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Jeb Bush Won't Feel Impact From Schiavo

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CatWoman Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-31-05 06:31 PM
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Jeb Bush Won't Feel Impact From Schiavo
Who IS this asshole?

BRENDAN FARRINGTON, Associated Press Writer

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - It seemed like Jeb Bush was in a no-win situation by taking up the cause of trying to keep Terri Schiavo alive.

He was going against polls that showed two out of three people thought government shouldn't get involved. Then when courts stopped him from stepping in, some of his conservative Christian base criticized him for not doing more.

But many people agree the Schiavo case was not a political issue for Bush and that the governor will not be hurt by it — especially since he doesn't have plans to run for office again any time soon.

"I can't see it having any impact on Jeb Bush and his political future," said Darryl Paulson, a University of South Florida political science professor. "He's not going to be running again in '06 and he says he's not running for the presidency and every one of his advisers is taking him at his word."

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20050331/ap_on_re_us/schiavo_jeb_bush_1
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xray s Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-31-05 06:34 PM
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1. Well duh!
The guy is saying it won't impact Bush's political future because he has no political future!

Talk about putting whipped craem on a turd...
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maxsolomon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-31-05 06:35 PM
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2. his is being coy. he is running for the presidency.
they're the goddamn royal family & the only way to maintain their grip on power is jeb.

watch him get elected.

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Johonny Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-31-05 06:40 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. Well
He's fat, ugly and mean. Not exactly the kind of guy you'd want to run. I mean why Jeb Bush when you can run Rove. He won't win the primary. Although I hope he and many republicans run. Thug vs. thug is the best thing that ever happens for liberals.
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KansDem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-31-05 06:40 PM
Response to Reply #2
5. "only way to maintain their grip on power is jeb"
That, and Diebold...
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oasis Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-31-05 06:38 PM
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3. Jebbie failed Terri by not following through. She's dead because he did
not intervene with state troopers when it counted most. He can't run away from that.

Both the Bush brothers will go down as flip flopping betrayers of Terri and her family.
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Coastie for Truth Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-31-05 07:03 PM
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6. Let's look at the GOP through Robert Reich's eyes. "ROT AT THE TOP"
See: "The Lost Art of Democratic Narrative: Story Time", The New Republic, March 28 & April 4, 2005, page 16.

Reich talks about "four stories"-

1. The Triumphant Individual
2. The Benevolent Community
3. The Mob At The Gates
4. The Rot At The Top.

Which Reich describes thusly--

    "There are four essential American stories. The first two are about hope; the second two are about fear.

    The Triumphant Individual. This is the familiar tale of the little guy who works hard, takes risks, believes in himself, and eventually gains wealth, fame, and honor. It's the story of the self-made man (or, more recently, woman) who bucks the odds, spurns the naysayers, and shows what can be done with enough gumption and guts. He's instantly recognizable: plainspoken, self-reliant, and uncompromising in his ideals--the underdog who makes it through hard work and faith in himself. Benjamin Franklin's Autobiography is the first in a long line of U.S. self-help manuals about how to make it through self-sacrifice and diligence. The story is epitomized in the life of Abe Lincoln, born in a log cabin, who believed that "the value of life is to improve one's condition." The theme was captured in Horatio Alger's hundred or so novellas, whose heroes all rise promptly and predictably from rags to riches. It's celebrated in the tales of immigrant peddlers who become millionaire tycoons. And it's found in the manifold stories of downtrodden fighters who undertake dangerous quests and find money and glory. Think Rocky Balboa, Norma Rae, and Erin Brockovich. The moral: With enough effort and courage, anyone can make it in the United States.


    The Benevolent Community. This is the story of neighbors and friends who roll up their sleeves and pitch in for the common good. Its earliest formulation was John Winthrop's "A Model of Christian Charity," delivered on board a ship in Salem Harbor just before the Puritans landed in 1630--a version of Matthew's Sermon on the Mount, in which the new settlers would be "as a City upon a Hill," "delight in each other," and be "of the same body." Similar communitarian and religious images were found among the abolitionists, suffragettes, and civil rights activists of the 1950s and 1960s. "I have a dream that every valley shall be exalted, every hill and mountain shall be made low," said Martin Luther King Jr., extolling the ideal of the national community. The story is captured in the iconic New England town meeting, in frontier settlers erecting one another's barns, in neighbors volunteering as firefighters and librarians, and in small towns sending their high school achievers to college and their boys off to fight foreign wars. It suffuses Norman Rockwell's paintings and Frank Capra's movies. Consider the last scene in It's a Wonderful Life, when George learns he can count on his neighbors' generosity and goodness, just as they had always counted on him.

    The Mob at the Gates. In this story, the United States is a beacon light of virtue in a world of darkness, uniquely blessed but continuously endangered by foreign menaces. Hence our endless efforts to contain the barbarism and tyranny beyond our borders. Daniel Boone fought Indians--white America's first evil empire. Davy Crockett battled Mexicans. The story is found in the Whig's anti-English and pro-tariff histories of the United States, in the anti immigration harangues of the late nineteenth century, and in World War II accounts of Nazi and Japanese barbarism. It animates modern epics about space explorers (often sporting the stars and stripes) battling alien creatures bent on destroying the world. The narrative gave special force to cold war tales during the '50s of an international communist plot to undermine U.S. democracy and subsequently of "evil" empires and axes. The underlying lesson: We must maintain vigilance, lest diabolical forces overwhelm us.

    The Rot at the Top. The last story concerns the malevolence of powerful elites. It's a tale of corruption, decadence, and irresponsibility in high places--of conspiracy against the common citizen. It started with King George III, and, to this day, it shapes the way we view government--mostly with distrust. The great bullies of American fiction have often symbolized Rot at the Top: William Faulkner's Flem Snopes, Willie Stark as the Huey Long-like character in All the King's Men, Lionel Barrymore's demonic Mr. Potter in It's a Wonderful Life, and the antagonists that hound the Joad family in The Grapes of Wrath. Suspicions about Rot at the Top have inspired what historian Richard Hofstadter called the paranoid style in U.S. politics--from the pre-Civil War Know-Nothings and Anti-Masonic movements through the Ku Klux Klan and Senator Joseph McCarthy's witch hunts. The myth has also given force to the great populist movements of U.S. history, from Andrew Jackson's attack on the Bank of the United States in the 1830s through William Jennings Bryan's prairie populism of the 1890s. "


L'affaire Schiavo has knocked out three GOP front runners -- Jeb Bush, Bill Frist, and anybody too close to Tom Delay.

Jeb Bush - eight years of Bushes are enough. By the end of W's 8th year there will be massive "Bush Fatigue" coupled with "Oil Company Fatigue" (Bush-Cheney", "Bush-Prince Bandar", "Bush-Peak Oil" etc.) The "Bush Fatigue" combined with "Rapture Right Fatigue" (American politics is self correctingly sinusoidal-cyclical) will do Jeb in.

Bill Frist - The who L'affire Schiavo has cooked Bill's goose. His long distance diagnosis of Teri Schiavo based on a five year old, heavily edited video, the financial shenanigans of his cash cow, for profit meg-hospital chain HCA, his description of AIDS transmission by tears and perspiration, even his catnapping and cat vivisecting.

DeLay - his shadow is the kiss of death.

JEB, Frist, and any DeLay associate is highly vulnerable to Reich's "Rot At The Top" identification. They each individual embody the ultimate of the malevolence of powerful elites. The tales of the Bushes, the Frists, and DeLay are the ultimate American tale of corruption, decadence, and irresponsibility in the highest places--of conspiracy against the common citizen.


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