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"And on Friday the Republican National Committee e-mailed to reporters an Internet boxing game called "Kerry vs. Kerry" designed, the committee said, to highlight the senator's "multiple positions on multiple issues."

I'd like to see that e-mail.

The closing sentence: "...I'd let Americans decide which in the end is closer to what they need in a president, in a complex world where if you get it really wrong there are enormous consequences." is what people need to think about. Can you trust Kerry with life and death decisions of the American people? I don't think so.

1 posted on 03/05/2004 9:23:16 PM PST by FairOpinion
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To: FairOpinion
"When Senator John Kerry was speaking to Jewish leaders a few days ago, he said Israel's construction of a barrier between it and Palestinian territories was a legitimate act of self-defense. But in October, he told an Arab-American group that it was "provocative and counterproductive" and a "barrier to peace.""

I just have to believe that this guy is going to implode at some point
2 posted on 03/05/2004 9:24:40 PM PST by raloxk
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To: FairOpinion
Kerry's Shifts: Nuanced Ideas or Flip-Flops?

Neither..
just plain lies.

3 posted on 03/05/2004 9:28:32 PM PST by evad (We all stand together OR we hang separately!)
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To: FairOpinion
I'm surprised that the NY Times ran this marginally unbiased article, but not surprised that since they did choose to run it that they buried it on their low-readership Saturday edition...
4 posted on 03/05/2004 9:29:25 PM PST by Southack (Media bias means that Castro won't be punished for Cuban war crimes against Black Angolans in Africa)
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To: FairOpinion

5 posted on 03/05/2004 9:30:51 PM PST by binger
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To: FairOpinion; Kenny Bunk
It's simple.

He's a liar.

Is that nuanced enough?

6 posted on 03/05/2004 9:31:02 PM PST by Shermy
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To: FairOpinion
Some aides and close associates say Mr. Kerry's fluidity is the mark of an intellectual who grasps the subtleties of issues

Fluidity????? ROTFL. Kerry goes from one extreme to the other at a drop of the hat.

7 posted on 03/05/2004 9:34:08 PM PST by Always Right
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To: FairOpinion
And that's from the NY Times! It's not lookin' good for mealy-mouthed, un-nuanced, unsophisticated liars in general nowadays.

Two of my coworkers were in the office tonight. One, my friend, is a partisan Democrat. He stated that if Bush gets back in, "ain't none of us gonna have jobs." We work at a drug rehab (a non-profit), and GWB asked Congress for $600 million for drug rehabilitation in the 2003 State of the Union.

But anyway, my other coworker ignored him the first couple of times he said this. I did also (he'd brought in the new "Star", and I was ogling female celebrities). Then she said, Bush was going to be reelected. This is not something I had expected her to say.

Maybe Bush will win Michigan... ;')
16 posted on 03/05/2004 11:18:17 PM PST by SunkenCiv ("Johnnie, we hardly cared to know ya.")
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To: FairOpinion; All
Kerry's World: Father Knows Best***From the start, Richard Kerry turned his oldest son into his foreign policy protégé. As Newsweek's Evan Thomas has written, "The Kerry dinner table was a nightly foreign-policy seminar. While other boys were eating TV dinners in front of the tube, [John] Kerry was discussing George Kennan's doctrine of containment." His father introduced the adolescent boy to such luminaries as Monnet and West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. Later, when he was at Yale, John Kerry traded letters with Clementine Churchill, Winston's wife.

As early as prep school, John Kerry showed signs that he shared his father's suspicions about America's cold war foreign policy. In a debate at St. Paul's in the late '50s, he argued that the United States should establish relations with Red China. During his junior year at Yale, he won a speech prize for an oration warning, "It is the specter of Western Imperialism that causes more fear among Africans and Asians than communism, and thus it is self-defeating." And, when he was tapped to deliver a graduation speech in 1966, he used the occasion to condemn U.S. involvement in Vietnam, intoning, "What was an excess of isolationism has become an excess of interventionism."

If Richard and John Kerry were not in perfect political sync, it was because the father, in an inversion of the usual dynamic, was more radical than the son. John Kerry, for instance, had grown enthusiastic about John F. Kennedy and his robust, anti-communist foreign policy. Indeed, it was his fervor for Kennedy's "bear any burden" call to service that largely inspired Kerry to join the Navy. Richard Kerry, by contrast, was more skeptical about New Frontier idealism. In a 1996 interview with The Boston Globe, he groused, "[John's] attitude was gung ho: had to show the flag. He was quite immature in that direction." When John Kerry came back from Vietnam, his father pushed him to be more outspoken in his opposition to the war. "When Kerry refused to speak out against the government [while in uniform], suddenly his father felt like he was being a wimp," says Brinkley. "[So he] encouraged his son to take off the uniform and to become a critic."

