Posted on 12/11/2002 2:15:31 AM PST by RonDog
Al Gore's world: The new season
Posted: December 11, 2002
1:00 a.m. Eastern
© 2002 WorldNetDaily.com
Here's what Trent Lott said at a farewell party for Strom Thurmond: "I want to say this about my state: When Strom Thurmond ran for president, we voted for him. We're proud of it. And if the rest of the country had followed our lead, we wouldn't have had all these problems over these years, either."Here's what Al Gore said about what Trent Lott said: "It is not a small thing, Judy, for one of the half dozen most prominent political leaders in America to say that our problems are caused by integration and that we should have had a segregationist candidate."
Of course, Trent Lott said nothing of the sort. Trent Lott put his foot in his mouth with an incredibly stupid comment that minimized Thurmond's segregationist past in much the same way everyone overlooks Robert Byrd's segregationist past, but had Lott said anything remotely approaching what Al Gore said Lott said, Lott would have to resign immediately. Al Gore knows this, and every commentator in Washington knows it. So why on earth did Al Gore invent a new version of Lott's comment?
(And why doesn't Gore's exchange with Judy Woodruff appear in the transcript of Monday's "Inside Politics" broadcast? I had begun to wonder whether Gore was being framed because I couldn't find the Gore quote in the transcript even though the quote was bouncing around the Internet, but Gore's ridiculous charge does appear in a John Mercurio online piece for CNN. Curious.)
Here's why Gore said what he said: He can't help himself. In a continuation of behavior that has followed him throughout his career, Gore overstates, embroiders, or simply invents the facts he needs in the moment he needs them. Whether its the cost of medicine for his dog Shiloh or a trip with a FEMA director or most famously inventing the Internet, Gore conjures up his version of reality as he needs it. Rarely does the public get to glimpse the process this closely.
There is no defending the stupidity of Lott's remarks. The 1948 presidential campaign of Thurmond was built on racism. Thurmond should not have been praised for running it, and Mississippi's vote for Thurmond is not likely to be featured on Mississippi's Greatest Hits reel. Lott has apologized for his "poor choice of words," and he needed to.
The farewell party for Thurmond 54 years removed from that campaign and having long ago repudiated segregation put Lott into a position where, with a little more felicity with words, Lott could have memorialized Thurmond's career without tripping over the embarrassment of 1948. Democrats have mastered the art of stuffing their segregationist baggage down the memory hole, and no one more than Al Gore who never finds it necessary to discuss his father's own Senate opposition to civil-rights laws. Lott deserves the criticisms he is getting from all sides.
But Gore's psyche can't let him score just the points allowed following a gaffe. Gore had to add a late hit, had to invent a slander on Lott. No one else in official Washington is saying that Lott attacked integration. Just Gore. Just weird Al. Alone again with his own reality.
The Weekly Standard's Stephen Hayes, in a fine piece that jumped on Lott hard, described Gore's comments as "opportunistic." This is too gentle. Way too gentle. Al Gore is running for president and he is already making up stuff on a weekly basis. This is not normal behavior. It wasn't normal in 2000, and it isn't normal now. Even the frothing Paul Krugman of the New York Times refused Al Gore's crazed translation.
Krugman used leading questions to deepen Lott's self-inflicted wound: "What exactly did Mr. Lott mean by 'all these problems' ... Is it possible that a major modern political figure has sympathy for such views?" See the safe ground of ridiculous but stinging insinuation. Not the nutty invention of Gore. Big difference. Important difference. Krugman knows there are lines you cannot cross without losing all credibility, even with a narrow spectrum of very-left readers. Al Gore has no such brakes. Gore literally appears unable to stop himself.
Which is why, I think, North Dakota's Byron Dorgan went public on Monday with an appeal for Al Gore to take a pass on '04. Even if Gore doesn't get the nomination, he'll turn the next 15 months into a bonfire of the vanities of other Democratic candidates. He has already started in on John Kerry. Folks remember what Gore did to Bill Bradley, and Bradley was a tomato can of an opponent. What will Gore say about Kerry and Edwards if Gore thinks he's losing his chance for a rematch? Dorgan and others know that if Gore can invent a Lott statement condemning integration, he will be just as inventive with his fellow Democrats. Gore unbound is a scary thought for Dems thinking about November of 2004.
