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Kerry endorsement by George W.
Bush's hometown newspaper.
http://www.iconoclast-texas.com/Columns/Editorial/editorial39.htm
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Kerry
Will Restore
American Dignity
2004
Iconoclast Presidential Endorsement
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Few Americans
would have voted for George W. Bush four
years ago if he had promised that, as
President, he would:
• Empty the Social Security trust fund
by $507 billion to help offset fiscal
irresponsibility and at the same time
slash Social Security benefits.
• Cut Medicare by
17 percent and reduce veterans’ benefits
and military pay.
• Eliminate
overtime pay for millions of Americans and
raise oil prices by 50 percent.
• Give tax cuts
to businesses that sent American jobs
overseas, and, in fact, by policy
encourage their departure.
• Give away
billions of tax dollars in government
contracts without competitive bids.
• Involve this
country in a deadly and highly
questionable war, and
• Take a budget
surplus and turn it into the worst deficit
in the history of the United States,
creating a debt in just four years that
will take generations to repay.
These were elements
of a hidden agenda that surfaced only
after he took office.
The publishers of
The Iconoclast endorsed Bush four years
ago, based on the things he promised, not
on this smoke-screened agenda.
Today, we are
endorsing his opponent, John Kerry, based
not only on the things that Bush has
delivered, but also on the vision of a
return to normality that Kerry says our
country needs.
Four items trouble
us the most about the Bush administration:
his initiatives to disable the Social
Security system, the deteriorating state
of the American economy, a dangerous shift
away from the basic freedoms established
by our founding fathers, and his
continuous mistakes regarding terrorism
and Iraq.
President Bush has
announced plans to change the Social
Security system as we know it by
privatizing it, which when considering all
the tangents related to such a change,
would put the entire economy in a dramatic
tailspin.
The Social Security
Trust Fund actually lends money to the
rest of the government in exchange for
government bonds, which is how the system
must work by law, but how do you later
repay Social Security while you are
running a huge deficit? It’s impossible,
without raising taxes sometime in the
future or becoming fiscally responsible
now. Social Security money is being used
to escalate our deficit and, at the same
time, mask a much larger government
deficit, instead of paying down the
national debt, which would be a proper
use, to guarantee a future gain.
Privatization is
problematic in that it would subject
Social Security to the ups, downs, and
outright crashes of the Stock Market. It
would take millions in brokerage fees and
commissions out of the system, and, unless
we have assurance that the Ivan Boeskys
and Ken Lays of the world will be caught
and punished as a deterrent, subject both
the Market and the Social Security Fund to
fraud and market manipulation, not to
mention devastate and ruin multitudes of
American families that would find their
lives lost to starvation, shame, and
isolation.
Kerry wants to keep
Social Security, which each of us already
owns. He says that the program is
manageable, since it is projected to be
solvent through 2042, with use of its
trust funds. This would give ample time to
strengthen the economy, reduce the budget
deficit the Bush administration has
created, and, therefore, bolster the
program as needed to fit ever-changing
demographics.
Our senior citizens
depend upon Social Security. Bush’s
answer is radical and uncalled for, and
would result in chaos as Americans have
never experienced. Do we really want to
risk the future of Social Security on Bush
by spinning the wheel of uncertainty?
In those dark hours
after the World Trade Center attacks,
Americans rallied together with a new
sense of patriotism. We were ready to
follow Bush’s lead through any travail.
He let us down.
When he finally
emerged from his hide-outs on remote
military bases well after the first
crucial hours following the attack, he
gave sound-bytes instead of solutions.
He did not trust us
to be ready to sacrifice, build up our
public and private security
infrastructure, or cut down on our energy
use to put economic pressure on the enemy
in all the nations where he hides. He
merely told us to shop, spend, and pretend
nothing was wrong.
Rather than using
the billions of dollars expended on the
invasion of Iraq to shore up our
boundaries and go after Osama bin Laden
and the Saudi Arabian terrorists, the
funds were used to initiate a war with
what Bush called a more immediate menace,
Saddam Hussein, in oil-rich Iraq. After
all, Bush said Iraq had weapons of mass
destruction trained on America. We
believed him, just as we believed it when
he reported that Iraq was the heart of
terrorism. We trusted him.
The Iconoclast, the
President’s hometown newspaper, took
Bush on his word and editorialized in
favor of the invasion. The newspaper’s
publisher promoted Bush and the invasion
of Iraq to Londoners in a BBC interview
during the time that the administration
was wooing the support of Prime Minister
Tony Blair.
Again, he let us
down.
We presumed the
President had solid proof of the existence
of these weapons, what and where they
were, even as the search continued.
Otherwise, our troops would be in much
greater danger and the premise for a
hurried-up invasion would be moot,
allowing more time to solicit assistance
from our allies.
