Sorry, the title was too long to add the phrase "barf alert"!
And for those who don't know, the author of this piece is a Salon writer.
Have fun ripping it to shreds ... or just pointing and giggling at it!
1 posted on
11/27/2001 2:13:24 PM PST by
Timesink
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To: Timesink
By the way, I think that photo is a crop of the infamous "Package"
Rolling Stone cover. It's rather out-of-date now, isn't it? Here's a more current photo:
2 posted on
11/27/2001 2:17:30 PM PST by
Timesink
To: Timesink
Gore's close friends and admirers agree that Gore has a penchant for hyperbole. The fact that Gore has a penchant for outright lying in situations where telling the truth would do him absolutely no harm led many people to believe that he had some kind of personality disorder. When he showed up for the first debate wearing so much makeup that he looked like a transvestite, he had them convinced.
To: Timesink
This is great. Boehlert's article which is intended to defend Gore on the charge of lying, is itself full of lies, misrepresentations and half-truths.
Eric is the only person in the world who believes that Coelho bowed out of the Gore campaign "for health reasons"! LOL!
4 posted on
11/27/2001 2:21:39 PM PST by
wideawake
To: Timesink
Boy, this writer sure has his knickers in a twist. Same with Joe Conason. Waaaah, it's always someone else's fault. Especially those mean, ruthless Republicans.
6 posted on
11/27/2001 2:24:58 PM PST by
Utah Girl
To: Timesink
So, Eric Boehlert thinks that the press was hard on Gore, branding him a liar and costing him the election. Conversely, does he think that the press was easy on Bush, branding him an idiot and handing him the election?
8 posted on
11/27/2001 2:29:40 PM PST by
eastsider
To: Timesink
The Press vs. Al Gore
How lazy reporting, pack journalism and GOP spin cost him the election
This title was off to me.
Al Gore struck me as being very uninterested in campaigning because he thought GW was such a joke that it was unnecessary to campaign against. Consequently, Gore's campaign was non-existent.
GW, meanwhile, was putting out position after position on a wide variety of issues of great interest to voters, after 8 years of Clinton/Gore getting nowhere on such issues.
Midway through the campaign season, it seemed to me Al Gore suddenly saw the polls and said: "Hey, someone! Anyone -- Karenna! We really DO need a campaign!"
But, by then, it was really too late, and mostly downhill for Al.
Maybe a better title for this article would have been:
Al Gore v Al Gore
How lazy thinking by Al, a bad campaign by Al, and a very late start by Al, cost him the election
9 posted on
11/27/2001 2:29:40 PM PST by
summer
To: Timesink
This author is engaging in more than a bit of revisionism in his recounting of the Kailey Ellis matter. The issue was not that Gore said she "has" to stand rather than she "had" to stand. The issue was that he claimed that the cause of her standing was an educational budget shortfall. My recollection was that there was not enough room the first day (or few days) of school because the classroom was full of new equipment, and not because there were too many students for the room.
To: Timesink
Geeeeezzz, where to start??? My head is swimming at how selective this Klymer is!!
To: Timesink
campaign against. = campaign against GW.
12 posted on
11/27/2001 2:30:51 PM PST by
summer
To: Timesink
Thanks for a good laugh! Algore the victim of press bias! Yep, those conservative Republicans at ABC/NBC/CBS/NYTimes/WashPost done Algore in! LOL!
To: Timesink
If AL Gore is honest, then Al Gore is delusional.
17 posted on
11/27/2001 2:38:08 PM PST by
gjenkins
To: Timesink
Ah, if the Rolling Stone tokers had printed anything but this kind of article, I would have been disappointed.
I can just see his campaign staff reading this and whining about it while they are between bong hits.
18 posted on
11/27/2001 2:38:13 PM PST by
Nachum
To: Timesink
"...the author of this piece is a Salon writer."*Whoooooshhhhh*
& down the ol' toilet she goessss...
19 posted on
11/27/2001 2:38:32 PM PST by
Landru
To: Timesink
This sounds like poetic justice to me. Mr. Gore lied to all of us and told us how great he thought Mr. Clinton was. Then, after the election, Mr. Gore does an interview in Vanity Fair where it comes out that he was really PO'ed at Clinton for all his lies and stuff. Live by the lie. . .
20 posted on
11/27/2001 2:39:16 PM PST by
parsifal
To: Timesink
22 posted on
11/27/2001 2:40:26 PM PST by
Ditto
To: Timesink
"
During my service in the United States Congress, I took the initiative in creating the Internet."
ROTFLOL, as are many FReepers who actually used the internet,
going back to the late '60s.
To: Timesink
Ha, ha.
I suppose the author had no problem with Bush being branded as a person born of big oil money... while Al Gore is sitting on a big Occidental oil trust fund.
And Bush's "drug problem"? The media forgot to mention Gore's drug habit in the 70's.
To: Timesink
I just knew the loss of the presidency couldn't have been Al's fault. He isn't that capable. {;~)
26 posted on
11/27/2001 2:46:09 PM PST by
d14truth
To: Timesink
- Perhaps Rolling Stone, itself, delivered gore's coup de grâce...
-
-
"'Al has a way of looking at you like his eyes are kind of burning,' said Nashville Tennessean reporter John Warnecke.You would get that when you mentioned his dad'. Asked in a 1987 interview about relations between father and son, Tipper Gore said:'You remember Oedipus? She quickly added that she was kidding, sort of. 'You had a very powerful father - a hero to many people - and a son coming to maturity and learning to find his own dignity.'" Inventing Al Gore by Bill Turque, p. 30 |
|
27 posted on
11/27/2001 2:50:00 PM PST by
Mia T
To: Timesink
Boo Hoo!
There is a bright side, however. Algore invented the concession speech so who better.....
Hee Hee!!!
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