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Dean: I Didn't Say 'Panic Attack' [Yes, He Did]
NewsMax.com, Fox & Friends ^
| Jan. 19, 2004
| Carl Limbacher
Posted on 01/19/2004 1:23:06 PM PST by Carl/NewsMax
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To: The Red Zone
Dean-Cheney??? You are one scary person.....
81
posted on
01/19/2004 4:17:59 PM PST
by
Krodg
To: savedbygrace
So much of how Dean reacts to things is exactly like many short men I've known in my life. Must be a common over-compensation. Did you see his endorsement appearance with Bradley? I thought Dean was going to freak out every time Bradley got close to him. Dean wanted NOTHING to do with it and his body language was facinating to watch. The whole situation was REALLY making Dean uncomfortable. When my husband and I saw it, we looked at each other with the same thought and cracked up laughing at the same time.
The last time I saw such blatant body language on TV was when Clinton spotted the camera at Ron Brown's funeral.
To: Carl/NewsMax
Another "smoking toe" incident.
To: Cboldt
Yeah, that's what I want to see. My president, with his head in a paper bag when the next 911 comes.
To: Nita Nupress
No, I missed that.
I used to work for a short man whose office was apparently set up just for him. The chair behind his desk was as high as it could be and the guest chair was set very low. The sofa next to it actually had NO legs. The sofa legs had been REMOVED to make it shorter than HIS chair.
Funny stuff.
To: cynicom
The Dean family floated the idea that the son was CIA.....but I doubt it....he was very much an anti war activist.
86
posted on
01/19/2004 4:54:30 PM PST
by
OldFriend
(Always understand, even if you remain among the few)
To: savedbygrace
I consulted a quite short medical specialist once who would see you briefly in his office to sort of debrief you before you left. He actually had a dais about 4-6 inches high built in his office on which his desk and chair sat, and the visitor chairs opposite his desk were both on the normal floor of the office and were somewhat shorter than normal, as well. I wondered if he ever got absent minded and slid his desk chair off of the dais by mistake which would have been quite a crash.
To: honeygrl
Actually I did Google it, and went to a bunch of web pages. I think it is fair to say that panic attacks and anxiety attacks are the same. But the fact remains that the People magazine interview did not use the term "panic attack," and thus Dean was technically correct in reprimanding Doocy.
To: SpyGuy
Doocy did well in my opinion, and voters will be able to check the facts in People Magazine itself. Howie obviously denied he said what he said, spun some BS around it and figured he'd get away with it. Even while Doocy was reading direct quotes to him from the magazine itself. Dean is no Bill Clinton.
To: governsleastgovernsbest
In my opinion, it harkens back to that famous quote by the bent one, "Depends on what the meaning of is is".
To: BigSkyFreeper
For Iowa voters who have been following things carefully, reading that Dean had attacks, be they panic or anxiety, might really have hurt Dean in the last days of the campaign. One more bit of evidence suggesting he doesn't have what it takes to be President and would be a weak candidate.
To: The Red Zone
"If, to consider a worst case scenario, . . ."So you're trying to induce a panic attack, eh?
Sheez. I do not know what we would do. How about let's do like Democrats do and make up laws to fit the scenario and ordain judges who agree with us?
To: Cboldt
Dean has the proverbial snowball's chance.Words of comfort are always welcome.
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