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Thread: I knew this campaign would get ugly...

  1. #26
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    Jesus Teej, you can be so contradictory and one-tracked sometimes. You rail on about the evils of communism and the NVA, yet you make the ridiculous claim that John Kerry is responsible for the torture of POWs and their executions in prison camps? Isn't that exactly the same as justifying the deaths of those kids with the deaths of 250,000 Chechans by Russia? Acts against all decent humanity are just what you said - wrong and inexcusable. So to blame JFKerry for what happened to American POWs is worse than hypocritical.

    PS: Answer these two questions...
    1. Where did John Kerry lie when he claimed that we "committed genocide, raised villages, raped women and children, mutilated bodies beyond recognition, etc"???

    -400 civilians were specifically massacred in the Son My area (including My Lai)
    -Napalm, as far as I'm aware, is very capable of mutilating bodies beyond recognition
    -10:1 kill ratio with no ability to distinguish between VC/NVA/etc. and civilians while almost no American civilians were at risk qualifies as geonocide in my mind. Some estimates (Lewy) even say that we may have killed as many as 220,000 SV civilians who were mistaken for VC.

    2. If Kerry's testimony was accurate (even as heresay evidence) does your military code mean that the American public didn't deserve to be told the truth about what the war was??? Because that info was not coming from the top (Pres, DoD, etc).

    I can't believe that you actually want ANOTHER election to be about Vietnam, but the fact is that John Kerry volunteered to go and THEN changed his mind about the justness of the war after BEING THERE. GWB was off getting drunk and signing papers vowing to complete his service, only to skate on through thanks to his connections. Thems the facts

  2. #27
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    We never learn. The atrocities come when it gets personal. Like it did in the 'Nam. Like it is now. When a buddy or someone from your unit gets iced, you want REVENGE. Same one the other side. A family member crippled. A friend killed. One of your drinking buddies loses a leg. You see blind rage. And so it escalates.







  3. #28
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    Originally posted by shamrockpow
    Jesus Teej, you can be so contradictory and one-tracked sometimes.
    Not to point you out specifically shamrockpow, and not that I even care that much about all this political BS, but the above comment strikes me as pretty funny. It's ok for 90% of the board to 'one-tracked' on the left side of the political spectrum, but it isn't ok for TJ to be? I'm not interested in taking sides, or getting into a pissing match or anything like that, but there is nothing wrong with bucking the liberal trend on the board...
    I went out there in search of experience. To taste, and to touch, and to feel as much as a man can, before he repents.

  4. #29
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    Originally posted by jayfrizzo
    My father-in-law, a Marine, supports him. Hoo-rah, motherfucker.

    And what's with this swinging dick/tit lingo? Don't they take away your jargon book when you leave the forces?
    dude, he talked to all of 'em. even the dead ones. from canada.
    fine

  5. #30
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    Originally posted by Canuk
    Not to point you out specifically shamrockpow, and not that I even care that much about all this political BS, but the above comment strikes me as pretty funny. It's ok for 90% of the board to 'one-tracked' on the left side of the political spectrum, but it isn't ok for TJ to be? I'm not interested in taking sides, or getting into a pissing match or anything like that, but there is nothing wrong with bucking the liberal trend on the board...
    I have no problem with his political beliefs. Everyone's welcome to their own and it's pretty damn hard to get most people to change their minds, that's why I like to hear the arguements from each side.

    My comment was in reference to the idea that in a thread about Dick Cheney's comments (to paraphrase: "If you elect John Kerry, watch out cause Osama has big plans in store once we're not here to protect you") Teej felt the need to bring the discussion back to Kerry's Vietnam service and his own military background. That's the one-track I was referring to. Tell me why Cheney's comments were right (a lot of people agree with him), tell me why they were out of context or just plan out of line, but just relate it to the current topic, not the same old thing...

  6. #31
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    are you guys seriously arguing about a Maureen Dowd article?

    save your strength.
    "The trouble with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money" --Margaret Thatcher

  7. #32
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    I don't want to argue about the political matters of your country (mine has already more than I can take) but : I frequently use the opinions of this forum to counter people's preconceptions. In one way or the other.

    Very interesting. In summer.

    I wonder how much skiers on the web are representatives...

  8. #33
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    Originally posted by mr_gyptian
    are you guys seriously arguing about a Maureen Dowd article?

