 12-13 points). It finds that the greatest number of Bush supporters will vote for the President because he's doing a good job and they're satisfied with his performance. The greatest number of Kerry supporters, Gallup finds, are voting for the senator because he's not Bush. It's not exactly a shock (that's what exit polls at the Iowa caucuses found was the reason for much of Kerry's support back in January.) Still, it will be interesting to see how successful Kerry's supporters are on Nov. 2 with a stratgegy of - as Zell Miller put it - "against, against, against." By Ed Moltzen · 21 September 2004
NY Times Correction Du Jour
Key words: "as much accuracy as a Kitty Kelley novel..."
If you're a reporter, do you really want an inaccuracy in a story that references Kitty Kelley? By Ed Moltzen · 21 September 2004
Keep Those Bloggies Rollin'
Blogrolling has become a major syndicator of blog items throughout the web, giving individual blogs the ability to tell thousands of others when they've written something new. The Blogrolling "updating" service was on the fritz for three or four days, and returned a little while ago.
Justagirlintheworld has some thoughts, as well, including how the folks who run Blogrolling handled the job of letting their customers know the bad news. (Which is to say, they didn't.) Services like Blogrolling's now qualify under the heading of "disruptive technology" - seeing as how many people rely on it every day. Let's just hope there's a little less, um, disruption from now on... By Ed Moltzen · 20 September 2004
Say It Ain't So
This important news just crossed the wire:
First Coke, now this. By Ed Moltzen · 20 September 2004
Yes, Virginia, There Is An Iraq Plan
On the day Iraqi sovereignty was returned, President Bush said:
The plan: U.S. troops will stay in Iraq to provide security while, simultaneously training a new Iraqi military to protect its own country. Elections will be in January, as scheduled, and American troops will leave as Iraqi troops are able to take on security themselves. As to the day-to-day details of which U.S. troops are deployed to which hotspots: Those are clearly military decisions made by military people. Among other things, General Tommy Franks' new book explains in detail that the White House has learned from Vietnam. It will not let bureaucrats and politicians micro-manage war plans. President Bush sets policy, the military carries out the details. Is there a hard-and-fast U.S. withdrawal date? No - unless folks suggest giving a roadmap to American enemies showing how long they have to hide in the tall grass and wait it out. You can disagree with President Bush's plan but you can't say he doesn't have one. By Ed Moltzen · 20 September 2004
Energizing The Base
Voters in Iowa last January thought they had the perfect strategy: Dump the flaky Howard Dean in favor of a more "electable" John Kerry to be the Democratic nominee to take on President Bush. Kerry won the Iowa caucus and rolled, Sherman-like, across the rest of the Democratic primary campaign season. But were all those Democrats so busy voting for a candidate they thought other voters would like that they picked someone that doesn't get them moving? John Zogby says Bush-Cheney leads Kerry-Edwards by 3 points in national polls and offers this reflection:
Other polls, including CBS-New York Times, show as many as one out of five Democrats or Liberals say they'll vote for Bush on Nov. 2. They can't all be Zell Millers or Ed Koches, either. By Ed Moltzen · 20 September 2004
Warming Up In The Bullpen: Tony Blair
Like President Bush in 2001, Koizumi touched the pitching rubber and threw from the mound. (Some folks throwing first pitches stand on the grass in front of the mound.) Unlike certain Democratic candidates for president, Koizumi's pitch reached the glove and didn't dribble the last ten feet to the plate. By Ed Moltzen · 20 September 2004
But He Always Goes For Buckeye Football
The more Sen. John Kerry campaigns in Ohio, the more ground he seems to lose in the state, according to this report out of Newsweek:
What's going on beneath the surface? Well, this internal poll might explain some:
Bush or no Bush, does Kerry make people feel safe? A key development will be whether Kerry's campaign decides to spend more money, time and resources in Ohio, or shift some to other "Blue" states that are close to turning red, like New Jersey. By Ed Moltzen · 19 September 2004
Terror Watch
This story is developing in Pakistan:
Reports are focusing on AQ's use of biological and chemical weapons. By Ed Moltzen · 19 September 2004
Expanding His Listenership
It appears he's working to bring his insight to folks who are outside the listening area of Air America Radio's few stations or those who can hear it via the prestigious Internet. By Ed Moltzen · 19 September 2004
Deep In The Heart Of...
Dan Rather was on his way to Dallas this morning, according to Power Line's spies. Of course, he could be on his way to tomorrow's Browns-Cowboys game. Ever since Rather's "60 Minutes II" piece on President Bush's National Guard service 30 years ago, the slope has only gotten slipperier. Even liberal columnist Eleanor Clift is speculating that the fake documents used in Rather's report could have been written by the discredited, Bush-hating ex-National Guard officer Bill Burkett:
But the real outrage, Clift suggests, isn't that the documents are fake. It's that it has taken attention away from all the bad stuff going on in Iraq that could hurt President Bush's re-election. (It's also taken attention away from an encouraging number of good things, as well. So maybe it's a push.) In any event, it's looking as if there will be some interesting, Texas-based datelines in the coming week - not even counting the Dallas Cowboys. By Ed Moltzen · 18 September 2004
Kerry's New Tack
With charges that President Bush served less-than admirably 30 years ago in the National Guard now foundering amid the Rathergate fiasco, the Kerry campaign is trying a new line of attack: Ripping government contracts awarded to Halliburton, where Vice President Cheney worked four years ago. Said Kerry in a new statement about President Bush:
Kerry failed to note, however, that Cheney literally walked away from a fortune by leaving Halliburton to become vice president. According to Halliburton's proxy statement immediately after Cheney left the company:
At the time he became vice president, those options were worth about $74 million on the open market - cash that Cheney gave away when he severed his ties with Halliburton. By contrast, Kerry has faced significant questions about his own involvement on behalf of the insurance group AIG. USA Today reported earlier this year that Kerry personally interceded on behalf of AIG to short-circuit legislation that would have cost AIG millions of dollars on its involvement in Boston's infamous "Big Dig" operation. USA Today reported that shortly after trying to sidetrack the legislation, AIG contributed thousands of dollars to Kerry's campaign coffers in 2000. What USA Today didn't report, however, is at the very moment Kerry was lobbying colleagues in Congress not to punish AIG for diverting federal money from the Big Dig project, Kerry's own family owned as much as $1 million in AIG stock, according to Kerry's financial disclosures with the Senate. That is $1 million more than Cheney had invested in Halliburton. By Ed Moltzen · 18 September 2004
NY Times Correction(s) Du Jour
Today's corrections column in The Times is so long, detailed and Russian-novel-like that it could present copyright issues were it to be cut-and-pasted and reproduced. The paper's errors in covering Memogate-Rathergate story have mounted. *The paper misquoted David Van Os, the lawyer for CBS source Bill Burkett; There are more corrections today involving other stories, too, that are worth pouring over. By Ed Moltzen · 18 September 2004
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