Republicans are conflicted. They are fairly certain they can beat Gore like a bongo and dream of his renomination. But folks concerned for the country don't want him anywhere near the Oval Office, fearing the flukes of politics. I am still in the former camp, but every time Gore displays his bizarre side and his impulsive, uncontrollable need to invent, I edge closer to the latter. Al Gore is a very, very odd man. Can Democrats not see that?
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And, from www.HughHewitt.com:December 10, 2002
Posted at 9:15 AM, Pacific
Trent Lott apologized for his foot-in-mouth performance at Strom Thurmond's farewell party. The story won't be gone for a few days more, however, because Democrats foolishly overreacted, and once again underestimated the common sense of the American people. I'll write about this tomorrow in my WorldNetDaily column, but the over-the-top attempts by Al Gore and Jesse Jackson to turn Lott into a Dixiecrat also remind us that Bill Clinton lied again last week when he told a Democratic leadership group that the Dems lacked a "destruction machine." They have a destruction machine --it just isn't very good when Bill and James Carville aren't in control of it.
Fred Barnes wrote a very incisive piece at yesterday's WeeklyStandard.com, entitled "Six Democratic Myths." Don't miss it. Fred is right to note that Dems generally fall for the self-interested spin emerging from the failed Democratic leadership, they will dig themselves into an enormous hole.
Over at today's American Prowler, Wlady Pleszczynki has conferred a "Conason Prize" on blogger Joshua Marshall. Marshall is a brass-knuckled Dem-booster, and I visit his site often and have invited him onto the show, something that I would never do with Conason, who is so often simply hysterical that he is of no consequence. Marshall, who you can read for yourself at www.talkingpointsmemo.com, is a very different pundit, and bears watching because he anticipates the news cycle and helps guide it. Along with The New Republic's Peter Beinart and the rest of the gang at that magazine, Marshall is the best the center-left and the left have, so keep reading their stuff.
Neil Lewis in the New York Times reports that Douglas Kmiec, dean of the law school at Catholic University, is under consideration for nomination to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. This would be an extraordinarily good appointment to an important court. The left is already noting that Kmiec is a natural rights scholar, and suggesting that this is somehow disqualifying. What a debate this would be, as Kmiec would slice and dice his critics if given the opportunity, and their attacks would inevitably be revealed as nothing more than blatant anti-Catholicism which does animate a lot of the left's thinking on many matters concerning the pro-life debate.
Finally, the Washington Post's Dan Balz reports that North Dakota Senator Byron Dorgan has called on Al Gore not to run for president. This is a stunning bit of candor from a senior Dem about their leading man: Gore's way out there, and absent the protection of a Clinton White House and a fawning press corps, he'll self-destruct, but in doing so may run the entire party into a huge ditch. Where's my Gore in '04 button?CLICK HERE for more
LOTT SAID IT BEFORE (Drudge Siren)
Drudge ^ | 12/10/02 | Drudge
Posted on 12/10/2002 6:58 PM PST by walrus954
After a fiery speech by Thurmond at a Mississippi campaign rally for Ronald Reagan in November 1980, Lott, then a congressman, told a crowd in Jackson: "You know, if we had elected this man 30 years ago, we wouldn't be in the mess we are today."
More to follow...
-- snip --
After a fiery speech by Strom Thurmond at a Mississippi campaign rally in November 1980, Lott, then a congressman, told a crowd: 'You know, if we had elected this man 30 years ago, we wouldn't be in the mess we are today'... MORE... Quotation appeared in an account of the rally on Nov. 3, 1980, in Clarion-Ledger in Jackson, Miss...
LOTT SAID IT BEFORE
CLICK HERE for more
U.S. Senator Trent Lott of Mississippi is the Senate's Republican Leader. From June 12, 1996, until June 5, 2001, he served as the Senate's 16th Majority Leader, the first Mississippian to hold that leadership post.A native Mississippian, Senator Lott began his political career in 1968 as Administrative Assistant to U.S. Representative William Colmer, D-Mississippi. He was elected to the House of Representatives in 1972 and served until 1988 when he was elected to the Senate. He was re-elected to a second term in 1994 and a third term in 2000.
The respect shown Senator Lott by his colleagues in both the House and Senate is reflected by the leadership positions to which he has been elected. In 1979, he was elected Chairman of the House Republican Research Committee, the fifth ranking Republican leadership position in the House. In 1980 he was elected Republican Whip, the second ranking Republican leadership position. The first Southerner to be elected to that position, he was re-elected to the post three times.
