Posted on 09/06/2004 5:49:36 PM PDT by itsnevertoolate
Kerry stops in Cannonsburg, PA while Teresa makes her first public appearance in awhile by attending the Labor Day parade in Pittsburgh. Kerry goes on to Racine, WV, where he receives a shotgun (but the AP and the AFP can't tell a shotgun from a rifle). Kerry then heads to Cleveland, where he shows he is one tough hombre, even though he knows how to bow.
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Democratic presidential nominee, Sen. John Kerry , D-Mass., waves to supporters while visiting a neighborhood in Cannonsburg, Pa., on Monday, Sept. 6, 2004. (AP Photo/Laura Rauch) |
U.S. Democratic presidential nominee Senator John Kerry (D-MA) waves to the crowd at a front porch chat in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, September 6, 2004. (Jim Young/Reuters) |
Democratic presidential nominee, Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., speaks to supporters while visiting a neighborhood in Cannonsburg, Penn. on Monday, Sept. 6, 2004. (AP Photo/Laura Rauch) |
Democratic presidential nominee, Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., speaks to supporters while visiting a neighborhood in Canonsburg, Penn. on Monday, Sept. 6, 2004. (AP Photo/Laura Rauch) |
U.S. Democratic presidential nominee Senator John Kerry (D-MA) is silhouetted against crowd at a front porch chat in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, September 6, 2004. REUTERS/Jim Young |
U.S. Democratic presidential nominee Senator John Kerry (D-MA) is silhouetted as he listens to his introduction at a front porch chat in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, September 6, 2004. Recent polls have Kerry trailing President George W. Bush by over 10 points. REUTERS/Jim Young |
U.S. Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry applauds his supporters as he boards his plane in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, September 6, 2004. Kerry is on his way to Charleston, West Virginia. REUTERS/Jim Young |
Maria Razanauskas, president of Allegheny Nurses Chapter, center, receives a hug from Teresa Heinz Kerry, wife of Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry, right, as they neared the end of their march on the Boulevard of the Allies for the Labor Day Parade in Pittsburgh, Pa., Monday, Sept. 6, 2004. (AP Photo/Mark Genito) |
Teresa Heinz Kerry, wife Democratic presidential candidate Sen. John F. Kerry (news, bio, voting record), D-Mass., is greeted by a swarm of supporters as she finished marching with union workers in Pittsburgh's Labor Day parade, Monday, Sept.6, 2004. (AP Photo/Mark Genito) |
U.S. Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry admires a shotgun presented to him at Labor Day celebrations in Racine, West Virginia, September 6, 2004. Under pressure from some Democrats to change the subject from national security -- regarded by many as President George W. Bush's strongest issue -- Kerry tried to focus exclusively on the economy and other domestic topics at a neighborhood meeting but supporters raised Iraq. The Massachusetts senator, who has said he would have voted to give Bush the authority to use force if necessary against Iraq even if he had known at the time that Saddam Hussein had no weapons of mass destruction, has struggled to draw clear contrasts with the president. REUTERS/Jim Young |
U.S. Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry holds up a shotgun presented to him at Labor Day celebrations in Racine, West Virginia, September 6, 2004. REUTERS/Jim Young |
Democratic presidential nominee, Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., holds up a rifle [sic] he received as a gift while visiting a Labor Day celebration in Racine, West Virg. on Monday, Sept. 6, 2004. (AP Photo/Laura Rauch) |
Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry holds a rifle [sic] offered to him by supporters before delivering a speech during a meeting with coal mine workers in Racine, West Virginia.(AFP/Hector Mata) |
Democratic presidential nominee, Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., speaks at a Labor Day celebration in Racine, West Virg. on Monday, Sept. 6, 2004. (AP Photo/Laura Rauch) |
Democratic presidential nominee, Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., speaks at a Labor Day celebration in Racine, West Virg. on Monday, Sept. 6, 2004. (AP Photo/Laura Rauch) |
U.S. Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry speaks to crowd at Labor Day celebrations in Racine, West Virginia, September 6, 2004. Under pressure from some Democrats to change the subject from national security -- regarded by many as President George W. Bush's strongest issue -- Kerry tried to focus exclusively on the economy and other domestic topics at a neighborhood meeting but supporters raised Iraq. The Massachusetts senator, who has said he would have voted to give Bush the authority to use force if necessary against Iraq even if he had known at the time that Saddam Hussein had no weapons of mass destruction, has struggled to draw clear contrasts with the president. REUTERS/Jim Young |
U.S. Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry waves to the crowd at Labor Day celebrations in Racine, West Virginia, September 6, 2004. Under pressure from some Democrats to change the subject from national security -- regarded by many as President George W. Bush's strongest issue -- Kerry tried to focus exclusively on the economy and other domestic topics at a neighborhood meeting but supporters raised Iraq. The Massachusetts senator, who has said he would have voted to give Bush the authority to use force if necessary against Iraq even if he had known at the time that Saddam Hussein had no weapons of mass destruction, has struggled to draw clear contrasts with the president. REUTERS/Jim Young |
Democratic presidential candidate Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., addresses the crowd at the UMW Labor Day Picnic in Racine, W.Va., Monday, Sept. 6, 2004. (AP Photo/Bob Bird) |
Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry, right, gestures along with West Virginia Auditor Glen Gainer, left, West Virginia Supreme Court Justice Warren McGraw, center left, and Rep. Nick Joe Rahall, D-W.Va., center right, during the UMW Labor Day Picnic in Racine, W.Va., Monday, Sept. 6, 2004. (AP Photo/Bob Bird) |
Democratic presidential nominee, Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., arrives at the 36th Annual Congressional Labor Day Picnic in Cleveland on Monday, Sept. 6, 2004. (AP Photo/Laura Rauch) |
U.S. Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry bows to the applause of the crowd at a rally in Cleveland, Ohio, September 6, 2004. REUTERS/Jim Young |
U.S. Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry speaks at a rally in Cleveland, Ohio, September 6, 2004. Recent polls have Kerry trailing President George W. Bush by over 10 points. REUTERS/Jim Young |
Democratic presidential nominee, Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., speaks at the 36th Annual Congressional Labor Day Picnic in Cleveland on Monday, Sept. 6, 2004. (AP Photo/Laura Rauch) |
That is tooo funny!
Whoops!
Good one!
Poseur ping!!
Is that a Mdl 1100? Cause if it is, what's a man who rides a $7000 bike gonna think about a $500 shotgun?(not that I wouldn't take it, mind you)
Heh heh.. Check out the dude in the blue t-shirt. Body language says it all.
Thank you!
What's with all the pointing? Does it make a point?
Desperate media ping - see post 40
Kerry currently is a co-sponsor of S. 1431, which would ban all semi-automatic shotguns, all detachable-magazine semi-automatic rifles and many other guns, calling the whole lot "assault weapons."
I'm gonna get me a shotgun and kill all the whities I see.
;^) yup
Perfect, LOL
You mean he's not?
I can't look at pics of Kerry
"I'm flashing back to Quang Tri '69. What's that gook behind me doing? Is that hand-banging some sort of signal? I'll wait till he turns away and then shoot him in the back."
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