Posted on 03/18/2002 3:54:43 PM PST by ken5050
Like many here on FR, I've spent the last week knashing my teeth over Daschle's tactics in the Senate...blocking Judge Pickering's confirmation, blocking drilling in Alaska, and now this inane effort to make the Homeland Security director testify in Congress. And I've been hoping, like many of you, that Sen Miller would cross the aisle to the GOP side. Well, consider this scenario.....
Based on her recent re-election, the GOP didn't seem much interested in their candidate winning against her....so what changes things....they find a candidate who is a suck-upRINO or what?
BTW, Buddy is NOT dead.
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"You can't be serious!" the earnest young democrat threw himself back in the plush chair and stared at the Wily Old Democrat. Behind the leonine head and silver-white hair, a floor-to-ceiling window framed a spectacular view of Washington, the kind of view a $750-an-hour consummate insider can afford.
"I'm as serious as a clogged tax loophole," the Wily Old Democrat said. "Been on the phone all morning tellin' anyone who'd listen to make sure G.W. wins."
"But you've been a Democrat since..." the Earnest Young Democrat began.
"...since Harry Truman was tryin' to find the White House men's room," said the W.O.D. "And I promise you, son, it'll be the best thing for us since the Republicans nominated Goldwater."
"You mean because Bush won't have a mandate, and there's no real majority in the Congress..." said the E.Y.D.
"Son, that doesn't even scratch the first vein of this gold mine," the elder said, chuckling. "Just think about it for a minute. Say it's Bush after all. You'll have a President who may well wind up with fewer votes than the other guy. And the Republicans will have maybe five votes to spare in the House and maybe one vote to spare in the Senate. Might even be 50-50. But look what some folks in his own party want from him maybe ease up on the environment, maybe start naming those pro-life judges."
"Right, right," said the E.Y.D. "How can you want Bush to change the Supreme Court?"
The W.O.D. chuckled. "Son, try and peer around the corner just a little harder. Suppose Mr. Bush names a Clarence Thomas type. Can he get him confirmed? With 49 or 50 Democrats, and Republicans like Jim Jeffords and Olympia Snowe and those other moderates? All that'll do is fire up our base. In fact, pray he does name a fire breather. He loses in the Senate, and we get, oh, maybe $20 million or so for the next election.
"And speakin' of our base," he continued, "you're going to have two years to let our folks stew in their anger. They're gonna believe every minute that Mr. Bush, Daddy's spoiled kid, cheated his way into the White House. You want to think what that means for turnout in two years... for taking back the Congress? And, meanwhile, if Bush does try to move to the center, how about all those Republicans who've waited for their guy to get through their agenda? I don't think that's gonna be a very happy time for G.W."
The E.Y.D. shook his head. "I don't feel good at all about losing the White House." The W.O.D. smiled benignly. "Look at it this way, Son poetic justice. If we had told Bubba Bill two years ago that he had let us down, that it was time to pack his bags, we'd have had Al Gore in the White House with all of Clinton's record and none of his baggage. Instead, we all rallied around him and Gore paid the price.
"So now," he said, "we wait while G.W. turns into Jimmy Carter and kick his butt in four years with our Ronald Reagan."
"And who," the E.Y.D. asked, "would that be?"
"Son," the old man said, "even I can't see that far around the corner."
