Posted on 09/03/2003 6:47:36 AM PDT by bedolido
Do you think George W. Bush is a Nazi? That his family and close advisers are Nazis, too? If so, then youll feel right at home in the growing ranks of hard-core Bush haters.
Go to the left-wing website Counterpunch.org and youll find this: Its going a bit far to compare the Bush of 2003 to the Hitler of 1933, writes a man named Dave Lindorff (who has written for The Nation and Salon and has appeared on National Public Radio).
Bush is simply not the orator that Hitler was. But comparisons of the Bush administrations fear-mongering tactics to those practiced so successfully and with such terrible results by Hitler and Goebbels on the German people and their Weimar Republic are not at all out of line.
Click to another site, the antiwar Takebackthemedia.com.
The media will not tell you of the Bush family Nazi association, says a Web movie that features photos of George W. Bush alongside photos of Adolf Hitler, along with stern warnings about the coming Bush Reich.
Then go to Fearbush.com, where you can download images of Bush in front of a giant swastika.
Does that seem like fringe stuff? Well, first remember that Counterpunch.org boasts 60,000 visitors a month. Takebackthemedia.com attracted some mainstream attention in coverage of the antiwar movement.
And then check out a slightly bigger publication: Vanity Fair.
Page 146 of the September issue of the magazine features a letter from a reader who noticed something interesting about a photograph of Bush administration military adviser Richard Perle in a previous issue.
The photograph reminded the reader of a famous Alfred Eisenstaedt photograph of Nazi propaganda chief Joseph Goebbels.
Here it is: the same arrogance, the same malice toward the photographer, the same all-around creepiness, the letter said. Perle isnt the first government official to use deceit and fear-mongering to force an extremist, irrational and ultimately violent view on an entire nation, or globe.
The interesting thing is not that some people have such thoughts. The interesting thing is that the editors of Vanity Fair found the argument so compelling that they printed the letter in a special box with the Perle and Goebbels photos side by side.
But maybe all the Nazi stuff is a bit much for you.
If so, stop by Bushbodycount.com, where you will learn that the president and his family have been involved in dozens of mysterious deaths.
This is a list of bodies, a roster of the dead, who might have been called witnesses had they not met their untimely ends, the site says. The list includes all sorts of names and even suggests that the elder George Bush might have had something to do with the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
At Bushbodycount.com youll also learn about something known on the Internet as the BFEE, or Bush Family Evil Empire. The bottom line: These Bushes are very, very bad people.
And if you tire of reading about how vicious the president is, you can take a break and read how stupid he is.
Stop by Presidentmoron.com. And Bushisamoron.com. And Toostupidtobepresident.com. Youll get the idea.
All that might seem not worth taking seriously were it not for the fact that similar stuff was taken quite seriously during the Clinton years.
Remember The Clinton Chronicles, the 1994 video that attempted to implicate Bill Clinton in all sorts of unsolved deaths? Remember the Clinton Body Count lists? Remember the stories of the presidents connections to drug running?
During those years, scurrilous stories about Bill Clinton were widely condemned in the press.
The Clinton White House did its part to help.
For example, in her famous vast right-wing conspiracy appearance on the Today show in 1998, then-first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton complained about administration opponents accusing my husband of committing murder, of drug running.
You might also remember that in 1995 the Clinton White House produced a 311-page study titled Communication Stream of Conspiracy Commerce, which purported to show how anti-Clinton stories made their way from the Internet (among other sources) to the mainstream press.
At the time, the Clinton White House sought to stigmatize the opposition by branding anyone who opposed the first ladys healthcare plan or who thought Whitewater was a legitimate inquiry as Clinton haters.
They werent, just as now, people who simply dislike the presidents tax cut or dont approve of the war in Iraq are not Bush haters.
But there are genuine Bush haters out there an extensive, aggressive network of them.
Only so far, the press has seemed less interested in their work than in the previous administration.
But pay attention to what you see and read at Counterpunch.org, Bushbodycount.com, Presidentmoron.com and Vanity Fair.
An election is coming up. Things will undoubtedly get rough. And youll be seeing more and more of the Bush haters.
Byron York is a White House correspondent for National Review. His column appears in The Hill each Wednesday. E-mail: byork@thehill.com
PLEASE PING YOUR LISTS to visit Terri Schiavo's Call to Action thread. A Florida Judge has divined that it is her wish to be starved to death. Terri is not in a come or a persistent vegetative state. The pro-death movement has set up housekeeping in Pinellas County Florida. If you'd like to be on Terri Schiavo's PING LIST, please contact kimmie7.
If you jump on a Terri Schiavo thread, we have phone numbers, email addresses and fax numbers we'd like you to contact. Terri's death sentence will be handed down on September 11, 2003. Starvation will take from 10 to 15 days and IT IS UNCONSTITUTIONAL! It's what Hitler used to do to imperfect people. In addition, the thread is an interesting read. FV
BIG FAT BUMP!
This seems a fine moment to contribute the:
ALL TIME CHILLING QUOTE OF THE DAY :
"The American People will never knowingly adopt Socialism,
but under the name of Liberalism
they will adopt every fragment of the Socialist Program
until one day America will be a Socialist Nation
without ever knowing how it happened----"
Comment courtesy of Norman Thomas, Six-Time Socialist Party presidential candidate
and one of the Founders of the ACLU.
Please mention that quote to anyone you care about!
I saw that, too. That was Byron York, the author of this article.
I also have a habit of watching ABC News when I can. Last night, I was so incensed at Jennings that I tried to E-mail ABC. I was unwilling to "join" their club in order to make comments. Ultimately I called my local ABC affiliate and bitched to the girl who answers the phone. I realize that it was a waste of time, yet, I somehow felt better about it later.
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