The Top 10 Conservative Idiots
(No. 168)
August 30, 2004
Swift Boat Ship Wreck Edition
It's
been a busy week for Conservative Idiots - presumably they're rehearsing
for the Republican National Convention. And if the Swift Boat Veterans
for "Truth" (1) splitting apart at the seams, Bob Dole
(3) tossing his credibility out of the window on national television,
and George W. Bush (4) flip-flopping on 527s is just a trial run
for the RNC, next weeks' Idiots should be a hoot. But there's certainly
plenty to see this week - it turns out that The Bush Administration
(5) got caught allowing an Israeli spy to influence American foreign
policy, Dick Cheney (7) is faking concern for his own daughter,
and Alan Keyes (10) is making even less sense than usual. Enjoy,
and don't forget the key!
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Swift
Boat Veterans for "Truth"
With a bit of luck we won't be writing much more about these idiots.
The past week has seen most of the organization's claims debunked
and many of the members have thoroughly contradicted themselves.
Not that you'd know it if you've been watching cable news. So let's
do a quick recap of some of the week's more important stories:
- Alfred French, who signed an affidavit accusing John Kerry of
exaggerating his war record, is in trouble after it was revealed
that he didn't serve with Kerry and did
not actually witness his behavior in Vietnam. Lying in affidavits
is obviously not a good idea when you're a county prosecutor.
Oh yes, he also got caught lying about an extra-marital
affair.
- After Ken Cordier's departure from Team Bush (see Idiots 167)
it was the turn of Benjamin Ginsberg to quit
last week when it was revealed that not only was he a lawyer for
George W. Bush's campaign, he was a lawyer for - surprise - Swift
Boat Veterans for Truth. We hear the door did not hit him in the
ass on the way out.
- Jim Russell (who, unlike the Swift Boat Veterans for "Truth,"
was actually there the day that Kerry pulled Jim Rassmann out
of the river) composed a stirring
letter contradicting their story. "The picture I have
in my mind of Kerry bending over from his boat picking some hapless
guy out of the river while all hell was breaking loose around
us, is a picture based on fact and it cannot be disputed or changed,"
he wrote.
- Larry Thurlow signed an affidavit accusing Kerry of lying about
being under fire when he rescued Rassmann, saying "no return
fire occurred.... I never heard a shot." This directly contradicts
his own Bronze Star citation (see Idiots 167).
But a third Bronze Star was awarded that day, to another Swift
Boat skipper, Robert Lambert. Lambert's recently-released citation
says
that "all units came under small arms and automatic weapons
fire from the river banks," and that Lambert "directed
accurate suppressing fire at the enemy." The citation praises
his "coolness, professionalism and courage under fire."
Thurlow claims that Kerry faked the citations by falsely describing
events to superior officers. But Kerry is not the eyewitness on
Thurlow's citation - Lambert is. Can it be any more obvious that
Thurlow is lying?
- John O'Neill has been making a big stink lately over whether
John Kerry was in Cambodia or not during the Vietnam War. It appears
that nobody - including Kerry - is really sure. But O'Neill -
as usual - made himself look like a complete ass by claiming
to CNN that he (O'Neill) had never been in Cambodia and in fact
it was impossible to cross the border by river. Whoops! It turns
out that O'Neill appears on an audio tape recorded in the Oval
Office telling the complete opposite to Richard Nixon. O'NEILL:
"I was in Cambodia, sir. I worked along the border on the
water." NIXON: "In a swift boat?" O'NEILL: "Yes,
sir." Ah, credibility. We hardly knew ye.
- Even George W. Bush admits John Kerry is a war hero, saying
last week, "I think him [Kerry] going to Vietnam was more
heroic than my flying fighter jets. He was in harm's way and I
wasn't." So now it's clear that either George W. Bush or
the Swift Boat Idiots are lying. One or the other. Who can it
be?
George
W. Bush
But while George W. Bush was expressing his admiration for John
Kerry's service, doubts about Bush's time in the National Guard
were slowly creeping back into the national dialog. Back in June
former Texas House Speaker Ben Barnes dropped this
bombshell, which got proper coverage for the first time last
week: "I got a young man named George W. Bush into the National
Guard ... and I'm not necessarily proud of that, but I did it ...
