I'm a Democrat by registration, but I'm not going to blindly follow anyone. I'm an intelligent man, and I'd rather hire that person that proves him/herself to stand solidly for the objectives I hired him/her to achieve. A politician's private life makes about as much difference to me as gays in the military: Don't bring your sex life to the work place. You do your job, do it competently, and you can do anything short of breaking the law in your private life as far as I'm concerned.
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Republican economic policy: Well, that was the case up until now, anyway. Now, with the MFFB in office, Republicans have become extreme. Now they work in favor of the elite only. Even those lower in the eschelons of the wealthy are bearing some of the brunt of Bush's policies, both environmental, social, and economic. But the real money, the real fat cats, are doing just fine. They are, after all, Bush's base (this from Bush's own lips during the 2004 election campaign). Which leads me to...
Taxes: Congressional Pay Raises: Foreign policy I used to have a lot to say about foreign policy, but it now it's all pie in the sky. Bush damaged the credibility of the U.N., but even more he destroyed the credibility of the U.S. What an ass. We should not be using the men and women of our armed forces like games pieces in a grown up version of the game "Risk." But that's what Bush is going at the direction of his NeoCon advisers. We should be all about being the bigger guy, and Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda didn't change that fact. The NeoCon's certainly used 9/11 to change the U.S. for the worse.
China
Cuba
Iraq
Afghanistan
Pakistan
Russia
Iran
United Kingdom
Europe
Africa
Mexico
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George Bush This man is a liar, a murderer by proxy, and an elitist. His job as he sees it is not to represent the American people as a whole but to serve himself and his elitist subsection of society first, his political party and the NeoCon power structure that runs it second. And that's basically the end of his priority list. The Republican party did a fanstastic job of distracting people from the main issues by downplaying those issues and holding up other non-issues as crises that had to be addressed immediately. Case in point: gay marriage juxtaposed with the Iraq war. Another: The Iraq war juxtaposed with finding Osama bin Laden. Smoke and mirrors were used to make people focus on issues like gay marriage and Vietnam rather than the fact that George had lied to us to put us in a war against a country that posed absolutely no threat to us to find weapons he knew didn't exist. He is the vilest of criminals and should be given the electric chair. And George Bush is directly responsible for September 11th, 2001. He had all the warnings, intelligence documents, and action plans the former administration and his current advisors could supply him with, and he actively ignored them. And by actively, I mean he downgraded terrorism policies, demoted experts in administration to sub-cabinet levels, refused to read memos, letters, and written pleas, refused to follow-up on the FBI's determination that the USS Cole was caused by Al Qaeda, etc., etc. Just read the timeline I put together and judge for yourself who did what and who didn't. My favorite nickname for George is Monkey Faced Frat Boy (MFFB for short). I can't believe 59 million people were so stupid, uninformed, working with a warped moral compass, or some combination of these that they would vote against ANY opponent of Bush. The 2004 election seriously damaged my esteem for general American population; so easily manipulated, so easily frightened, so easily blinded. He's greezy. He's hypocritical on a scale that takes my breath away. He dared during the 2000 race for office to point fingers at Gore about campaign contributions while vacuuming up special interest money by the bucket load. He's in bed with so many industrial polluters, he probably pours toxic run-off onto his Cheerios every morning. Texas has the worst environmental record in the nation at this time. I don't think I have to remind anyone that Bush is a foreign policy lightweight who can't name the leaders of the European nations without an advisor whispering the answers in his ear. His campaign finance reform proposal was laughed out of existence by nearly all the major Congressional leaders and was called a "hoax" by John McCain. I could go on and on, but you'd be better off reading The Skeleton Closet. Oh, one last parting shot: Bush has plunged us back into staggering multi-trillion dollar debt with his dusted-off-and-refried-Reaganomics taxation of the middle and lower class, tax exemptions for his business buddies, and exhorbitant military spending. If you voted for him based on his