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A Few Questions for Sen. Kerry from a Concerned Voter (watch Kerry crash & burn answering these)
May 14, 2004 | The Bandit

Posted on 05/14/2004 10:01:38 PM PDT by The Bandit

 

 

Dear Senator Kerry,

Could you please spare me a few moments of your time to clear up a few questions I have, questions that have so far caused me great confusion about you and your positions on the issues? This won't take long and the questions I have are rather straight forward and simple. With this said, let me begin with a few of the most pressing questions I would like answered:

Question: You once told reporters that "I fully intend to continue to practice my religion as separately from what I do with respect to my public life, and that's the way it ought to be in America." During Easter Sunday you attended both Protestant and Catholic communion services.

Just exactly what faith do you practice?

Question: In 1985, responding to questions about your participation in a April 24, 1971 vietnam war protest involving medal tossing, you told the, Washington Post, "They're my medals. I'll do what I want with them. And there shouldn't be any expectations about them. It shouldn't be a measurement of anything. People say, 'You didn't throw your medals away.' Who said I had to? And why should I? It's my business. I did not want to throw my medals away."

Couple of quick questions here for you:

1.) On October 6, 1996 the Boston Globe asked you why you didn't bring your own medals to throw since it was planned weeks in advance, for which you responded that you didn't have time to go home [to New York] and get them. Why if you were not interested in tossing your medals, then insinuate that you would have if you would have had the time to go home and return with them?

2.) If you did not want to toss your medals on April 24, 1971, why did you bother showing up to participate in a medal tossing event, only to leave a false impression afterwards that you had indeed tossed your medals over a fence?

3.) Wouldn't it have diminished the "expectations" of the other medal throwers - perhaps even the general public - to have learned you had no desire to throw your own medals over the fence that day?

Question: You once responded to, Wallace Carter, a constituent opposed to the Gulf War on January 22, 1991 by writing, "Thank you for contacting me to express your opposition... to the early use of military force by the US against Iraq. I share your concerns. On January 11, I voted in favor of a resolution that would have insisted that economic sanctions be given more time to work and against a resolution giving the president the immediate authority to go to war."

Then a week later, you responded again to, Wallace Carter, by writing, "Thank you very much for contacting me to express your support for the actions of President Bush in response to the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. From the outset of the invasion, I have strongly and unequivocally supported President Bush's response to the crisis and the policy goals he has established with our military deployment in the Persian Gulf."

What was your REAL position on the war and how can anyone believe your response?

Question: You made a televised comment last year during a Democratic debate suggesting that French and Russian officials at the United Nations were poised to compromise with the Bush administration on the eve of the Iraq war. The following day you followed up by saying, "I have it on the highest authority" that the French and Russians were prepared to make an offer at the UN, but were rebuffed by American officials intent on going to war,  and "I'm going to talk about it more publicly at a later time."

Do you still plan to publicly talk about this and reveal what evidence this so-called 'highest authority' may have given you?

Question: During a 1971 Senate hearing you were asked whether CBS could defend a documentary titled "The Selling of the Pentagon" that they had recently aired,  for which you responded:

"I think they have; yes, sir. I think the public opinion in this country believes that, 'The Selling of the Pentagon.' I was a public information officer before I went to Vietnam, and I know that those things were just the way they said because I conducted several of those tours on a ship, and I have seen my own men wait hours until people got away, and I have seen cooks put on special uniforms for them. I have seen good come out for the visitors and everything else. It really happens."

Were you really once a 'Public Information Officer,' and if so, when and where?

Question: Since becoming a candidate, you have come come out and strongly attacked the Patriot Act. At the time of the passage you said "With the passage of this legislation, terrorist organizations will not be able... to do the kinds of things they did on Sept. 11." Then went on to add that you were "pleased at the compromise we have reached on the anti-terrorism legislation"

You recently suggested that "it is time to end the era of John Ashcroft. That starts with replacing the Patriot Act with a new law that protects our people and our liberties at the same time."

Has any U.S. citizens lost their liberties due to the Patriot Act? If the Patriot Act is such a terrible piece of law, why in the world did you even support it in the first place? Surely you read it before casting your 'yes' vote in favor of it?

(Please, don't try and pass the buck to the Bush Administration: I am addressing you - and you alone here - along with your own actions during the process of enacting this piece of legislation.)

Question:  In your own opinion, what important distinctions should be made between a civil union and a civil marriage?

Question: You once referred to 'No Child Left Behind' (NCLB) in July of 2003 as an `Unfunded Mandate.'

How is it you could describe NCLB as 'unfunded' when the states had not yet exhausted all currently available funds to them?