In the Senate, Senator Lott continued his leadership service as Secretary of the Senate Republican Conference. In 1995, he was elected Senate Majority Whip. Senator Lott is the first person to be elected to the position of Whip in both the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate.
Senator Lott has won the admiration of his constituents with his service to Mississippians. A June 1995 Political/Media Research Inc. poll asked the constituents of 89 sitting Senators (the 11 freshmen were not included) how they rated the job performance of their Senator. Senator Lott received a 75 percent positive rating from Mississippians, earning him the second best constituent ranking in the Senate.
In the Senate, Lott serves on the Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, the Finance Committee, and the Rules Committee.
He was born October 9, 1941, in Grenada County, Mississippi, the son of a sharecropper farmer turned shipyard worker and a school teacher. He received his Bachelor of Science in Public Administration degree in 1963 and his Juris Doctorate in 1967 from the University of Mississippi in Oxford. He is married to Patricia (Tricia) Thompson Lott, originally of Pascagoula, Mississippi. Senator and Mrs. Lott are the parents of son, Chet, and daughter, Tyler, who have blessed them with three grandchildren: Trent, Shields Elizabeth, and Lucie Sims.
Senate GOP leader apologizes for remarkBy Jim Abrams=
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) _ Faced with an uproar over his remark that the nation would have been better off if Strom Thurmond had won the presidency when he ran on a segregationist ticket in 1948, Senate Republican leader Trent Lott apologized Monday night, saying he misspoke.
A poor choice of words conveyed to some the impression that I embraced the discarded policies of the past,'' Lott, R-Miss., said in a statement. "Nothing could be further from the truth, and I apologize to anyone who was offended by my statement.''Lott spokesman Ron Bonjean said the senator issued the statement "out of personal concern for the misunderstanding.''
Former Vice President Al Gore said earlier Monday that Lott should be censured for his ``racist statement.''
Lott made his comments last Thursday at a party celebrating the 100th birthday of Thurmond, who is retiring as South Carolina's senator after a record 48 years of service.
Lott, who will become Senate majority leader when the next Congress convenes in January, had issued an earlier statement denying support for Thurmond's past positions.
``This was a lighthearted celebration of the 100th birthday of legendary Senator Strom Thurmond,'' Lott said then. ``My comments were not an endorsement of his positions of over 50 years ago, but of the man and his life.''
Thurmond, then governor of South Carolina in 1948, ran for president as a states' rights and anti-integration Dixiecrat, opposing the civil rights policies of President Truman. He captured 39 southern electoral votes, including those of Lott's state, Mississippi.
Thurmond entered the Senate in 1954 and became one of the South's most vocal opponents of integration, opposing the 1954 Supreme Court school desegregation decision and filibustering against civil rights legislation. He changed positions later in the year, hiring black staffers and helping promote blacks to federal judgeships.
``I want to say this about my state,'' Lott said last Thursday. ``When Strom Thurmond ran for president, we voted for him. We're proud of it,'' he said to applause. ``And if the rest of the country had followed our lead, we wouldn't have had all these problems over all these years either.''
Kevin L. Martin, government and political affairs director of the African American Republican Leadership Council, said people were overreacting to the remarks. ``By no means was he endorsing segregation or anything like that. It was lighthearted, it was humorous.'' Martin said Lott captures 25 percent of the black vote in Mississippi, which he said couldn't happen if Lott were a racist.
But Gore, speaking on CNN's ``Inside Politics,'' said the Senate should censure Lott. ``It is not a small thing for one of the half-dozen most prominent political leaders in America to say that our problems are caused by integration and that we should have had a segregationist candidate. That is divisive and it is divisive along racial lines.''
The Rev. Jesse Jackson had said Sunday that Lott should step down. ``Shame on the Republican Party if it does not demote him for promoting this mean-spirited and immoral propaganda. ``The civil rights movement was one of America's finest hours. Strom Thurmond's massive resistance to that movement, and his support in states like Mississippi, was one of history's low points. Trent Lott must not be allowed to tarnish that truth.''