I got a lot of other people in the National Guard because I thought
that was what people should do when you're in office, you helped
a lot of rich people ... I walked through the Vietnam Memorial the
other day and I looked at the names of the people that died in Vietnam.
I became more ashamed of myself than I've ever been because it was
the worst thing I did - help a lot of wealthy supporters and a lot
of people who had family names of importance get in the National
Guard. I'm very sorry of that and I'm very ashamed of it and I apologize
to the voters of Texas for that." (Video of Ben Barnes here.)
Add to this the possibility that Bush liked to be photographed wearing
medals he did not earn, and it kinda makes you wonder why the
hell any Vietnam veteran would throw their support to President
Yellow Streak over a guy who actually volunteered to fight there.
Bob
Dole
Meanwhile, the famously impotent former presidential candidate Bob
Dole jumped into Bush's Big Bucket o' Slime with both feet last
week, criticizing John Kerry's war record on CNN's Inside Edition
by saying
that Kerry had "three Purple Hearts and never bled that I know
of." I do hope that from now on Dole is going to intercept
American soldiers returning from Iraq to make sure they're injured
enough before they're awarded the Purple Heart. He could separate
them into two lines when they come off the plane. Not that self-inflicted
superficial wounds were a big problem for Dole when he was
awarded the Purple Heart of course. In Unlimited Partners: Our
American Story, he
wrote, "As we approached the enemy, there was a brief exchange
of gunfire. I took a grenade in hand, pulled the pin, and tossed
it in the direction of the farmhouse. It wasn't a very good pitch
- remember, I was used to catching passes, not throwing them. In
the darkness, the grenade must have struck a tree and bounced off.
It exploded nearby, sending a sliver of metal into my leg - the
sort of injury the Army patched up with mercurochrome and a Purple
Heart." Can it get any more hypocritical than this? Actually,
yes it can! During the CNN interview, Wolf Blitzer showed Bob Dole
a Kerry campaign ad which highlighted a 2000 primary debate between
John McCain and George W. Bush. At the time Bush was refusing to
denounce an "independent" smear campaign attacking McCain's
record, and the portion of the debate featured in the ad shows McCain
telling Bush, "you should be ashamed of yourself." When
CNN cuts to the ad, a leaked
raw video feed shows Dole saying of McCain, "he was right."
Not that Dole deigned to express that opinion while he was live
on air, mind you.
George
W. Bush
The Flip-Flop Of The Week Award goes to George W. Bush, who recently
reversed his position on 527s, joining forces with John McCain to
file suit against them. Here's
what he said in an interview back in 2000, when - coincidentally
- an "independent" 527 was smearing John McCain's war
record. Sound familiar? "That's part of the American - let
me finish. That's part of the American process," said Bush.
"There have been ads, independent expenditures, that are saying
bad things about me. I don't particularly care when they do, but
that's what freedom of speech is all about ... You know, let me
- let me say something to you. People have the right to run ads.
They have the right to do what they want to do, under the - under
the First Amendment in America." So how this all jives with
"President Bush and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., joined forces
yesterday to seek legal action to reduce the influence of '527'
political organizations," as reported
by the Seattle Times, we're not quite sure. But it's
pretty obvious that Bush's "free speech" argument has
fallen by the wayside now that 527s are doing political damage to
his campaign. Which is probably why he's making a big fuss
about taking everyone to court but still won't
denounce the Swift Boat smears. So - does this mean that George
W. Bush now supports judges rewriting the law from the bench? I
thought he was against that sort of thing...
The
Bush Administration
George W. Bush is losing heavily to John Kerry in many key polling
indicators - but still has strong approval for his handling of the
war on terror. Of course, when the Bush administration is consistently
telling the public that America is safer while simultaneously raising
and lowering alert levels and warning that an attack could happen
at any time, the public is bound to be confused. But perhaps this
will clear things up a little: the FBI revealed
last week that an Israeli spy has been "uncovered at the highest
levels of the Pentagon." According
to the Herald-Sun, "The agent is thought to have
played a leading role in shaping US defense policy, raising fears
he - or she - may have manipulated information in order to persuade
the US to attack Iraq's Saddam Hussein, a sworn enemy of Israel."
