Posted on 09/16/2003 10:01:52 AM PDT by dead
Boxing George Bush Into a Corner in 2004
It is an unlovely fact, but a fact nonetheless. The surest way to win a presidential election is to successfully scare the bejesus out of the voters about what will happen if the opponent becomes, or remains, president of the United States. Not a pleasant thing for Democrats, who like to be nice, to have to ponder. Fortunately for the squeamish, they will simply be telling the truth. George W. Bush is scary. Going negative against him, early, even right out of the box, might be not just a winning strategy. It will also be the patriotic thing to do. Just ask Rand Beers.
I fantasize about the Democratic nominee kicking off his campaign with a TV spot like this:
Picture a man standing in an office, handsome, serious. It is Rand Beers, a former top Bush administration counterterrorism expert, looking into the camera and telling America the exact same words he told The Washington Post this past June when he resigned from his job with the National Security Council and joined the John Kerry presidential campaign: "The administration wasn't matching its deeds to its words in the war on terrorism. They're making us less secure, not more secure." (The words appear along the bottom of the screen, for emphasis: They're making us less secure, not more secure.)
Perhaps at this point a shot might home in on a documentthe oath of office he keeps framed upon his wall. Then he might say something like: I served under presidents Ronald Reagan, Clinton, and George H.W. Bush. But what I saw under this president made me do something I never thought I would do: quit the government service.
Cue close-up: steely eyes.
Stirring music.
I decided this past June that the best way to keep my pledge to help secure my nation was to work full-time for the defeat of this president.
Is that too wordy? I don't know. I've never written a television commercial before. I suspect that this one might work, though, even if General Wesley Clark isn't the Democratic nominee.
Another reverie: I picture zeros filling the screen. George W. Bush's zeros. There are 11 zeros in $500 billionthe current estimate of Bush's budget deficit. There is one more zero in a trillionthe amount the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities estimates the Bush tax cuts for the rather well-off will end up costing. Maybe start off the commercial with six zeros almost filling the screen: the six zeros in 3 million, the number of jobs lost under Bush. Picture them as balloons: six of them, filling with air, crowding the frame. Five more balloons, then six, crowd them further, the narrator explaining how many zeros there are in $1,000,000,000,000. The balloons get too big, the screen is too small, a single TV set proves unable to squeeze them all in. The balloons begin to explode, one by one, until there's only one fat, round one left. Which begins to whinily leak.
A single zero. To illustrate the number of net jobs created under every administration led by a man with the last name of Bush.
People hate budget deficits. George W. Bush has built up the largest one ever, by far, and in record time. It is visceral, this hatred of government red ink. In the American mind it has symbolized dissolution, a loss of controlthe kind of sleazy, lazy, bumble-headedness Republicans have so effectively pinned on Democrats for decades. The first person who told me she loved Howard Dean, a college student, said it was because he would eliminate the Republican budget deficit for her children's and grandchildren's generation.
It's a powerful appeal. How about a slogan: Remember the Surplus.
I find a certain orotundity in the phrase, a handsome, bumper-sticker-worthy roundness. Remember the SurplusVote Democratic in '04. Columnist Matthew Miller speaks of Bush's "radical fiscal immorality." A pretty good line. Remember the Bush speech on Iraqthe one a few nights back, the one where the Son King crawled on his knees begging the nations of the UN to aid our occupation after months and months of insolence toward the UN? (Americans hate to see their presidents beg. And Americans rather like the UN.) "We will do what is necessary," he said. "We will spend what is necessary."
He means us to think of John F. Kennedy: Pay any price, bear any burden, pass the torch to a new generation of Americans. Why not a Democratic commercial asking the Republican candidate if that means he'll cancel any of his tax cuts when the deficit grows great enough to spark a fiscal conflagration that will devour our children and grandchildren in the flames?
The Bush administration must be held to its words. Nailed to its words. Until Bush bleeds.
Here is an image. A picture to strike fearful memories in the hearts of Americans. The empty, abandoned airports.
Quick cuts on the airports, busy and bustling, then those same spaces as they were the first few days after September 11, 2001: eerie ghost towns.
Then, the voice-over, citing the facts established in an indispensable article in the October 2003 issue of Vanity Fair: "Within minutes of the attacks on 9/11, the Federal Aviation Administration had sent out a special notification . . . ordering every airborne plane in the United States to land at the nearest airport as soon as possible, and prohibiting planes on the ground from taking off."
Cut to an abandoned baseball stadium: Across the country, professional baseball games were postponed.
Menacing music.
So why were 140 members and associates of two families with close business and social ties to the Bush familythe bin Ladens, and the royal family of Saudi Arabiaallowed the only flights out of the country on those days? The monologue might get a little dry at this pointexplaining all those ties: the Saudi family's bailing out Bush Jr.'s Harken Oil, for example. The racquetball games between Colin Powell and Prince Bandar bin Sultan, the Saudi ambassador who brokered the favor. It might get complicated, laying out how, as ground zero was aflame and Arabs were being hustled into FBI interrogation rooms around the nation almost at random, the dozens of people most likely to be able to shed light on the suspects were ushered out of the country under FBI escort.
At least the ending could be punchy.
Blank screen.
Voice-over:
Call the White House at 1-202-456-1414 and ask George W. Bush why his administration denies those flights ever took place.
Fade in: the rugged, all-American face of Rand Beers.
Cue music.
They're making us less secure, not more secure.
Repeat as necessary. 'Til victory is ours.
Not a pleasant thing for Democrats, who like to be nice, to have to ponder.
The When you vote for a Republican, another black church burns Democrats, or The George Bush chains black men to the back of his pick-up truck Democrats?
Yep. Telling senior citizens that republicans want to kick them into the streets, take away their medicine, force them to eat dog food, and take away their social security. Real Nice.
Or Al Gore telling the NAALCP that Republicans don't want blacks counted in the census. Real nice.
Or the NAALCP running ads equating George W Bush with dragging death of James Byrd. Real nice.
Or RATS running ads telling blacks that if they vote for a republican black churches will burn. Real nice.
The RATS run the most vile, hate filled campaigns.
Oh my gosh, is this buffoon serious????? Democrats typically use bullwhips in ads aimed at African-Americans to try to make Republicans sound like slave owners. Democrats are usually accusing Republicans of starving the elderly and children. Rick needs to stay off the heavy drugs for a while and come back to friggin reality.
Thank goodness, someone finally was able to get rid of the guy. Not before his pension was vested, though, I'm sure.
forgot the barf alert.
I kinda thought you could deduce the tone of the article from the title of the thread.
the narrator explaining how many zeros there are in $1,000,000,000,000
You can see the target demographic he has for these fantasy ads people who have to have big numbers explained to them.
I know, because he Freep-mailed me to complain about my review of his last article.
It's a good thing the Dems are so opposed to mudslinging.
This is really from the Onion, right?
And the Republicans have now become the Liberals.
$15b Sought to Fight AIDS(African dictator bribe)
Lay off Arafat, Powell tells Israel(enablers of terrorism)
Steel Tariffs Cost Jobs
The Skys the Limit: Medicares Upwardly Mobile Drug Cost Projections(Govt pills for Seniors)
Estrada withdraws name from court consideration(because he had no support from GOP Senate)
/unfortunatley, the sarcasm was never on
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