    I believe the issue at heart is V.P. Cheney's remarks regarding the terrorist threat if Kerry is elected.

    As usual, this provides a mechanism for TJ to go off on some rave that further exposes to many of us, yet again, TJ's tangential grip on reality.

    It also exposes a mechanism for you, mr_g, to make yet another not so subtle ad hominem attack on someone you don't know.

    And so the tgr chatbored turns...
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  9. #34
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    I can't comment on a writer based upon his/her byline, which I've followed for years?

    Oh arbiter of all that is right and wrong on the board, thank you for keeping us in line.

    Buster, because I care, was my ad hominem attack jingoist or fascist? or both?
    "The trouble with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money" --Margaret Thatcher

  10. #35
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    Now look what you did. You woke up the parrot.

  11. #36
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    No, mr g. you missed the point. The article occurred after the comments by Cheney. The comments by Cheney were what was being discussed, not the article. Get it?

  12. #37
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    Maureen Dowd? Are you kidding me?

    I was going to comment that she should stick to fashion, but then I found this, which states it better than I can:

    Maureen Dowd - the queen of Liberal media.


    "I suppose we all have our own time-to-stop-throwing-
    the-newspaper-across-the-room-and-just-cancel-
    the-damned-thing moments. For me it was November 14, 2001, when I encountered five little words in Maureen Dowd’s New York Times column about the wrongness of invading Afghanistan. “The world’s in a swirl,” wrote Dowd, “and things are changing at a dizzying pace.”

    Yes, things have a way of doing that. But the world’s in a swirl? There was something so quintessentially girlish and inane about the phrase—so quintessentially Dowd, with its rhymey, fashion-runway language. Her point, if she had one, was that war is unpleasant and the Northern Alliance is mean. P.S.: President George W. Bush was becoming “chummy” with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    “When Mr. Bush called Mr. Putin to invite him to the ranch,” Dowd wrote, fluttering toward her conclusion, “the Russian president said he was looking forward to riding horses with the American president. Mr. Bush had to explain that he doesn’t ride. He prefers to saddle up his jeep or his golf cart, Gator, around the ranch.”

    And this meant . . . what? Nothing, but in a Maureen Dowd column, meaning has become unnecessary. It was just another schoolgirl spitball lobbed at Bush: Screw you and the horse you didn’t ride in on.

    I wasn’t the only one who noticed Dowd’s precious column that day. “Little Miss Dowd says ‘Ick,’ ” Lucianne Goldberg noted on her Web site, summing up not only Dowd’s inane tone of that moment but pretty much everything the New York Times’s star columnist has written after September 11. That things are changing at a dizzying pace seems to have thrown her for a loop. You could stuff all Dowd’s anti-whack-Iraq columns into a hat and pull one out at random; odds are “Little Miss Dowd Says ‘Ick’ ” would be the theme in a nutshell.

    Let’s consider some of her latest work. This past November she was invited by the Saudi government to what might be called the Useful Idiot tour of Saudi Arabia, land of colorful characters. Did you know that citizens of Riyadh dislike Americans and don’t want to be told what to do by President Bush and that women there can’t drive? Yes? Well, now Maureen does too. She also now knows that Saudi police don’t want any women to show their ankles—“I thought I’d catch a break because I’m an American Catholic, not a Muslim.” You have to wonder about the provincialism of someone who has to travel halfway round the world to discover that.

    By December, Dowd was safely back in her microworld of DC shoptalk and fashion observations, which was a relief, because her biggest weakness is foreign policy and reading her pie-eyed observations of life in Saudi Arabia, so disappointingly different from I Dream of Jeannie, was like watching a car wreck. Still, there was nothing that was not stale. A Christmas column about the growing popularity of plastic surgery (who’d have thunk it?) noted the impassiveness of Dick Cheney’s mug and concluded with this moral: “In the White House, as in so many other American homes this holiday, appearance counts.”

    A December column about Bill Frist included the usual lame wordplay—“So why did they give this 50-year-old surgeon . . . room to operate?” And as Glenn Reynolds noted on his Instapundit site, the column included “classic New York Times use of passive voice . . . although Dowd is careful to slip in that Bill Frist has been ’scolded for racial insensitivity,’ she doesn’t bother to say by whom, or for what.”