One Democrat, Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle, defended Lott on Monday, saying he had spoken with Lott and had accepted Lott's explanation that he hadn't meant for the remarks to be interpreted as they were. ``There are a lot of times when he and I go to the microphone and would like to say things we meant to say differently, and I'm sure this was one of those cases for him, as well,'' Daschle said.
AP-ES-12-09-02 2213EST
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"...Krugman used leading questions to deepen Lott's self-inflicted wound:See also, from:"What exactly did Mr. Lott mean by 'all these problems' ... Is it possible that a major modern political figure has sympathy for such views?"See the safe ground of ridiculous but stinging insinuation. Not the nutty invention of Gore.
Big difference. Important difference. Krugman knows there are lines you cannot cross without losing all credibility, even with a narrow spectrum of very-left readers.
Al Gore has no such brakes. Gore literally appears unable to stop himself.Which is why, I think, North Dakota's Byron Dorgan went public on Monday with an appeal for Al Gore to take a pass on '04..." - Hugh Hewitt
Dorgan Urges Gore to Give Up on Presidency
The Washington Post ^ | 12/10/02 | Dan Balz
Posted on 12/10/2002 8:04 AM PST by Gothmog
As Al Gore contemplates another run for president, Sen. Byron L. Dorgan (D-N.D.) has some crisp advice: Don't do it again.
"Al Gore is a fine person, and I like him," Dorgan said in an interview. "My feeling is that our party must turn the page."
Dorgan, burned by the way Gore and the national Democratic Party ran the 2000 presidential campaign, sent the former vice president a three-page letter in April outlining his complaints. He blamed Gore for issuing an "I give up" message in North Dakota and many other states long before the campaign was over.
"It's one thing to try and fail," Dorgan said in the letter. "But I think it is unforgivable to fail to try. . . . I want a presidential candidate who will give us a fighting chance in the heartland states."
Dorgan said over the weekend that his views haven't changed. "Vice President Gore is pretty much a known commodity," he said. "My own view is that, at this point, I hope he will make a decision not to seek the presidency."
Dorgan's letter carries an inherent warning to other Democrats thinking of running in 2004. Democratic candidates in Republican-leaning states need financial and rhetorical support from the party's presidential nominee and national organization to avoid what happened in North Dakota in 2000, which was a Republican sweep.
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[ Report Abuse | Bookmark ]No surprise -- Dorgan is up for 2004 and is afraid of losing w/ a popular President at the head of the ticket. Such honor among thieves, ha ha ha.
1 posted on 12/10/2002 8:04 AM PST by Gothmog
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To: Gothmog
It becomes more apparent daily that Gore is most likely a better candidate for self-committment than a presidential run. He is so confused on every issue. It really smacks of MPD.
2 posted on 12/10/2002 8:08 AM PST by widowithfoursons
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To: Gothmog
I'm torn between wanting to see Gore get crushed by Bush and the sick feeling I get anytime I hear or see Gore on tv.
3 posted on 12/10/2002 8:10 AM PST by KansasConservative
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To: Gothmog
We'll be seeing a lot more of these articles from the Clymers in the coming weeks and months. The Rats are deathly afraid of Gore running and know he will lose. Their problem is that he is so stupid, he won't take the clue and will plod on. Go Al Go....
4 posted on 12/10/2002 8:11 AM PST by eureka!
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To: KansasConservative
I'm torn between wanting to see Gore get crushed by Bush and the sick feeling I get anytime I hear or see Gore on tv.
Ditto.
5 posted on 12/10/2002 8:12 AM PST by VRWC_minion
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To: Gothmog
Don't bother Al. Right now he's out looking for "evidence" that Saddam Hussein supports terrorism.
6 posted on 12/10/2002 8:13 AM PST by angkor
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To: eureka!
The national Democrats regarding Gore are starting to sound a lot like the Florida Democrats earlier this year, when they realized Reno couldn't win.
7 posted on 12/10/2002 8:19 AM PST by Coop
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To: Coop
Yep. It will be interesting to see how it plays if he plods on. I'm sure he'll be saying some more silly stuff in the meanwhile to upstage Kerry and whoever else announces--and it'll just drive the Rats crazier...
8 posted on 12/10/2002 8:24 AM PST by eureka!
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To: Gothmog
"It's one thing to try and fail," Dorgan said...
