In other words..."these guys suck! Don't y'all want Hillary and my sycophant psycho Wes Clark instead"?
Candidate George W. Bush warned voters of the coming recession. The Clinonistas said that Gov. Bush shouldn't say such things because he was "jinxing" the economy. The Clinton economy was a sham and it had been debt ridden for years (the I.O.U.s came due).
"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."
Following the lead of the rest of the world is not a foreign policy. We are a soverign nation and our President is accountable to our citizens. In WWII, Europe went fascist (Spain, Italy, Germany) and some countries were conquored while others remained "neutral" in the midst of pure evil. We aren't lemmings and shouldn't try to win any popularity contests by doing what all the other kids are doing.
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.
A bad speech from a former president can still get ink he has the "right" tone when it comes to conservatives.
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.
Uh, there are 10 candidates for the Democrat Presidential nomination. Lyndon LaRouche is in the running even if they don't like to acknowledge him.
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 I'm sick and tired of seeing the Democrats appropriate credit for the greatest period of economic growth away from the policies of Reagan and Bush (the US economy was already in recovery before Bill Clinton took office despite their claims of "worst economy in 50 years"). What was the policy that Bill Clinton set in motion that caused that economy? Retroactively raising taxes?
(Kerry 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.
Doesn't sound like the speech was as riviting as some would like to make it out to be.