  13. #38
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    ...continued:

    "
    The Maureen Dowd story is at least vaguely familiar to anyone who follows the careers of media stars. Unlike so many of her Ivy League-educated colleagues, she’s a local girl from a working-class Irish Catholic family, the youngest of five children of a DC cop.

    Dowd majored in English at Catholic University, and her first job was at the pool-and-tennis club at the Washington Hilton. She got her start in journalism taking dictation and phone messages at the old Washington Star. She didn’t do either of these tasks very well, according to her own recollection, but editor Jim Bellows—legendarily sharp at spotting nascent writing talent—promoted her to reporter.

    When the Star folded, Dowd worked at Time for a while, then landed at the New York Times, moving from the Metro desk back to Washington in 1986. Ever since, she’s been something of a golden girl.

    There’s a famous story from the early ’90s illustrating her status at the Times. At a staff meeting, then-executive editor Max Frankel angered Dowd by remarking that her perhaps overly flattering front-page story about Kitty Kelley’s Nancy Reagan biography was beneath the paper’s standards. Dowd walked out—some say she also threatened to quit—and soon received flowers and an apology.

    Dowd is famously private for a journalist. I couldn’t find any story about her that she cooperated with after 1995. “Ms. Dowd does not speak to the press,” her assistant told New York magazine media columnist Michael Wolff in 1999. Dowd’s inner circle over the years has included Times executive editor Howell Raines, Leon Wieseltier of the New Republic, Times reporter Alessandra Stanley, The West Wing creator Aaron Sorkin, actor Michael Douglas (in his pre-Catherine Zeta-Jones days, at least), and pundit Michael Kinsley. Esquire featured her as one of its “Women We Love” in the early ’90s. But to many outside her coterie, Dowd has become the Woman You Love to Hate.

    Critics have called her style catty, or at least kittenish. But this doesn’t really seem apt anymore. Cats scratch, and Dowd no longer draws blood.

    An effective criticism of Bush’s foreign policy has to involve more than just chirping “Rummy” and “Boy Emperor” from the sidelines or dreaming up whimsical dialogues. Dowd is now more pixieish than kittenish, which is part of what makes her so annoying. Who wants to deal with Tinkerbell flitting around when you’re trying to read the op-ed pages?

    Although Dowd is now lambasted on the Internet—where she’s regularly referred to as Moron Dud and Modo the Dodo and Stupid Pan Dowdy—she has never been beyond media criticism, despite being something of a sacred cow in Washington and at the Times.

    James Poniewozik, now at Time, summed up the anti-Dowd case for Salon in 1999. “Does Maureen Dowd believe in nothing?” he asked rhetorically, just after she’d won the Pulitzer for cute but essentially trivial columns about the Monica Lewinsky scandal. “You could say that Maureen Dowd believes in being an asshole, which is not an insignificant journalistic tenet.”

    Perhaps because of her slipperiness, Dowd has served as something of an inkblot: People disliked her according to their own personal concerns and prejudices. After Dowd got her Times column in 1995, Susan Faludi took Dowd to task in the Nation for not being a politically correct liberal and serious feminist like her predecessor Anna Quindlen.

    Investigative reporter Katherine Boo, now at the Washington Post, took up the case against Dowd in a 1992 piece called “Creeping Dowdism” for the Washington Monthly. “Campaign planes and buses are freighted with Dowd disciples: hyperliterate capital-W Writers with an eye for detail and an ear for the shuffling going on behind the curtain,” Boo warned. As a result, she added, “the democratic process is reduced to Pirandello, to theater of the absurd.”

    I remember hearing colleagues at the time carp that Dowd’s coverage of the George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton campaigns was overly personal and unfair, but I’ve never bought the notion that traditional dry-as-dust reporting is therefore pristinely unbiased. I admired Dowd’s style when she was a reporter. The Times op-ed page’s loss when she arrived there was also the Washington beat’s loss. Her famous campaign-trail observation that Clinton’s visit to Oxford University was a return to a place “where he didn’t inhale, didn’t get drafted, and didn’t get a degree” still stands as one of the all-time great leads.

    Her frequent forays into Times pop-culture coverage produced pieces that were often dazzling: Her interview with Kevin Costner remains a definitive portrait of the movie star as clueless egomaniac. Her observations of the first President Bush’s many malapropisms—like referring to the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band as the Nitty Ditty Nitty Gritty Great Bird—certainly added to the culture, providing years of fodder for Saturday Night Live.