Instead we were
duped into following yet another
privileged agenda.
Now he argues
unconvincingly that Iraq was providing
safe harbor to terrorists, his new key
justification for the invasion. It is like
arguing that America provided safe harbor
to terrorists leading to 9/11.
Once and for all,
George Bush was President of the United
States on that day. No one else. He had
been President nine months, he had been
officially warned of just such an attack a
full month before it happened. As
President, ultimately he and only he was
responsible for our failure to avert those
attacks.
We should expect
that a sitting President would vacation
less, if at all, and instead tend to the
business of running the country,
especially if he is, as he likes to boast,
a “wartime president.” America is in
service 365 days a year. We don’t need a
part-time President who does not show up
for duty as Commander-In-Chief until he is
forced to, and who is in a constant state
of blameless denial when things don’t
get done.
What has evolved
from the virtual go-it-alone conquest of
Iraq is more gruesome than a stain on a
White House intern’s dress. America’s
reputation and influence in the world has
diminished, leaving us with brute force as
our most persuasive voice.
Iraq is now a
quagmire: no WMDs, no substantive link
between Saddam and Osama, and no workable
plan for the withdrawal of our troops. We
are asked to go along on faith. But
remember, blind patriotism can be a
dangerous thing and “spin” will not
bring back to life a dead soldier;
certainly not a thousand of them.
Kerry has remained
true to his vote granting the President
the authority to use the threat of war to
intimidate Saddam Hussein into allowing
weapons inspections. He believes President
Bush rushed into war before the inspectors
finished their jobs.
Kerry also voted
against President Bush’s $87 billion for
troop funding because the bill promoted
poor policy in Iraq, privileged
Halliburton and other corporate friends of
the Bush administration to profiteer from
the war, and forced debt upon future
generations of Americans.
Kerry’s four-point
plan for Iraq is realistic, wise, strong,
and correct. With the help from our
European and Middle Eastern allies, his
plan is to train Iraqi security forces,
involve Iraqis in their rebuilding and
constitution-writing processes, forgive
Iraq’s multi-billion dollar debts, and
convene a regional conference with
Iraq’s neighbors in order to secure a
pledge of respect for Iraq’s borders and
non-interference in Iraq’s internal
affairs.
The publishers of
the Iconoclast differ with Bush on other
issues, including the denial of stem cell
research, shortchanging veterans’
entitlements, cutting school programs and
grants, dictating what our children learn
through a thought-controlling “test”
from Washington rather than allowing local
school boards and parents to decide how
young people should be taught, ignoring
the environment, and creating extraneous
language in the Patriot Act that removes
some of the very freedoms that our
founding fathers and generations of
soldiers fought so hard to preserve.
We are concerned
about the vast exportation of jobs to
other countries, due in large part to
policies carried out by Bush appointees.
Funds previously geared at retention of
small companies are being given to larger
concerns, such as Halliburton —
companies with strong ties to oil and gas.
Job training has been cut every year that
Bush has resided at the White House.
Then there is his
resolve to inadequately finance Homeland
Security and to cut the Community Oriented
Policing Program (COPS) by 94 percent, to
reduce money for rural development, to
slash appropriations for the Small
Business Administration, and to under-fund
veterans’ programs.
Likewise troubling
is that President Bush fought against the
creation of the 9/11 Commission and is yet
to embrace its recommendations.
Vice President
Cheney’s Halliburton has been awarded
multi-billion-dollar contracts without
undergoing any meaningful bid process —
an enormous conflict of interest — plus
the company has been significantly raiding
the funds of Export-Import Bank of
America, reducing investment that could
have gone toward small business trade.
When examined based
on all the facts, Kerry’s voting record
is enviable and echoes that of many Bush
allies who are aghast at how the Bush
administration has destroyed the American
economy. Compared to Bush on economic
issues, Kerry would be an
arch-conservative, providing for Americans
first. He has what it takes to right our
wronged economy.
The re-election of
George W. Bush would be a mandate to
continue on our present course of chaos.
We cannot afford to double the debt that
we already have. We need to be moving in
the opposite direction.
John Kerry has 30
years of experience looking out for the
American people and can navigate our
country back to prosperity and re-instill
in America the dignity she so craves and
deserves. He has served us well as a
highly decorated Vietnam veteran and has
had a successful career as a district
attorney, lieutenant governor, and
senator.
Kerry has a positive
vision for America, plus the proven
intelligence, good sense, and guts to make
it happen.
That’s why The
Iconoclast urges Texans not to rate the
candidate by his hometown or even his
political party, but instead by where he
intends to take the country.
The Iconoclast
wholeheartedly endorses John Kerry.
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