baseless campaign tripe about how Democrats are "tax and spend" freaks, even though his own record is stained with his turning the Texas $6 billion surplus into a $10 billion deficit, then shame on you. But let's not stop there. He cut funding for the environment and energy conservation. He rescinded arsenic standards, rolled back mining regulations, ignored his promises to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, and is proposing opening national forests to highway projects, logging, and drilling. And I saved the best for last: after watching Dear Ole Daddy Bush get roasted for going back on his "No New Taxes" promise, Gee Dub is determined to cut taxes and utterly kill the surplus that Clinton managed to create. Eight years of fiscal responsibility wiped out in less than one year by a monkey faced frat boy. Texas had a $6 billion surplus, and Gee Dub turned it into a $700 million shortfall. His little brother is similarly destroying Florida, turning a $3 billion surplus into a $1 billion shortfall. These states are now heavily in debt thanks to irresponsible tax cuts. Yeah, I think the electoral system should be dismantled ASAP... Al Gore Oh my god. Al Gore has matured, come into his own, become the world leader that the Republican Party couldn't stop him from becoming. He was destined to be a big name in history, and he has taken on the mantle of world leader without ever being sworn into the office he rightfully won and had stolen from him. To hear Al speak now sends shivers down my spine. He's amazing, powerful, erudite, elegant, confident, ... geez, this love-fest could go on for several pages. So, why did Al seem so stiff? Simple: he came off as a consummate politician. Bill Clinton had one thing in his favor, that he's so darned likeable. Remember when he and Yeltsin had their summit meeting and afterwards met the press? Yeltsin had Bill cracking up about something. Watching Bill started me cracking up. He's just likeable, and he comes off most of the time as real. You never see him sweat. He seems to be enjoying himself and in command of the situation. And that's important. Gore doesn't have that good ole boy quality. Yeah, I hear the accent back there when he's talking, but there's a down-to-earth quality that he's missing. Before, he was so stiff at the podium that he seemed slightly out of touch, slightly evasive when speaking before a crowd, and that hurt his image during the 2000 election campaign. But now, without the pressure of running for office, he's at ease with himself and his audience. George Bush has become the consummate whipping boy, the easiest target in U.S. history for politically punditry, to the point that Gore doesn't even have to take broad-handed swipes at George. He can play the touch game, the slow and easy, and take the piss out of George all day long without breaking a sweat. By the way, he did NOT "invent" the Internet, and never claimed to; he did on the other hand push bills through Congress that funded the Internet. Very farsighted, IMHO. I don't sense any evil from him. This is the guy who liquidated all his stocks when he entered Congress because he feels it's an inherent conflict of interest for legislator to vote on bills that affect their portfolios. Gore has an inate moral compass that I can appreciate. I think it's a real shame he didn't win the electoral vote, especially since the majority of people of this nation *did* vote for him. He'd certainly be doing a better job than Bush... But then, so could my 12 year daughter. A standing ovation to Gore and what he has blossomed into. Outstanding!Dick Cheney Signatory to PNAC, which contains the rants of a group of power-mad and power-hungry old men with dreams of reshaping the world in their image -- literally. You have to go to that site and read it to believe it. It's essentially Dick Cheney's "Mein Kampf," in which he, Donald Rumsfeld, Scooter Libby, John Bolton, Jeb Bush, Paul Wolfowitz, and two dozen other movers and shakers in the NeoCon movement, define a movement interested in tearing down nations that they are afraid of and replacing them with hotdogs, apple pie, and Chevrolet Democracy, just like we have here in the U.S. The implied notion is that people not like us want to be like us, and they pose a threat because they're different. And as long as they're different, we need to pump trillions into the military-industrial complex and steamroll those countries over and over until every bump is made smooth, every turban compressed into a Yankees baseball cap, and everyone is Christian and holds an income tax paying job. Dick Cheney is a sick, balding, homophobic little man who can't die of heart disease too quickly. Too bad his death won't cause the entire hive of Hitleresque drones to go limp as well. Bill Clinton He was a great President, but he suffers from ZCDD (Zipper Control Deficit Disorder). Great domestic policies, C- on foreign policies with the exception of running to kick butt on nations that need it. Still, thanks to ole Bill my kids will have U.S. Government and Sex Ed combined into one class. Thanks a bunch, pal... On the other hand, compared with the MFFB, he was an angel and a genius. One thing you can give him credit for is his effort to quash Al Qaeda during his administration. Oh, wait -- you're not one of those people that believes the whack jobs on Fox News, are you? You don't actually think that Clinton set us up for 9/11? Here, let me help you fight off the propoganda: read this timeline of events starting from the beginning of the Clinton era and ending with events that immediately followed 9/11. (Former President) George Bush 1. Had Noriega, the head of a sovereign nation, arrested and brought to trial in the U.S. This is actually illegal by international law. 2. He didn't finish the job during Desert Storm. Saddam Hussein should have been deposed and turned over to the World Court. He's evil and must be dealt with, but even though I'd love for him to find a bomb in his morning falafel, I don't think it's up to the U.S. to imprison or kill him. Still, he should have been removed from power. 3. No new taxes. HAHAHAHAHAHAAH!!!!! Yeah, right. This was unrealistic from the get go, and even if it was attainable, this was not the solution to the budget problem. 4. Republican. Four more years of Reaganomics. Nuff said. Bill Clinton, or for that matter, any non-Republican, was long overdue. Too his credit, though, he wasn't power mad like his son, The Monkey-Faced Frat Boy. He once gave an interview about the first Iraq War, and to the question of why he didn't take out Saddam then, he replied something like, "I've heard that question a lot since then, and the answer is simple. We sat down with the coalition, which included the countries around Iraq and Kuwait as well as our European allies, and we came to an agreement that we would leave Saddam in power and Baghdad standing. And that's what we did." It was a simple, honest answer, and one I can respect. He gave his word he'd fight the battle a specific way, and he kept his word. He didn't destabilize an entire sector or the planet. He listened to the advice of his peers, came to a consensus with the members of the coaltion, and lived by the agreements made. He restored order. I admire his clarity of purpose. Of course, given his family's deep involvement with the Saudis, there may be more to the story that his integrity and clarity of purpose, but I think his time serving in World War II left its mark, and he had no desire to risk American lives anymore than was necessary to achieve the stated reason for waging war. Pat Buchanan
Jesse Jackson Remember when Jesse ran for president? Y'know what? I'd have voted for him. Yup, if he had stuck it out, I'd have voted for him. On the other hand, I've since learned more about Jesse and how he uses the Rainbow Coalition and his own reputation to squeeze businesses for money. He recently tried to put the pressure on Bay Area businesses, but they didn't play ball. In fact, T.J. Rodgers of Cypress Semiconductor took Jesse head-on with a scorching rebuttal that really laid it all out for everyone to see and invited Jesse to a debate, and Jesse ran with his tail between his legs. Or perhaps it was between someone else's legs? Hm..... Which raises an interesting question: Why isn't there a well-known, well-publicized political party that has as its candidate for president an experienced black politician? I don't know about you but I'm a bit tired of minorities looking at 200 years of white presidents and bemoaning their inequality in this country. If you put a minority individual into that hallowed position, you remove any perceived obstacles to success from the minds of millions of young people. You remove the perception that whites run this country alone. You give a crystal clear example to the rest of the world that democracy can, at times, represent everyone equally. And just so I don't seem to view the races as just white and black, I feel that ANY minority would do. ANYONE that wasn't a white male would fill the bill, although it's my gut reaction that a white woman would fall just short of what's needed. Heck, an asian woman would rock the world's impression of the USA, wouldn't she? California Governor Arnold Schwarzenneger On the other hand, I wouldn't give him my support for President. He's not a citizen, and no matter how great he is as The Governator, no non-citizen should ever be elected to such a powerful position. On the other hand, he got into office on the back of a power grab by California Republicans. Which leads us to.... Former California Governor Grey Davis More to come... Back to Todd's Views Todd Grigsby's Home Page |