    Complaints about Dowd have moved beyond her flashy reporting style and water-beetle habit of skimming the surface.

    Her crimes against readers now fall into three main categories—formulaic nuttiness, posturing, and condescension. Sometimes she manages to compress all her essential traits into the first few paragraphs, such as this August 21 “Coup De Crawford” column about Bush and his advisers.

    “The plotters are meeting down at the Ponderosa today,” Dowd began, efficiently combining her formulaic alliteration and pop-culture habits—in this case, a reference to the old TV western Bonanza (a reminder that Bush is a cowboy).

    “They waited to huddle in Crawford until the flower child Colin Powell had gone up to the Hamptons, ensconced with the white-wine-swilling toffs scorned by the president.” Dowd is actually on Powell’s side here, though it takes a minute to figure that out, what with all the sneering, but she can’t resist reminding you of her girl-of-the-people street credentials—as if she’s never been to the Hamptons or swilled white wine herself. The vital Dowdism in this graph, though, is toff—a British expression only an affected American would use—because it gets her reflexive posturing established up front.

    “With the diffident general brunching with the Dean & DeLuca set [more faux populism, more sneering], Cheney, Rummy, Condi, and W. [check out the nicknames] can get down to bidness [in case you’ve forgotten, Bush is a cowboy] on the ranch, scheming to smoke Saddam. [Two, four, six, eight—when in doubt, alliterate.]

    “We used to worry about a military coup against civilian authority. Now we worry about a civilian coup against military authority.” Dowd’s condescension is encapsulated in these “we”s—her insulated world makes her assume that “we” all worry about this.

    How, I wondered at the time, can the commander-in-chief of the armed forces execute a civilian coup? Josh Chafetz, an American graduate student at Oxford who keeps track of Dowd’s disconnects, explained it the next day on his Web site. “I hate to bring up a pesky thing like the Constitution, especially when dealing with a legal eagle like Dowd, but . . . the military is meant to be under civilian control. The idea of a civilian coup against military authority is completely incoherent in a democratic state.”

    Chafetz expanded his Dowd observations in October for a Weekly Standard piece called “The Immutable Laws of Maureen Dowd.” I asked him why he thought Dowd is so infuriating now. “You can’t really argue against her,” he e-mailed back. “You can’t say why she’s wrong because first you’d have to identify a point to her column, and that’s precisely what you can’t do because of the sort of columns that she writes.”

    But I’d say that it’s her condescension, even more than her superficiality and silliness, that so rankles readers. I don’t know Dowd, and I live in Los Angeles, not Washington, so I only see her when the Times flies her out to the summer TV press tour every July.

    She cuts a memorable figure because she attends press conferences in a bizarrely casual getup: tank top over sports bra over sweatpants over running shoes, with hair up in a clip and—this part never varies—sunglasses worn indoors. (Is there something about Washington retinas that makes them peculiarly sensitive to the light in Los Angeles hotel ballrooms? The only other attendee who affects the sunglasses-indoors shtick is the Washington Post’s Lisa de Moraes.)

    Dowd’s goin’-to-California costume is, at first glance, merely a dated and preposterous notion of how the natives dress around here—as if I assumed the thing to wear to any Washington event were a Reagan-red Adolfo suit. It’s silly, clichéd, and corny. But more than that, it’s a patronizing display on Dowd’s part. Just like her columns."

  14. #39
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    Originally posted by mr_gyptian
    I can't comment on a writer based upon his/her byline, which I've followed for years?
    The question you posed regarded the subject of the post, not the medium.


    Oh arbiter of all that is right and wrong on the board, thank you for keeping us in line.
    You asked the question. I provided the answer. It's not right or wrong. Can you please tell me what you think a line is?


    Buster, because I care, was my ad hominem attack jingoist or fascist? or both?
    This time, it was just plain stupid and typical of nitwits who can't address the issues. Not that you care about that fact either.

    >>>>
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  15. #40
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    Soooo, does Maureen Dowds background change what was said by Cheney or am I just missing the point of this thread.

  16. #41
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    Nice attack on Dowd.
    Irrelevant, but a nice attack.
    [quote][//quote]

  17. #42
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    Ms. Dowd has her spin, which is sort of dumb, but the subject of the article is interesting.

