Posted on 09/14/2003 9:34:04 PM PDT by sdk7x7
Former President Bill Clinton, seizing the Democratic stage, offered one of his strongest denunciations of President George W. Bush since leaving office as he tried to rally Democrats here around candidates who have yet to stir the excitement he did in 1992. . Speaking without notes or a prepared text on Saturday night, Clinton invoked the circumstances of the 2000 presidential election as he argued that the Bush administration had squandered the domestic and foreign policy gains he had made in his eight years in office. . "That election was not a mandate for radical change, but that is what we got," Clinton said, adding, "We went from surplus to deficit, from job gain to job loss, from a reduction in poverty to an increase in poverty, from a reduction in people without health insurance to an increase of people without health insurance." . The former president said that Bush had wasted an opportunity to unite the country and enhance its international standing in the days after the Sept. 11 attacks. . "Instead of uniting the world, we alienated it," he said. "And instead of uniting America, we divided it by trying to push it too far to the right." . The setting for Clinton's rare public speech on the American political scene was the annual steak fry held by this state's senior senator, Tom Harkin. It was attended by seven of the nine Democratic presidential candidates. . Six of them also spoke to the crowd on Saturday night, but Clinton's speech, even though it was arguably not one of his strongest performances, almost entirely obscured their words and served instead to underscore the contrast between the political skills of Clinton and those of this year's crop of candidates. . Indeed, two of the best-known Democrats, Senator John Edwards of North Carolina and Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, left the stage about 15 minutes before Clinton arrived, citing scheduling conflicts. . Clinton seemed aware of the danger that his presence might overshadow the 2004 contenders, or highlight their shortcomings, and he went to great lengths to dispute the notion that the Democrats were putting up a weak field this year. . He went out of his way to praise eight of the nine candidates. . The Reverend Al Sharpton of New York, who was not here, was the only one not to receive any mention from Clinton. . "I like this field - I get tired of people saying the field can't beat the incumbent president," said Clinton, adding: "When somebody tells you the people who are running for president aren't big, they just mean they aren't famous yet." . Clinton used his own economic situation to mock Bush's tax cut. . Clinton said he might, as a very wealthy former president living in Chappaqua, New York, be paying more taxes than just about anyone else in America. "I get my tax cut, and they are going to take 300,000 poor children and kick them out of after-school programs," he said. . The candidates and the host, Harkin, fell over one another to praise Clinton and dispel any idea that Clinton, who was impeached but not removed from office, was not welcome in Democratic circles. . Harkin even praised Clinton for bringing rain to this drought-afflicted region, though the rain stopped the moment Clinton took the stage. And the audience was dotted with signs reading, "Welcome back, Bill," and "We Miss You." . Edwards, who has patterned his campaign after Clinton's 1992 race, even appropriating some of Clinton's language, said, "I am tired of Democrats walking away from Bill Clinton and Al Gore, who led the greatest period of economic growth in our country's history." . And Kerry, speaking before Clinton, took notice of the former president's propensity for lengthy speeches at public gatherings, a propensity that Kerry shares. "I saw in the program that Bill Clinton is going to speak for about 20 minutes," he said. "And in that 20 minutes, if that's what you believe it is, he's going to deliver more common sense and more sense of the country than George Bush has in two and a half years." . Clinton, in fact, spoke for 22 minutes. His voice was hoarse and strained, and his speech wandered at times, as his crowd grew restless. . Wearing blue jeans and cowboy boots, and appearing thinner then he had at any point in the White House, Clinton took the stage to the sound of his 1992 campaign theme song, "Don't Stop (Thinking about Tomorrow)" by Fleetwood Mac. And when he was done, Clinton did as Clinton always does at these kinds of events: He stayed behind to shake every hand he could find, lingering for nearly an hour as the Iowa sky turned dark behind him. . The New York Times INDIANOLA, Iowa: >en<>res< Former Presi$-$ Former President Bill Clinton, seizing the Democratic stage, offered one of his strongest denunciations of President George W. Bush since leaving office as he tried to rally Democrats here around candidates who have yet to stir the excitement he did in 1992. . Speaking without notes or a prepared text on Saturday night, Clinton invoked the circumstances of the 2000 presidential election as he argued that the Bush administration had squandered the domestic and foreign policy gains he had made in his eight years in office. . "That election was not a mandate for radical change, but that is what we got," Clinton said, adding, "We went from surplus to deficit, from job gain to job loss, from a