Question: You have spoken about wanting to repeal some of the Bush Administrations tax cuts to pay for some or all of the $87 billion Iraq/Afghanistan Reconstruction package that was requested to fund both the Iraq and Afghanistan military operations in '03. In fact, there was an amendment pending prior to congress voting to approve the $87 billion that would had done just that.

On 'Face the Nation' you were asked, "If that amendment does not pass, will you then vote against the $87 billion?" For which you replied, "I don't think any United States senator is going abandon our troops and recklessly leave Iraq to whatever follows as a result of simply cutting and running. That's irresponsible. ...I don't think anyone in Congress is
going to not give our troops ammunition, not give our troops the ability to be able to defend themselves."

The amendment to roll back some of Bush's tax cuts to pay for Iraq and Afghanistan failed. Yet you went on to vote against the $87 billion anyway. Under your own admission of the consequences of any senator (including yourself) in voting against the $87 billion funding request: Did you not 'abandon our troops?'

Did not your actions - as you personally characterized the result of any senator or congressman voting against the $87 billion funding request - rise to the level of irresponsible?

Question: On December 2, 1968 you claim you were wounded by enemy combat activity for which you received a tiny piece of shrapnel. You visited a medical tent at Cam Ranh Bay on Dec. 3, 1968 and was seen by a Dr. Louis Letson, who described your wound as a "splinter." You told Dr. Letson that you and your crew "had been engaged in a firefight, receiving small arms fire from on shore."

Soon afterwards, you visited your commanding officer, Lt. Cmdr. Grant Hibbard, in his office holding a piece of shrapnel. Hibbard has told the Globe, "People in the office were saying, 'I don't think we got any fire,' and there is a guy holding a little piece of shrapnel in his palm." You recently told, Douglas Brinkley, for his book Tour of Duty, that the Dec. 2, 1968 'splinter' wound you received was the result of "a half-assed action that hardly qualified as combat."

As you are well aware of, military requirements for issuance of a Purple Heart require that an injury must be received during "action against an enemy of the United States." Isn't it a fact your 'splinter' wound was directly the result of of your own actions the night of Dec. 2, 1968 when there had been a M-79 fired at the shore? Isn't it a fact there was no enemy engagement the night of Dec. 2, 1968, which explains why The Naval Historical Center has no "casualty card"  on file for your Purple Heart?

Do you not feel any dishonor to claim an award that you did not deserve to receive - lied about the circumstances in order to be awarded the medal - an award that required most others to receive stitches; massive blood loss or loss of life in order to qualify for the medal?

Question: During a conference call on April 22, you told reporters that you did not own a SUV. Responding to whether your wife might own a SUV, you said that your wife owns a Chevrolet SUV - "The family has it. I don't have it."

During an New Hampshire rally, you were asked what you have done to reduce the dependency on oil, which you responded, "I sold my gas guzzler and got a van and downgraded, that's what I did personally, in my own life. Also got an economical car in Washington and so forth so that I was trying to live up to that standard."

A month later in Michigan, you listed the auto's you own as follows: "I own a Dodge 600 that I've had for about 20 years; I own a Chrysler 300M; we have a Chrysler van, a minivan; a Chrysler PT Cruiser; a Suburban Chevy-big Suburban - and she has a Land Rover Defender."

What compelled you to so boldly lie about what you own and drive?

Question: The Congressional Record for 1/22/85 quotes you as follows: "The right to choose is the law of the United States. No person has the right to infringe on that freedom. Those of us who are in government have a special responsibility to see to it that the United States continues to protect this right, as it must protect all rights secured by the constitution."

Does the constitution not declare that the most fundamental natural right that exists for all people is the natural right to life? Additionally, does the constitution not declare that no one can be denied either their right to life or liberty without due process of the law?

Just how does your "right to choose" constitutionally trumps the fundamental sacred right to life embedded in the very fabric of the constitution itself?

Question: You were quoted by the New York Times as reacting to Massachusetts' highest court's decision legalizing same-sex marriages by saying, "I personally believe the court is dead wrong." But when you were asked twenty days later why you believed the decision was not correct,  you replied, "I didn't say it wasn't."

Did you not indicate on February 5, that you personally believed the court was "dead wrong" in legalizing same-sex marriages?

Question: I am confused as to why the United States Navy awarded you the Silver Star. I am confused because of the speed in which it was given to you (did you know you may have received the fastest awarded Silver Star in Navy history without even receiving a scratch?), the actions that earned you the medal - and I am confused to why you have three Silver Star citations all signed by three different people. If I understand correctly, you skippered a swift boat among two others that participated in a mission to insert some 70 Viennese troops to check out a hot area along a channel on February 28, 1969.

All the troops were inserted by all three swift boats and they quickly chased off 20 Viet Cong's that were along the shore of the insertion point. You then went up river to investigate some other activity when a Viet Cong fired a rocket at your boat and missed. You then ordered your swift boat to be beached within ten feet of the guy who had fired at your boat and missed. He attempts to run away and your forward gunner hits him in the leg with his M-60 machine gun and he falls - only to get up again to continue fleeing. The citation says you chased him behind a hooch and killed him.

