
I've read the transcript and heard snippets of the two speeches last night. From what I can tell, Zell Miller's keynote address sounded a lot like the infamous hate-filled Pat Buchanan speech from 1992 that drove undecideds away. Molly Ivins famously reported that Buchanan's speech "sounded better in the original German", and Zell was very similar. Very angry old white man.
The right-wing nutballs lapped it up, to be sure. They think Zell was the greatest, they were saying "Amen!" throughout his speech, no doubt. That's why it was so great. The people who think Zell Miller is the greatest were going to vote for Bush all along. Hell, they'd vote for fucking Barney if he had a (R) next to his name on the ballot, arguing that "Well, he may seem simple, but he's got sharp teeth, and he'll surround himself with real professionals."
The people who are undecided, though, really need to see speeches like this (that kind of reasoning is why I always say that right-wing nutballs often make the case for liberalism more eloquently and forcefully than I can). Compare Miller's speech with Obama's keynote address, and there's no question which party is prepared with an optimistic plan for America and which party governs using fear, hatred, lies and divisiveness. There were so many lies in Miller's speech, but the saddest ones involved the old, tired attack line about Kerry voting against certain weapons systems.
This is the keynote address of what both parties agree is "the most important election of our generation", and a riff on Kerry voting against weapons systems is all they could come up with? It is so fundamentally dishonest on so many different levels. No one who is the least bit informed can buy this line of reasoning. Fred Kaplan demolished this months ago in Slate:
Before George W. Bush's political operatives started pounding on John Kerry for voting against certain weapons systems during his years in the Senate, they should have taken a look at this quotation:
After completing 20 planes for which we have begun procurement, we will shut down further production of the B-2 bomber. We will cancel the small ICBM program. We will cease production of new warheads for our sea-based ballistic missiles. We will stop all new production of the Peacekeeper [MX] missile. And we will not purchase any more advanced cruise missiles. … The reductions I have approved will save us an additional $50 billion over the next five years. By 1997 we will have cut defense by 30 percent since I took office.
The speaker was President George H.W. Bush, the current president's father, in his State of the Union address on Jan. 28, 1992.
They should also have looked up some testimony by Dick Cheney, the first President Bush's secretary of defense (and now vice president), three days later, boasting of similar slashings before the Senate Armed Services Committee:
Overall, since I've been Secretary, we will have taken the five-year defense program down by well over $300 billion. That's the peace dividend. … And now we're adding to that another $50 billion … of so-called peace dividend.
Cheney proceeded to lay into the then-Democratically controlled Congress for refusing to cut more weapons systems.
Congress has let me cancel a few programs. But you've squabbled and sometimes bickered and horse-traded and ended up forcing me to spend money on weapons that don't fill a vital need in these times of tight budgets and new requirements. … You've directed me to buy more M-1s, F-14s, and F-16s—all great systems … but we have enough of them.
The Republican operatives might also have noticed Gen. Colin Powell, then chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, at the same hearings, testifying about plans to cut Army divisions by one-third, Navy aircraft carriers by one-fifth, and active armed forces by half a million men and women, to say noting of "major reductions" in fighter wings and strategic bombers.
Granted, these reductions were made in the wake of the Soviet Union's dissolution and the Cold War's demise. But that's just the point: Proposed cuts must be examined in context. A vote against a particular weapons system doesn't necessarily indicate indifference toward national defense.
Looking at the weapons that the RNC says Kerry voted to cut, a good case could be made, certainly at the time, that some of them (the B-2 bomber and President Reagan's "Star Wars" missile-defense program) should have been cut. As for the others (the M-1 tank and the F-14, F-15, and F-16 fighter planes, among others), Kerry didn't really vote to cut them.
The claim about these votes was made in the Republican National Committee "Research Briefing" of Feb. 22. The report lists 13 weapons systems that Kerry voted to cut—the ones cited above, as well as Patriot air-defense missiles, Tomahawk cruise missiles, and AH64 Apache helicopters, among others.