The FBI is investigating Undersecretary of Defense Douglas Feith,
whose shadowy "Office of Special Plans" is widely reported
to have been behind much of the false intelligence that pushed America
to invade Iraq (see Idiots 136).
In case you need reminding, Feith's office had close
ties to Ahmed Chalabi, the former Bush buddy who was later discovered
to be an Iranian spy. So this is how the Bush administration
is handling the war on terror, folks - they were so keen to invade
Iraq that they allowed their policies be determined by spies from
Israel and Iran. Is anybody feeling safer yet?
George
W. Bush
The Census Bureau released a report last week which revealed that
"The number of Americans living in poverty increased by 1.3
million last year, while the ranks of the uninsured swelled by 1.4
million," according
to the Associated Press. They continued, "It was the third
straight annual increase for both categories." Third straight
increase huh? I guess we're still waiting for Our Great Leader's
Great Tax Cut Plan to kick in. Should be any day now. Meanwhile,
the AP also noted that, "The rise was more dramatic for children.
There were 12.9 million living in poverty last year, or 17.6 percent
of the under-18 population. That was an increase of about 800,000
from 2002, when 16.7 percent of all children were in poverty."
Leave no child behind my ass. George left 800,000 more children
behind last year than he did the year before. Great work. Do the
math: since George W. Bush became president, 5.2 million people
have lost their health insurance and 4.3 million have fallen into
poverty. Meanwhile corrupt CEOs make more money than they ever have
before. And that's supposed to be leadership?
Dick
Cheney
In what appeared to be a moment of compassion, Dick Cheney announced
last week that "With respect to the question of relationships,
my general view is freedom means freedom for everyone." He was talking
about gay marriage, and everyone oohed and aahed and thought, gosh,
maybe Dick Cheney isn't such a heartless bastard after all. Which
is exactly what Team Bush wanted you to think. Cheney has previously
held the position that gay marriage should be decided by the states,
but flip-flopped when George W. Bush decided to support amending
the Constitution to discriminate against gays and Cheney "said
he'd support whatever decision Bush made," according
to USA Today. The media would have you believe that social
conservatives are up in arms about Cheney's statement, with Family
Research Council president Tony "Psycho" Perkins releasing
a statement saying in part, "We support President Bush's commitment
to a constitutional amendment on marriage but we are left to wonder
why the Vice President is allowed to depart from this position when
the top of the ticket is unified on all other issues. I find it
hard to believe the Vice President would stray from the administration's
position on defense policy or tax policy." Yes - it is
hard to believe, isn't it? Let's face it, Dick Cheney's comments
make very little difference to the FRC or their followers - they're
voting for Bush this year. In fact, despite Cheney's comments, the
Republicans' platform committee officially
endorsed the Federal Marriage Amendment in the party's platform
last week, adopting the language unanimously. So why did Dick risk
such a fuss just a few days before the start of the Convention?
Simple - he was told to do it by Karl Rove. You think it's a coincidence
that the Republicans will be hiding the nutcase elements of their
party behind Rudy Giuliani and Arnold Schwarzenegger this week?
You think it's odd that a tiny minority of the Republican party
- moderates - will get a majority of coverage at the Convention
podium? It's no coincidence - and Cheney's comments were all part
of the plan.
George
W. Bush
George W. Bush is having a fine old time bashing John Kerry for
proposing intelligence funding cuts in the 1990s. A recent Team
Bush ad proclaimed, "John Kerry... proposed slashing Intelligence
Budget 6 Billion Dollars." Cue deep and menacing minor-chord
keyboard music. But according
to Dana Milbank in the Washington Post, "President
Bush's nominee to be the director of central intelligence, Rep.
