[Vision2020] Reverse Bush's Policies: General Wesley Clark

Ted Moffett ted_moffett@hotmail.com
Thu, 18 Sep 2003 21:20:42 +0000


Melynda et. al.

Your points are excellent, but the bottom line for me is, despite Clark's 
shortcomings, can he beat Bush?
This is one case where I will vote for the lesser of two evils.  Dean's 
chances of beating Bush are ZERO!  Clark's chances are more than zero.  The 
agenda of the Bush administration is so egregious that support should be 
given to any Democratic party candidate that does not resemble Attila the 
Hun, Genghis Khan, Hitler, Pol Pot, Stalin, etc. even though that candidate 
is less than ideal.  And we have no viable third party to go to.  Like it or 
not, we are stuck in a political environment where the presidency is 
controlled and limited by numerous powerful factions that offer Americans 
only a narrow range of choice.

Dean will NOT become president.  Clark might be able to satisfy the demands 
of the powers that be pulling the strings, while being a large improvement 
over the extreme dangerous agenda of the Bush administration.  Clark would, 
I think, reverse the insane economic policies of the Bush administration.  
For more on this subject read "The Great Unraveling" by economist and 
Princeton professor Paul Krugman for a detailed economic analysis of the 
damage to the USA being done by the Bush administration.

Ted


>From: "Melynda Huskey" <mghuskey@hotmail.com>
>To: vision2020@moscow.com
>Subject: RE: [Vision2020] General Wesley Clark to announce Candidacy at 10 
>AM
>Date: Thu, 18 Sep 2003 08:53:42 -0700
>
>Well, I don't mind outing myself as a Dean supporter (no surprises there, 
>eh?)--but even if Dean weren't in the race, I can't imagine going for 
>Clark.
>
>Remember all those Yugoslavian civilians?  The medieval churches we bombed 
>during Orthodox Easter week ("to break the will of the Serbian people," 
>according to Clark)?  The faked-up massacre in the marketplace?  Not for 
>me, thanks.
>
>Being a general is not necessarily a preparation for governing a 
>nation--think of the "perfumed princes" of Vietnam--and it worries me more 
>than a little that Clark has been courting comparisons with McArthur (as 
>opposed to, say, Eisenhower).
>
>Clark has yet to deliver a platform--his incredibly vague "Vision for a 
>Century" to the contrary notwithstanding.  The Women for Clark website 
>features this quotation, which reminds me more than a little of Dan 
>Quayle's famous mangling of the United Negro College Fund slogan:
>
>"I don’t believe in glass ceilings for women. At least half of us are 
>women, and think of the incredible talent that is there."
>
>No, Clark reminds me more and more of Gertrude Stein's dictum about 
>Oakland--"There is no there there."
>
>Melynda Huskey
>
>
>
>Go, said the bird, for the leaves were full of children,
>Hidden excitedly, containing laughter.
>Go, go, go, said the bird: human kind
>Cannot bear very much reality.
>Burnt Norton, T.S. Eliot
>
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