But several of your crewmembers have different changing recollections of what happened that day. You don't help the confusion either by telling CNN in April of 2001 of the reason you beached your swift boat only ten feet from someone holding a B-40 rocket launcher.

Jonathan Karl: "...The Silver Star citation says an enemy soldier sprang up less than 10 feet from Kerry's boat and fled. The citation reads, quote: "Kerry pursued the man behind a hooch and killed him, capturing a B-40 rocket launcher with a round in the chamber."

Sen. Kerry: "On that particular day, I heard the ambush, I heard the firepower, and I made the judgment. Besides, we were very heavily weighted down. We had troops on board. We couldn't reach maximum speed. I knew that to whatever degree we were in the ambush, we were going to get hurt, so I turned the aspect of us toward it, minimizing our exposure, surprising them, and we did win. I mean, we ran right over the ambush, and it felt good to win.

One problem I have with your explanation: you only had four crewmembers and yourself aboard you're boat when you encountered the Viet Cong soldier with the B-40. The late, Tom Belodeau, whom was there that day and part of your crew, standing right beside you in October of 1996 when he stated that there was only five crew members aboard your swift boat during this incident. Where did all these troops come from to weigh you down and force you to have beached your boat near a Viet Cong with a B-40 rocket launcher?

Question: Touching further on your Silver Star award, why did you refuse to release the official 'after-action' reports for February 28, 1969, the date that earned you the Silver Star? Why did you not release the nomination for the award? Did your superior officers take two witness statements and investigate as required under Navy regulations?

Question: Will you sign a Standard Form 180? If not, why?

Question: On voting to invade Iraq to disarm Saddam Hussein, you have said, "I voted not specifically to go to war....I voted for a process.....The process that we got out of the president by standing up to him was that he was going to go to the U.N. and build an international coalition, a true international coalition. Going to war was a last resort.

During a Democrat Presidential Candidate Debate on May 4, 2003, you said, "George, I said at the time I would have preferred if we had given diplomacy a greater opportunity, but I think it was the right decision to disarm Saddam Hussein, and when the President made the decision, I supported him, and I support the fact that we did disarm him."

If you really voted for a process - and not specifically for war - why did you not make that clear in your May 4, 2003 debate comments? Did not President Bush go to the UN and build a international coalition? If you had some specific definition for a 'real international coalition' in mind,  why did you not insist that definition be part of the authorization for war you voted in favor of, or had entered into the public record during your senate floor comments in favor of the war authorization bill?

Question: March 2003 Headline: "Senator John F. Kerry of Massachusetts said he will cease his complaints once the shooting starts. `It's what you owe the troops,' said a statement from Kerry, a Navy veteran of the Vietnam War. `I remember being one of those guys and reading news reports from home. If America is at war, I won't speak a word without measuring how it'll sound to the guys doing the fighting when they're listening to their radios in the desert.'" (The Boston Globe, 3/11/03)

But when troops were within 25 miles of Baghdad, you said in a speech at the Peterborough Town Library, "What we need now is not just a regime change in Saddam Hussein and Iraq, but we need a regime change in the United States." (The Boston Globe, 4/3/03)

Why did you go back on your word and attack President Bush after the shooting had started? Why did you claim we needed a 'regime change' just before troops entered Baghdad, while later on May 4, you told a national audience that you supported the decision to disarm Saddam Hussein? 

Do you ever actually listen to yourself and take your own positions seriously?

Question: You have a habit of telling voters you supported bill's that you had in fact voted against in the senate. Isn't the very act of voting against a bill a sign that you don't support the bill, regardless of you're reasons or explanations? Should politicians be able to tell voters after voting 'no' on a bill that they really did support the bill?

If politicians can do that, do we then even need to bother with maintaining voting records for every congressmen since they will have little value because yes/no votes can be publicly withdrawn and revised afterwards?

Question: Were you asked to leave Vietnam by fellow officers or did you initiate leaving on your own?

Question: Back  in 1991, soon after Iraq had invaded and taken over the country of Kuwait, you indicated going to war to liberate Kuwait was wrong because doing so would abandon ``the theory of deterrence." 

How would 'deterrence' have removed Iraqi forces from Kuwait?

Question: You have often ridiculed the 'international coalition' that has assisted the United States in removing Saddam Hussein from power in 03. You have also attacked Bush's father's 'international coalition' that had liberated Kuwait as lacking "a true United Nations collective security effort." You also went on to say this about the 1991 international coalition, "I regret that I do not see a new world order in the United States going to war with shadow battlefield allies who barely carry a burden."