Clinton in Berkeley, January 29, 2002 Because I Won: The Cost of Being Popular As he walked up to the microphone, screams of "We Love You" echoed from the back of the hall. When he was done, hordes of 18-year-old girls ran up and down endless flights of stairs to elude security guards and make it to the gym through the back door. There, students stepped on each others toes to touch him, nearly knocking down the very inconspicuous California governor trailing closely behind. He then proceeded to shake every hand, thank every well wisher, even take the time to shoot a few baskets with the kids. Finally back outside, he plunged one more time into the adoring crowd to grasp every stretched-out hand until his own were raw. This was not a rock concert, but a visit to the University of California at Berkeley by former President Bill Clinton -- the first president to come to this campus since John F. Kennedy more than four decades ago. Clinton was honored by Chancellor Robert Berdahl with the universitys highest award, the Berkeley Medal, for "his lifetime of service to society." Most of the students who camped overnight for tickets to see him were too young to have ever voted for him, but most would clearly do so in a heartbeat if given the chance. Clinton was the hottest ticket in town the very day of the State of the Union address -- an occasion largely ignored in an area that overwhelmingly rejected George Bush at the polls. Whats more surprising is that in this ultraliberal, anti-establishment Mecca of Berkeley, a mainstream Democrat like Bill Clinton received nothing short of a heros welcome. And therein lies the true reason of why the GOP feared Bill Clinton so. It was not for his views, but for his undeniable star quality, which left unsmeared could have turned the Republican strategy on its head for decades to come. And no one understood that strategy better than Bill Clinton. Asked why the right wing despises him so, the former president answered simply, "Because I won." This is not what Clinton came to talk about, but these three words are the ones that will be remembered by everyone who saw him on January 29, for they said as much about the country in which we live, and in which 51 million were disenfranchised a little over a year ago, as Clintons prepared speech said about our entire world. "They believed there would never be a Democratic president," he said of the Republicans. "They thought they found a foolproof formula to turn us into cardboard cutouts -- superficial, one-dimensional, non-American figures. And the American people voted for me. They never thought it was legitimate. They decided We should have never lost the White House. It belongs to us. If you want to be a Democrat or progressive and run for national office today, you have to have a pretty high pain threshold. Its just the cost of doing business in politics today." Clintons address was intended to offer students his alternate vision of Americas role in the world and of the most effective means to fight terrorism. His talk would have made for a rousing response to the same old rally-around-the-flag mantra served nationwide during the State of the Union address. Clintons speech was interrupted every few minutes by spontaneous ovations, one of the loudest of which came in response to his comments about the war. Clinton endorsed the war on terrorism, but added: "I do not believe that a law enforcement and military strategy alone is sufficient to build the world that I hope the young people in this audience will live in. I dont want the world we live in to change the character of our country by having people dominated by fear." He went on to describe his vision, one borne out of a belief that sharing our economic good fortune -- to which his administration contributed so greatly -- and promoting our common humanity are the most effective strategies to weed out terrorism. "Its a lot cheaper than going to war," he said to the delight of the crowd. Clinton challenged the administration and the young people to focus on reducing poverty in a world in which half the people, he said, live on less than $2 a day and in which billions are sick and go to bead hungry. Reaching out to them, he said, "will create a world with more partners and fewer terrorists." Looking at the world from a different perspective may have been the secret to his administrations success, and this is precisely what he asked his audience to do with regard to public policy in the 21st century. Said Clinton, "Hillary gave me a little card when I ran for President in 92, that read: Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting the same result." On a serious note, he said, "We can do Americas fair share of economic empowerment of poor people, put all the poor kids in school, fund the [United Nation] Secretary Generals health initiative, and accelerate the effort to turn around climate change -- we can do all that for more or less what wed spend in less than a year in Afghanistan." As important as economic empowerment, Clinton said, is creating a world of shared values, thereby rooting out hatred that missiles alone cannot destroy. "You have to tell people We respect your differences, well celebrate them, but only if you acknowledge that our common humanity is more important. Not very complicated, but this is what I believe will determine the shape of this whole new era." After he finished his prepared speech, Clinton sat down with the dean of the School of Journalism, Orville Schell, for an informal question and answer session. For the next 45 minutes he touched on subjects ranging from campaign finance reform to his book and his view of the media. "Our perception is that there are basically two dominant elements [in the media]: the establishment press and the right wing press, and the right wing is the magnet that pulls the establishment press to the right," he said. Clinton was unabashed in defending his fundraising efforts in a political climate that would otherwise have made him another Democratic victim of GOPs ruthless campaign tactics. "It is true that I refused to practice unilateral disarmament," he said. "I tried that and ended up with severe wounds." And his description of "the cost of doing business" was not based on mere perception, he said. "Ive had great candid conversations with Newt Gingrich and other members of Congress privately, in which they basically said that "we have to incite people against you because you won. And so, since we cant win the argument, we have to convince them youre the devil." The Democrats, Clinton said, have a very different approach to winning and losing, one that has proven very costly. "We dont necessarily hate people when they beat us because were so used to losing in life. We always like the contest. You get into the ring, you wrestle, someone wins, somebody loses, you wait till the next time and try again. But if you think youre going to win every time, and you think you found the formula by which they can get even close, and then somebody turns out to win, youve got to go out and convince the people that something bad happened." Yet even eight years of almost daily pounding by the media and the far right have not hardened Clinton or soured him to public service. Its all a matter of how you respond to it, he said. "You just have to smile, go on, stand up for what you believe in. Theres still nothing better than public service. Its the most rewarding thing I ever did. And if I had to do it all tomorrow again, Id do it again in a heartbeat." To that, Clinton received the biggest ovation of all.
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I think most people here (on FR) are upset about the probability of CFR being signed and the continued neo-Keynesian economic policies in the current administration. I agree that we (Repubs) have to take back control or all is lost, but I want to see a more conservative direction if we do...
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