9 posted on 12/10/2002 8:25 AM PST by 69ConvertibleFirebird
CLICK HERE for more
Where's my Gore in '04 button?You can get THESE buttons right now - from www.campaignbuttons-etc.com:
Excerpt:
Here's why Gore said what he said: He can't help himself. In a continuation of behavior that has followed him throughout his career, Gore overstates, embroiders, or simply invents the facts he needs in the moment he needs them. Whether its the cost of medicine for his dog Shiloh or a trip with a FEMA director or most famously inventing the Internet, Gore conjures up his version of reality as he needs it. Rarely does the public get to glimpse the process this closely.
There is no defending the stupidity of Lott's remarks. The 1948 presidential campaign of Thurmond was built on racism. Thurmond should not have been praised for running it, and Mississippi's vote for Thurmond is not likely to be featured on Mississippi's Greatest Hits reel. Lott has apologized for his "poor choice of words," and he needed to.
The farewell party for Thurmond 54 years removed from that campaign and having long ago repudiated segregation put Lott into a position where, with a little more felicity with words, Lott could have memorialized Thurmond's career without tripping over the embarrassment of 1948. Democrats have mastered the art of stuffing their segregationist baggage down the memory hole, and no one more than Al Gore who never finds it necessary to discuss his father's own Senate opposition to civil-rights laws. Lott deserves the criticisms he is getting from all sides.
But Gore's psyche can't let him score just the points allowed following a gaffe. Gore had to add a late hit, had to invent a slander on Lott. No one else in official Washington is saying that Lott attacked integration. Just Gore. Just weird Al. Alone again with his own reality.
Please let me know if you want ON or OFF my General Interest ping list!. . .don't be shy.
Having said that, I wish the Senate had someone other than weenie Lott as the Majority Leader, his latest gaffe being the least of his problems.
No brain, no spine. We could do better!!!
Having said that, I wish the Senate had someone other than weenie Lott as the Majority Leader, his latest gaffe being the least of his problems.You got THAT right!No brain, no spine. We could do better!!!
Your post, however, is hardly the FIRST time that conservatives have questioned this former cheerleader's apparent lack of intestinal fortitude...
One of my ALL-TIME FAVORITE Lott-bashers is still Mark Helprin, with THIS zinger, from:
- The Way Out of the Wilderness
Politics/Elections Editorial Editorial Keywords: WILDERNESS, HELPRIN
Source: Imprimis
Published: Jan. 2001 Author: Mark Helprin
Posted on 01/25/2001 16:43:33 PST by Osage OrangeThe Way Out of the Wilderness
Mark Helprin
Novelist and Contributing Editor, The Wall Street Journal
Mr. Helprin delivered the following speech at the first annual Hillsdale College Churchill Dinner, held on Tuesday, December 5, 2000, at the Crystal Gateway Marriott in Arlington, Virginia...
-- snip --
...Who the victor will be and by what narrow margin or technicality is immaterial to the fact that the horrid election of 2000 was created by the over-calculation and dissembling of both parties, which directed their gargantuan efforts not to clarify their positions but to obscure them. Had they argued forthrightly and drawn the clear lines the electorate deserves, the break almost certainly would have been less ambiguous. With a more truthful politics issues would be settled, things would get done, politics would actually recede.
It is foolish to believe that because half the people favor blue and half yellow, what the country really wants is green. If a nation could put itself on the right path merely by splitting differences, history would be rather less sharp. You cannot properly address the questions of what constitutes an adequate national defense, of collective versus individual rights, of abortion, capital punishment, the redistribution of wealth, the role and effect of government, and the meaning of the Constitution unless you debate them with all the force of argument you can bring to bear for the purpose of determining the truth of contending propositions.
Is it not astounding that this approach is associated with fanaticism and suicide, when in fact it is the sine qua non of survival in the long term?Its exemplar is not a Pat Buchanan, who feeds on the absolutism of his positions more than on their content, and has yet to adjust to the Second World War.
But nor is it a Trent Lott, who dwells behind the baseboards, ears cocked and fingers to the wind, surrounded by squadrons of ever-trembling mice...CLICK HERE for more
"I'm torn between wanting to see Gore get crushed by Bush and the sick feeling I get anytime I hear or see Gore on tv".
How accurately you express my thoughts.Thanks, but those words were from KansasConservative.
I just cut and pasted them into THIS thread. :o)
I pray that all goes VERY WELL, and that you "Get Well SOON!"
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