Porter J. Goss (R-Fla.), sponsored legislation that would have cut
intelligence personnel by 20 percent in the late 1990s." What?
Surely not! Milbank continues, "the cuts Goss supported are
larger than those proposed by Kerry and specifically targeted the
'human intelligence' that has recently been found lacking..."
So check it out - according to the Post, "Kerry, in
September 1995, proposed a five-year, $1.5 billion cut in the intelligence
budget, about 1 percent of the overall intelligence budget."
And Goss? Well, he "was one of six original co-sponsors of
legislation titled H.R. 1923, called the Restructuring a Limited
Government Act. Among other things, the legislation, written by
then-Rules Committee Chairman Gerald B.H. Solomon (R-N.Y.), directed
that 'the president shall, for each of fiscal years 1996 through
2000, reduce the total number of military and civilian personnel
employed by, or assigned or detailed to, elements of the Intelligence
Community by not less than 4 percent of the baseline number' of
employees on Sept. 30, 1995." How bizarre. Surely appointing
someone like that proves without a shadow of a doubt that deriding
John Kerry for proposing cuts in intelligence services is just mindbendingly
hypocritical. And if Bush really believes that people who
propose cutting intelligence funding are not only dangerous but
possibly in league with the terrorists, why does he want to make
one of them the head of the CIA? I'm scratching my head here...
ABC
During the Democratic National Convention, the broadcast networks
aired three nights of prime-time coverage - Monday, Wednesday and
Thursday. This week, for the Republican National Convention, they're
airing prime-time coverage on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday.
Okay - that all sounds very fair and balanced and equal-time-ish.
Except, except, I should probably mention ABC, who will "carry
a special live convention report anchored by Peter Jennings at halftime
during 'Monday Night Football.'" Uh, what? That's right - while
all the other networks are playing it fair and square, ABC is giving
the Republican party free
air time on a fourth night of the Convention, and during a show
which has one of the most sought-after advertising demographics
on television. Zip up your fly, ABC. Your partisan underpants are
showing.
Alan
Keyes
Before beginning this week's final entry I would like to personally
thank Alan Keyes for not only making my job much easier, but for
also literally defining the term "conservative idiot."
So thank you Alan, you're a star. Now let's find out what you've
been up to lately shall we? Over the last couple of weeks Alan has
distinguished himself from his opponent by flip-flopping on carpet-bagging
(see Idiots 166),
comparing abortion to terrorism (see Idiots 167),
and suggesting a new reparations plan (after previously opposing
reparations) which would involve screwing the poor and rewarding
the rich by abolishing income taxes for African-Americans (also
see Idiots 167).
How to top that? If you're Alan Keyes, it's easy! Last week Keyes
announced that he saw no reason why citizens shouldn't be able to
openly carry machine guns on the street. That's right! Despite making
himself look like even more of a lunatic than he did previously,
Keyes clearly holds the belief that "an armed society is a
polite society" - and here's his evidence: "Have you ever been
to Israel?" Keyes asked
a reporter last week. "Because if you've ever been to Israel,
you wouldn't ask that question. And in the midst of terrifying dangers,
you walk around the streets of Israel and you see every other person
carrying arms and Uzis and so forth and so on, and believe me, you
do not feel less safe on that account." Oh Alan, only you
could hold up Israel as a bastion of safety and security! Classic
stuff. See you next week!
The Top Ten Conservative Idiots
list is back on the radio! The Air America Radio Network's
Ring
of Fire show is currently broadcasting "Cuckoo Conservatives"
- excerpts from the Top Ten read by 30+ year radio veteran
Dean Randall. Dean has worked in broadcast markets from the
Midwest to the west coast including an overseas hitch in Wellington,
New Zealand, and most of his radio experience was spent as
a morning show personality. He is currently employed by a
local ABC TV affiliate and is active in politics on a local,
state and national basis. Dean says, "My liberal roots went
down and deep early when my father hosted a Minnesota state
DFL rally in 1961. Ever since I have had a keen interest in
politics and the Democratic philosophy and history." You can
drop him a line at DeanRandall1@aol.com.
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