reduction in poverty to an increase in poverty, from a reduction in people without health insurance to an increase of people without health insurance." . The former president said that Bush had wasted an opportunity to unite the country and enhance its international standing in the days after the Sept. 11 attacks. . "Instead of uniting the world, we alienated it," he said. "And instead of uniting America, we divided it by trying to push it too far to the right." . The setting for Clinton's rare public speech on the American political scene was the annual steak fry held by this state's senior senator, Tom Harkin. It was attended by seven of the nine Democratic presidential candidates. . Six of them also spoke to the crowd on Saturday night, but Clinton's speech, even though it was arguably not one of his strongest performances, almost entirely obscured their words and served instead to underscore the contrast between the political skills of Clinton and those of this year's crop of candidates. . Indeed, two of the best-known Democrats, Senator John Edwards of North Carolina and Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, left the stage about 15 minutes before Clinton arrived, citing scheduling conflicts. . Clinton seemed aware of the danger that his presence might overshadow the 2004 contenders, or highlight their shortcomings, and he went to great lengths to dispute the notion that the Democrats were putting up a weak field this year. . He went out of his way to praise eight of the nine candidates. . The Reverend Al Sharpton of New York, who was not here, was the only one not to receive any mention from Clinton. . "I like this field - I get tired of people saying the field can't beat the incumbent president," said Clinton, adding: "When somebody tells you the people who are running for president aren't big, they just mean they aren't famous yet." . Clinton used his own economic situation to mock Bush's tax cut. . Clinton said he might, as a very wealthy former president living in Chappaqua, New York, be paying more taxes than just about anyone else in America. "I get my tax cut, and they are going to take 300,000 poor children and kick them out of after-school programs," he said. . The candidates and the host, Harkin, fell over one another to praise Clinton and dispel any idea that Clinton, who was impeached but not removed from office, was not welcome in Democratic circles. . Harkin even praised Clinton for bringing rain to this drought-afflicted region, though the rain stopped the moment Clinton took the stage. And the audience was dotted with signs reading, "Welcome back, Bill," and "We Miss You." . Edwards, who has patterned his campaign after Clinton's 1992 race, even appropriating some of Clinton's language, said, "I am tired of Democrats walking away from Bill Clinton and Al Gore, who led the greatest period of economic growth in our country's history." . And Kerry, speaking before Clinton, took notice of the former president's propensity for lengthy speeches at public gatherings, a propensity that Kerry shares. "I saw in the program that Bill Clinton is going to speak for about 20 minutes," he said. "And in that 20 minutes, if that's what you believe it is, he's going to deliver more common sense and more sense of the country than George Bush has in two and a half years." . Clinton, in fact, spoke for 22 minutes. His voice was hoarse and strained, and his speech wandered at times, as his crowd grew restless. . Wearing blue jeans and cowboy boots, and appearing thinner then he had at any point in the White House, Clinton took the stage to the sound of his 1992 campaign theme song, "Don't Stop (Thinking about Tomorrow)" by Fleetwood Mac. And when he was done, Clinton did as Clinton always does at these kinds of events: He stayed behind to shake every hand he could find, lingering for nearly an hour as the Iowa sky turned dark behind him. . The New York Times INDIANOLA, Iowa: >en<>res< Former Presi$-$ Former President Bill Clinton, seizing the Democratic stage, offered one of his strongest denunciations of President George W. Bush since leaving office as he tried to rally Democrats here around candidates who have yet to stir the excitement he did in 1992. . Speaking without notes or a prepared text on Saturday night, Clinton invoked the circumstances of the 2000 presidential election as he argued that the Bush administration had squandered the domestic and foreign policy gains he had made in his eight years in office. . "That election was not a mandate for radical change, but that is what we got," Clinton said, adding, "We went from surplus to deficit, from job gain to job loss, from a reduction in poverty to an increase in poverty, from a reduction in people without health insurance to an increase of people without health insurance." . The former president said that Bush had wasted an opportunity to unite the country and enhance its international standing in the days after the Sept. 11 attacks. . "Instead of uniting the world, we alienated it," he said. "And instead of uniting America, we divided it by trying to push it too far to the right." . The setting for Clinton's rare public speech on the American political scene was the annual steak fry held by this state's senior senator, Tom Harkin. It was attended by seven of the nine Democratic presidential candidates. . Six of them also spoke to the crowd on Saturday