Yet today when you talk about what you would have done differently then George W. Bush, in removing Saddam,  you often speak of how you would have built a strong 'international coalition' to confront Saddam Hussein with. Do you seriously believe any of the dozens of countries who have participated in two Gulf Wars against Iraq - Russia; France; Germany; Britain, to name a few - would take you seriously after you accusing them of not being able to "barely carry a burden?"

How and why should anyone take you seriously when you speak of building strong international coalition's in the fight against terrorism when you so easily denounce and belittle one of the greatest international coalition's in history?

Question: Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, stated on  October 10, 2002 :

"Now, I believe the facts that have brought us to this fateful vote are not in doubt...

"In the four years since the inspectors left, intelligence reports show that Saddam Hussein has worked to rebuild his chemical and biological weapons stock, his missile delivery capability, and his nuclear program. He has also given aid, comfort, and sanctuary to terrorists, including al Qaeda members. It is clear, however, that if left unchecked, Saddam Hussein will continue to increase his capacity to wage biological and chemical warfare, and will keep trying to develop nuclear weapons....

"It is clear, however, that if left unchecked, Saddam Hussein will continue to increase his capacity to wage biological and chemical warfare, and will keep trying to develop nuclear weapons. Should he succeed in that endeavor, he could alter the political and security landscape of the Middle East, which as we know all too well affects American security."

Did not you agree with Sen. Clinton that the facts she spelled out were not in doubt? Is this not the same evidence  President Bush was looking at, the same evidence that goes back before President Bush was even president?

Would you agree that this bandwagon you and your fellow democrats are riding that says 'Bush mislead' or 'Bush lied' has more then a few broken wheels?

Question: CNN's Jonathan Karl asked you in '01 if you still had the rocket launcher you had taken from the VC soldier you had killed, for which you replied, "I do have the rocket, yes, I do have the rocket. One of the SEALs disarmed it for me, and I brought it home."

Can you make it available to the media for inspection?

Question: Which is most important to you; personal convictions or political ambitions?

Question: Recently, Alan Colmes, asked you in an interview, "How do you define in such a nugget a John Kerry presidency? " You replied, "I'm going to bring truth and responsibility back to the White House, and I'm going to bring influence and respect in the world back to America."

You don't personally believe that; do you? I for one do not, senator.

 



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To: GraniteStateConservative
I posted a new revied version as an Editoral called "54 Questions that destroy Sen. Kerry's credibility" and it was pulled in minutes. So that sent me the message that FreeRepublic dosen't want me no longer questioning Kerry's credibility.
21 posted on 05/15/2004 6:51:34 PM PDT by The Bandit
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To: Condor51
Just what is a NA Form 13164 ? Was that part of the records Kerry released?
22 posted on 05/16/2004 12:50:53 PM PDT by The Bandit
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To: The Bandit
Oops, I should have clarified. NA Form 13164 is what one gets from the National Archives And Records Administration when one sends in standard form SF 180 requesting the military records of a person.

BTW, an online fill-out SF 180 form in .pdf is readily available. I filled one out, hit 'print', mailed it and got Kerry's records in about a week. CAUTION you also get a picture of a VERY UGLY Ensign Kerry. Thank God it's the last page.

Here's a link to that .pdf fill-out form
SF 180

BTW, as I understand it, this form was made available so any citizen could verify someone's 'war stories'. And yes you can request ANYONE'S records who was in the military. You don't have to be related to the person, just put down 'concerned citizen'.

23 posted on 05/16/2004 1:47:15 PM PDT by Condor51 ("Diplomacy without arms is like music without instruments." -- Frederick the Great)
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To: Condor51
calcowgirl sent me this observation:

Here's a new sentence that I found in John Kerry's Fitness Report from Nov 1969:

--He has of his own volition learned the Vietnamese language and is instrumental in the successful Vietnamese training program. [Fitness_Reports.pdf (pg 29 of 29)]

24 posted on 05/16/2004 2:18:10 PM PDT by The Bandit
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To: Condor51
His Military education was;
US Naval Officer Candidate School, Nuclear Weapons Orientation3.

Good Lord help us if he's ever elected to the Presidency!

25 posted on 05/16/2004 4:36:44 PM PDT by ATOMIC_PUNK (If the price of Freedom be blood "So be it " I shall give all i have that our Children be FREE !!!)
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To: The Bandit

Excellent essay. This should be published, or forwarded to the Bush Administration to be used against Kerry in upcoming debates.


26 posted on 05/18/2004 2:01:07 PM PDT by zenblends (I never make stupid mistakes. Only very, very clever ones.)
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To: zenblends
I'll have an update later tonight that can be found here:

Questions for Sen. Kerry


27 posted on 05/18/2004 3:01:33 PM PDT by The Bandit
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