Posted on 09/25/2004 5:19:08 PM PDT by wagglebee
'Hanoi Jane' Fonda is teaming up with a leading anti-Bush 527 group in a bid to register millions of women voters to cast their ballots for her old anti-war protest partner, John Kerry.
Fonda, who called President Bush a "radical ideologue" during a campaign stop in New York City last week, was asked about her latest move during a recent interview with CNN's Paula Zahn, and explained why she's come out of political retirement to back Kerry:
ZAHN: Let's talk a little bit about this partnership you have with MoveOn.org, an organization that has spent tens of millions of dollars to try to defeat George W. Bush. Is it your primary goal to elect John Kerry?
FONDA: Our primary goal is to try to get the 50 million women who are eligible to vote and have not voted to vote. We want the woman's voice to be in the body politic.
ZAHN: But the fact is, Jane, with the vast amount of money that MoveOn.org has spent running ads against President Bush, is there any way you can encourage women out there who would be inclined to vote Republican to come to the polls?
FONDA: We're the majority. If we voted, we would make a difference. We could decide who was elected. We could decide whether the person elected, man or woman, was going to care about and speak to our issues. . . . .
ZAHN: Jane, I find it hard to believe when you talk to these 50 million women out there that didn't vote that you just want them to vote their hearts. You really want them to vote for John Kerry, don't you?
FONDA: I'm not putting myself, nor am I asked to be in either campaign. I'm just saying that I know that if women voted and they voted with their hearts and with their bodies and their souls, that the future would be more safe, because that's where our hearts are.
ZAHN: But you personally, obviously, are more comfortable with Kerry.
FONDA: I'm a Democrat. My father would strike me dead from the heavens if I ever voted for a Republican. Ted could never understand: "You've never voted for a Republican?" I can't do that to my father, who was a yellow dog Democrat. What can I say? [END OF EXCERPT]
Zahn then broached the sensitive subject of the Vietnam War, which Fonda and Kerry protested together in 1970 and 71, prompting the controversial actress to share her insights into why so many Americans still hate her.
ZAHN: Jane, you have spent a number of years trying to put your controversial Vietnam past behind you. And yet for the last week or so, we have seen a tremendous amount of news coverage on George W. Bush's service in the national guard and questions being asked about John Kerry's service in Vietnam.
What does that tell us about how raw the feelings are to this day about the Vietnam War?
FONDA: It tells us that they're raw. It tells us that we have not healed. We need to heal from this wound, because it's very directly connected to what -- to the new wound. We haven't learned, you know, the lessons of Vietnam.
ZAHN: Jane, you have apologized to the families of Vietnam War vets, saying that maybe you have said some things that you wish you hadn't said along the way. Do you think you'll ever be able to satisfy people to this day who question what you did in Vietnam?
FONDA: No. There's a lot of people who -- who -- it's a cottage industry to hate me. And if they -- if they stop, that might mean that they'd have to look at some things that would question their own identity. And that's -- it's very hard for people to do. [END OF INTERVIEW]
Remember the good ol'days when treason was punishable by hanging?
She has continued to denigrate all things American. She has worked hard to promote murdering the unborn baby, she has funded every wacko environmental plan to hurt America.
Her marriage to Turner enabled her to fund all kinds of anti american programs.
Feel free to accept her apology but allow us to stay in the real world.
During her pro-Hanoi activities she was extremely hostile to US veterans and was even disdainful of her 'antiwar' vets from the VVAW and Save our Soldiers (SOS).
Like Kerry, she still thinks that she was right and all of the rest us are wrong.
The worst part is that future generations will believe that treason is just a rough spot in a film career, easily solved through a TV 'apology'.
Her apology wasn't really an apology. She never apologized for her treason, her aiding and abetting the torture and murder of American POW's, nor did she apologize for being used to destroy the morale of our military. Quote:
ZAHN: Jane, you have apologized to the families of Vietnam War vets, saying that maybe you have said some things that you wish you hadn't said along the way.
That sir, is no apology. They are weasel words to try and get out of the reaping of anger and hatred she herself has sown. Her insertion, now, in this campaign over this issue has proven she repented of nothing. Maybe she shouldn't have gone behind enemy lines. Maybe she shouldn't have turned in the names of POW's who were beaten to death trying to contact her. Just MAYBE.
She'll get no "breaks" from me. She deserves all that she gets now and more.
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