night, but Clinton's speech, even though it was arguably not one of his strongest performances, almost entirely obscured their words and served instead to underscore the contrast between the political skills of Clinton and those of this year's crop of candidates. . Indeed, two of the best-known Democrats, Senator John Edwards of North Carolina and Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, left the stage about 15 minutes before Clinton arrived, citing scheduling conflicts. . Clinton seemed aware of the danger that his presence might overshadow the 2004 contenders, or highlight their shortcomings, and he went to great lengths to dispute the notion that the Democrats were putting up a weak field this year. . He went out of his way to praise eight of the nine candidates. . The Reverend Al Sharpton of New York, who was not here, was the only one not to receive any mention from Clinton. . "I like this field - I get tired of people saying the field can't beat the incumbent president," said Clinton, adding: "When somebody tells you the people who are running for president aren't big, they just mean they aren't famous yet." . Clinton used his own economic situation to mock Bush's tax cut. . Clinton said he might, as a very wealthy former president living in Chappaqua, New York, be paying more taxes than just about anyone else in America. "I get my tax cut, and they are going to take 300,000 poor children and kick them out of after-school programs," he said. . The candidates and the host, Harkin, fell over one another to praise Clinton and dispel any idea that Clinton, who was impeached but not removed from office, was not welcome in Democratic circles. . Harkin even praised Clinton for bringing rain to this drought-afflicted region, though the rain stopped the moment Clinton took the stage. And the audience was dotted with signs reading, "Welcome back, Bill," and "We Miss You." . Edwards, who has patterned his campaign after Clinton's 1992 race, even appropriating some of Clinton's language, said, "I am tired of Democrats walking away from Bill Clinton and Al Gore, who led the greatest period of economic growth in our country's history." . And Kerry, speaking before Clinton, took notice of the former president's propensity for lengthy speeches at public gatherings, a propensity that Kerry shares. "I saw in the program that Bill Clinton is going to speak for about 20 minutes," he said. "And in that 20 minutes, if that's what you believe it is, he's going to deliver more common sense and more sense of the country than George Bush has in two and a half years." . Clinton, in fact, spoke for 22 minutes. His voice was hoarse and strained, and his speech wandered at times, as his crowd grew restless. . Wearing blue jeans and cowboy boots, and appearing thinner then he had at any point in the White House, Clinton took the stage to the sound of his 1992 campaign theme song, "Don't Stop (Thinking about Tomorrow)" by Fleetwood Mac. And when he was done, Clinton did as Clinton always does at these kinds of events: He stayed behind to shake every hand he could find, lingering for nearly an hour as the Iowa sky turned dark behind him. . The New York Times
-sdk
The "foreign policy gains" he made? What, like giving the North Koreans several billion dollars and allowing them to restart their nuclear weapons program? Like not accepting Osama bin Laden when Somalia offered him to us? Like not getting us out of Bosnia after the conflict was over. Etc, etc, etc....
But as for Clinton, it just goes to show what a few million bucks in poorly laundered campaign money can buy, if you approach the right candidate.
Currently, only the Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times have an excerpt only requirement @ FR.
Well...
1) If it's an NYT article in the IHT, that means it was in the Times as well.
2)There's a "print" button on each IHT page. You can either cut-and-paste from that, or get the source of the "print" page and cut/paste that.
Not nagging, just suggesting for next time...
(And, as I like to point out, FR seems to be the only site on the net where the LAT and WP have actually gone out of their way to stop reposting of their stories. There are a number of leftie sites that repost WAP and LP articles in their entirety every single day, and the LAT and WP never bats an eyelid. I thought selective prosecution of so-called "copyright violations" was grounds for losing said copyright. I don't know why we've never pursued that angle.)
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Perhaps the most stupid woman on the planet called Drudge tonight. She thinks the storm is a conspiracy by Bush to help the economy that he can't get started. She says that it won't hit, but people are spending all kinds of money getting supplies.
907 posted on 09/15/2003 12:03 AM EDT by doug from upland (Why did DemocRATS allow a perjuring rapist to remain in the Oval Office?)
I didn't read all that garbage you posted (and it wasn't because of the formatting but because it's such hogwash) ..... did x42 also mention Isabel?
I wonder what pile of sand this woman had her head in when Floyd was going up the East coast while x42 was president and he was declaring disaster areas where the storm hadn't even made landfall yet.
Oh and Bill .. YOU ARE A LOSER!!
In other words (they giddily gasp), HE'S SO SMART!!!
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