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Eggs Benedict on His Face. John Kerry’s words come back to bite him.
NRO ^ | April 02, 2004, 8:52 a.m. | Rich Lowry

Posted on 04/02/2004 7:01:51 AM PST by .cnI redruM

If Democrats believe anything these days, it is that it is wrong to question anyone's patriotism. For John Kerry, this is a matter of sacred conviction. He calls the defeat in 2002 of former Georgia Sen. Max Cleland "the most craven moment I have ever seen in American politics," because "the Republican party challenged this man's patriotism." He routinely vows to fight back with a fearsome "message for those who try to challenge the Democrats and say to them 'you're unpatriotic.'" In Kerry's book, only the desperate hurl such charges: "It's curious to me how angry they get and how they throw patriotism around and so forth."

Curiously, this is the same John Kerry who nearly every day on the campaign trail has said a version of this: "We're going to shut down any incentive, any reward or any kind of benefit for any Benedict Arnold company or CEO that takes American jobs overseas and sticks the American people with the bill." Benedict Arnold. This Revolution-era general wanted to hand West Point over to the British in exchange for cash and other inducements. He is the most famous traitor in American history. So Kerry has routinely accused American businessmen of treason. What was he saying about the lowdown tactic of questioning people's patriotism again?

Kerry has now released a plan to deal with the issue of "outsourcing." One would think it would involve jail, or reeducation camps, or at least the mandatory recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance — sans the phrase "under God," of course — by everyone heading an American business. Instead, Kerry is proposing changing the mix of tax incentives for American corporations. On Kerry's own terms, this is absurd — like offering Benedict Arnold increased child tax credits, free dental care and college aid for his five children to try to keep him from betraying his country.

Unless Kerry's "Benedict Arnold CEO" line is a ridiculous, demagogic and unworthy smear of American business. His own tax plan exposes it as exactly that. Kerry wants to repeal a provision that allows companies to defer paying taxes on profits from overseas operations and — in order to keep corporations from getting too hard hit by a more onerous tax burden — also to cut the corporate tax rate. Imagine that — lower taxes for the treasonous! That's even worse than a tax cut for the merely rich. Kerry thus makes a huge intellectual concession: that businesses respond to incentives, that taxes and regulations affect their behavior and that tax-cutting Reaganites have always had a point.

In fact, a reason U.S. corporations do business overseas is that U.S. corporate taxes are so high compared with other countries. They operate overseas for other perfectly benign reasons: to be closer to foreign customers and to achieve efficiencies that make them more productive. Why this is considered a bad thing is not clear — except that it makes for an easy pander to economically illiterate voters. Companies with thriving overseas operations create management jobs back here in the United States, and most economic literature suggests that the phenomenon of "outsourcing" was a key factor in the glorious boom of the 1990s, lowering prices and thus keeping inflation low as economic growth soared.

But let's do the favor of taking Kerry's rhetoric seriously. CEOs seeking foreign customers and lower taxes abroad are "Benedict Arnolds," selling out their nation for venal reasons. Teresa Heinz Kerry owns millions in stock in the Heinz Company, the ketchup and pickle empire. Of Heinz's 79 factories, 57 are located outside North America, and 72 percent of its work force is offshore. John Kerry is, by his own logic, married to a woman implicated in acts of treason. Kerry's defense of the nation from dastardly betrayal should begin at home.

Meanwhile, the candidate has said he will roll out other parts of his economic plan sometime soon. If he is to be true to the spirit of his own words, the next installment should involve leg irons.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2004; benedictarnolds; demogaugery; fauxpopulism; heinz; kerry; richlowry; scarykerry; unpatriotic
If these CEO's are Benedict Arnolds, than John Freakin' Kerry is Aaron Burr. Personally, I think Benedict Arnold at least had a point. So do most of these CEOs who pack up and leave.

Arron Burr never had a legitimate graveman beyond his own cupidity. Much the same is true of John F. Kerry. He his about as genuine as his own botoxed facial features. He has no vision or legitimate desire to do anything except sleep with the next rich widow, snort the next line of fine cocaine and ascend to the next position of unearned privalege.

Men like Horatio Gates and Arron Burr are what ultimately turned first Arnold's stomach and then Arnold's coat. Politicians like John F. Kerry make the American economy user-hostile to the businesses that employ our people. These businesses, like Arnold, know when they are getting it in the shorts. They don't argue, they complain, they just pack their gear and walk.

1 posted on 04/02/2004 7:01:51 AM PST by .cnI redruM
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To: All

Donate Here By Secure Server

2 posted on 04/02/2004 7:03:07 AM PST by Support Free Republic (If Woody had gone straight to the police, this would never have happened!)
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To: .cnI redruM
They're all the same.


3 posted on 04/02/2004 7:05:26 AM PST by Lady Jag (I dreamed I surfed all day in my monthly donor wonder bra.)
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To: Support Free Republic
The Dems are blowing themselves up faster than a 12-year old Palestinian boy.

;-/

4 posted on 04/02/2004 7:10:25 AM PST by Gargantua (Max Cleland is out stumping for Kerry)
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To: .cnI redruM
"Bush gives tax cuts to the rich! That's why I will give tax cuts to big business!"

John Floppin' Kerry...
5 posted on 04/02/2004 7:39:39 AM PST by jcb8199
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To: .cnI redruM

6 posted on 04/02/2004 7:44:57 AM PST by wolicy_ponk (If con is the opposite of pro, is congress the opposite of progress?)
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To: .cnI redruM
some of the "off shore or outsourcing" companies like IBM or HP should run an add about the amount of Moen the give to civil and culture events, like ballets, symphonies, kids activities etc and then mention that this money is possible because they have profits to donate.
7 posted on 04/02/2004 7:54:19 AM PST by q_an_a
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To: .cnI redruM
THE STORY SAYS: "U.S. corporations do business overseas is that U.S. corporate taxes are so high compared with other countries. They operate overseas for other perfectly benign reasons: to be closer to foreign customers and to achieve efficiencies that make them more productive. Why this is considered a bad thing is not clear — except that it makes for an easy pander to economically illiterate voters"

YOU SAID: "I think Benedict Arnold at least had a point. So do most of these CEOs who pack up and leave."

I suggest you read the quoted part of the story again, and perhaps you will find yourself in the last sentence .. "an easy pander to economically illiterate voters".
8 posted on 04/02/2004 12:01:47 PM PST by CyberAnt (The 2004 Election is for the SOUL of AMERICA)
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To: CyberAnt
Why you consider my statement a pander is not clear. The article says corporations have intelligent reasons to leave. So do I. How is what I'm saying significantly athwart the thrust of the article?
9 posted on 04/02/2004 12:35:10 PM PST by .cnI redruM (Kerry 2004 - Currently crouched in Howard Dean's spider-hole of denial.)
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