John Kerry, of course, did exactly this, first in Vietnam Veterans Against the War and eventually in the U.S. Senate. From the moment he arrived in Washington, Kerry promised that "issues of war and peace" would remain his passion. And, from the start, this meant that he would criticize Ronald Reagan's war against communism, especially when it was fought through proxies in the jungles of Central America. In 1985, he traveled to Nicaragua to meet with the Sandanista government, telling The Washington Post, "I see an enormous haughtiness in the United States trying to tell [the Sandinistas] what to do." Soon after his return, he pressured Congress into investigating the administration's illegal funding of the Contra rebels, opening a trail that culminated in the exposure of the arms-for-hostages deal with Iran. And, a few years later, in the late '80s, he repeated this success, launching an investigation that revealed that another of the administration's favorite anti-communists, the Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega, had been deeply enmeshed in drug-trafficking. Kerry was also skeptical enough of U.S. power that he voted against authorizing a popular intervention -- the Gulf war -- and opposed a 1995 resolution that would have allowed the arming of Bosnians. ***

17 posted on 03/05/2004 11:19:04 PM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: FairOpinion
Mr. Kerry's fluidity is the mark of an intellectual who grasps the subtleties of issues, inhabits their nuances and revels in the deliberative process

hehe, It just doesn't get any better than this.

18 posted on 03/05/2004 11:23:36 PM PST by squidly (Money is inconvenient for them: give them victuals and an arse-clout, it is enough.)
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To: FairOpinion
I wonder why Pillory's "home town" paper didn't mention this BEFORE Super Tuesday?
19 posted on 03/05/2004 11:39:36 PM PST by ApplegateRanch (The world needs more horses, and fewer Jackasses!)
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To: FairOpinion
"Between the moral clarity, black and white, good and evil of George Bush that distorts and gets reality wrong," he said, "and someone who quotes a French philosopher, André Gide, saying, `Don't try to understand me too much,' I'd let Americans decide which in the end is closer to what they need in a president, in a complex world where if you get it really wrong there are enormous consequences.

That's just what we need -- a president who quotes French philosophers. And that quote essentially means, "Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain." Sheesh!

20 posted on 03/05/2004 11:55:47 PM PST by NYCVirago
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To: FairOpinion
This guy can't even tell you in two words what he believes. And if he does he'll sooner or later emerge with the opposite position! A flip-flopper can be fine in a legislator, who you know is expected to engaged in horsetrading and seek the broadest possible ground with colleagues but its a fatal defect in a Chief Executive. With a President or CEO, one has the right to know his sense of direction and that both friends and foes know exactly where he stands. You get no such reassurance from John F. Kerry.
22 posted on 03/06/2004 2:15:58 AM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: FairOpinion
Ask yourselves this:

Whom do you think that nuts like Bin Laden, Kim Jong Il, Assad, and the Iranian mullahs would like to see elected US President this November? Someone who is taking it to them or Kerry?
24 posted on 03/06/2004 3:53:24 AM PST by Smber (The smallest minority is the individual. Get the government off my back.)
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To: FairOpinion
Ah, Nuancyboy!
25 posted on 03/06/2004 4:19:00 AM PST by hershey
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To: FairOpinion
Pulling a complete 180 is not a nuanced idea.
29 posted on 03/06/2004 5:30:46 AM PST by New Horizon
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To: hershey
This must be the article you referenced in another thread.

Good grief.
30 posted on 03/06/2004 5:45:54 AM PST by Samwise (I am going to need to be sedated before this election is over.)
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To: FairOpinion
The reason why JFKerry flip and flops from one day to the next is his brain has gone to "pot".

He simply cannot remember what he said the day before.

Can there be any other reason why he keeps playing and replaying those films he made in Vietnam, reenacting his gun battles? I am only half joking.
32 posted on 03/06/2004 8:24:13 AM PST by Just mythoughts
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To: FairOpinion
Here we go again. Liberal idiot media is about to start parroting the "n-word" to convince everyone that Kerry is a genius (like all liberals, everywhere, all the time).

You see, whenever a fellow liberal doesn't make sense it's merely a matter of him being too deep for the rest of us yokels to understand. When a conservative does the same thing, it's proof that he's a knuckle-dragging moron.

So the idiot liberal media has a job to do. They have to repeat the word "nuanced" approximately four million times to create the impression that Kerry is so intelligent that making the least bit of sense is beneath him.

33 posted on 03/06/2004 10:27:27 AM PST by Reactionary
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To: FairOpinion
This article shows very well why this guys decision style would be an absolute disaster for America and the World in dealing with Terrorists.

______________________________________________________________________________

"There's indoor John and outdoor John," said Jonathan Winer, a Washington lawyer and former State Department official who worked for Mr. Kerry from 1983 to 1994.

"Indoor John is thoughtful, works all this through, is nuanced, and so deeply into the process that you can get impatient," Mr. Winer said. "Outdoor John is a man of action. There'd be a point where, Boom! and go. Once it happened, the dialogue was over, and you wouldn't always know which way he was going to go."

38 posted on 09/30/2004 11:40:17 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach (A Proud member of Free Republic ~~The New Face of the Fourth Estate since 1996.)
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