    I really don't think she is.

    Whether the American people will see through this kind of issue redirection remains to be seen.

    mr_g aside, I was hoping better of this community.
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  18. #43
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    I'd just like to say that Dowd can write, and is a sexpot.

  19. #44
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    Originally posted by jayfrizzo
    I'd just like to say that Dowd can write, and is a sexpot.
    OK, so I'm wrong. Ms. Dowd is interesting.
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  20. #45
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    Originally posted by Dexter Rutecki
    Nice attack on Dowd.
    Irrelevant, but a nice attack.
    No, it's not irrelevant, since it's typical Dowd spin.

    "Because if we make the wrong choice,'' Mr. Cheney said in Des Moines in that calm baritone, "then the danger is that we'll get hit again. That we'll be hit in a way that will be devastating from the standpoint of the United States, and that we'll fall back into the pre-9/11 mind-set if you will, that in fact these terrorist attacks are just criminal acts, and that we're not really at war.''

    Well leave it to Dowd to note whether or not Cheny speaks like Mickey Mouse, or in a calm baritone. THAT'S irrelevant.

    I don't see the article about Dowd as an "attack" as much as it is pointing out the obvious. (At least to those who care to look past the rhetoric.)

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  22. #47
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    Spinning a conversation about the stupidity that Dick Cheney uttered into something about Dowd's sometimes breathless writing style doesn't make it relevant.
    Logic: Dowd's usually liberal and not always right, therefore the remarks described in the posted column shouldn't be scrutinized. Nope.
    [quote][//quote]

  23. #48
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    So Kerry as a young man said some things that were overstated. So as a young man he was a bit of idealist and made some mistakes. But he wasn't a coward.

    On the other hand Bush and Cheney were but are very able to send many young people to theirs deads in an illconceived war. I'm sorry Bush couldn't pour piss out of a boot with instructions printed on the heel.
    Mrs. Dougw- "I can see how one of your relatives could have been killed by an angry mob."

    Quote Originally Posted by ill-advised strategy View Post
    dougW, you motherfucking dirty son of a bitch.

  24. #49
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    Originally posted by EPSkis
    No, it's not irrelevant, since it's typical Dowd spin.

    "Because if we make the wrong choice,'' Mr. Cheney said in Des Moines in that calm baritone, "then the danger is that we'll get hit again. That we'll be hit in a way that will be devastating from the standpoint of the United States, and that we'll fall back into the pre-9/11 mind-set if you will, that in fact these terrorist attacks are just criminal acts, and that we're not really at war."

    Well leave it to Dowd to note whether or not Cheny speaks like Mickey Mouse, or in a calm baritone. THAT'S irrelevant.

    I don't see the article about Dowd as an "attack" as much as it is pointing out the obvious. (At least to those who care to look past the rhetoric.)
    Well, if your internal editor can't filter out the goo, let's try this:

    "Because if we make the wrong choice,'' Mr. Cheney said in Des Moines, "then the danger is that we'll get hit again. That we'll be hit in a way that will be devastating from the standpoint of the United States, and that we'll fall back into the pre-9/11 mind-set if you will, that in fact these terrorist attacks are just criminal acts, and that we're not really at war.


    Yes, the baritone remark is the worst type of journalism, usually empoyed by such luminaries as Rove or Limbaugh, but the content of the remark shouldn't be overlooked.

    So, if we excise the Dowdian stupidity, is there an issue? Or shall we continue to worry the Dowd issue like a bunch of prom queens?
    Last edited by Buster Highmen; 09-09-2004 at 12:31 PM.
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  25. #50
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    Gotta love The Onion:

    Bush Campaign More Thought Out Than Iraq War

    WASHINGTON, DC—Military and political strategists agreed Monday that President Bush's re-election campaign has been executed with greater precision than the war in Iraq. "Judging from the initial misrepresentation of intelligence data and the ongoing crisis in Najaf, I assumed the president didn't know his ass from his elbow," said Col. Dale Henderson, a military advisor during the Reagan Administration. "But on the campaign trail, he's proven himself a master of long-term planning and unflinching determination. How else can you explain his strength in the polls given this economy?" Henderson said he regrets having characterized Bush's handling of the war as "incompetent," now that he knows the president's mind was simply otherwise occupied.

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