It is instructive, however, to look at the footnotes. Almost all of them cite Kerry's vote on Senate bill S. 3189 (CQ Vote No. 273) on Oct. 15, 1990. Do a Google search, and you will learn that S. 3189 was the Fiscal Year 1991 Defense Appropriations Act, and CQ Vote No. 273 was a vote on the entire bill. There was no vote on those weapons systems specifically.
On a couple of the weapons, the RNC report cites H.R. 5803 and H.R. 2126. Look those up. They turn out to be votes on the House-Senate conference committee reports for the defense appropriations bills in October 1990 (the same year as S. 3189) and September 1995.
In other words, Kerry was one of 16 senators (including five Republicans) to vote against a defense appropriations bill 14 years ago. He was also one of an unspecified number of senators to vote against a conference report on a defense bill nine years ago. The RNC takes these facts and extrapolates from them that he voted against a dozen weapons systems that were in those bills. The Republicans could have claimed, with equal logic, that Kerry voted to abolish the entire U.S. armed forces, but that might have raised suspicions. Claiming that he opposed a list of specific weapons systems has an air of plausibility. On close examination, though, it reeks of rank dishonesty.
Another bit of dishonesty is RNC Chairman Ed Gillespie's claim, at a news conference today, that in 1995, Kerry voted to cut $1.5 billion from the intelligence budget. John Pike, who runs the invaluable globalsecurity.org Web site, told me what that cut was about: The Air Force's National Reconnaissance Office had appropriated that much money to operate a spy satellite that, as things turned out, it never launched. So the Senate passed an amendment rescinding the money—not to cancel a program, but to get a refund on a program that the NRO had canceled. Kerry voted for the amendment, as did a majority of his colleagues.
An examination of Kerry's real voting record during his 20 years in the Senate indicates that he did vote to restrict or cut certain weapons systems. From 1989-92, he supported amendments to halt production of the B-2 stealth bomber. (In 1992, George H.W. Bush halted it himself.) It is true that the B-2 came in handy during the recent war in Iraq—but for reasons having nothing to do with its original rationale.
The B-2 came into being as an airplane that would drop nuclear bombs on the Soviet Union. The program was very controversial at the time. It was extremely expensive. Its stealth technology had serious technical bugs. More to the point, a grand debate was raging in defense circles at the time over whether, in an age of intercontinental ballistic missiles and long-range cruise missiles, the United States needed any new bomber that would fly into the Soviet Union's heavily defended airspace. The debate was not just between hawks and doves; advocates and critics could be found among both.
In the latest war, B-2s—modified to carry conventional munitions—were among the planes that dropped smart bombs on Iraq. But that was like hopping in the Lincoln stretch limo to drop Grandma off at church. As for the other stealth plane used in both Iraq wars—the F-117, which was designed for non-nuclear missions—there is no indication that Kerry ever opposed it.
The RNC doesn't mention it, but Kerry also supported amendments to limit (but not kill) funding for President Reagan's fanciful (and eventually much-altered) "Star Wars" missile-defense system. Kerry sponsored amendments to ban tests of anti-satellite weapons, as long as the Soviet Union also refrained from testing. In retrospect, trying to limit the vulnerability of satellites was a very good idea since many of our smart bombs are guided to their targets by signals from satellites.
Kerry also voted for amendments to restrict the deployment of the MX missile (Reagan changed its deployment plan several times, and Bush finally stopped the program altogether) and to ban the production of nerve-gas weapons.
At the same time, in 1991, Kerry opposed an amendment to impose an arbitrary 2 percent cut in the military budget. In 1992, he opposed an amendment to cut Pentagon intelligence programs by $1 billion. In 1994, he voted against a motion to cut $30.5 billion from the defense budget over the next five years and to redistribute the money to programs for education and the disabled. That same year, he opposed an amendment to postpone construction of a new aircraft carrier. In 1996, he opposed a motion to cut six F-18 jet fighters from the budget. In 1999, he voted against a motion to terminate the Trident II missile. (Interestingly, the F-18 and Trident II are among the weapons systems that the RNC claims Kerry opposed.)
Are there votes in Kerry's 20-year record as a senator that might look embarrassing in retrospect? Probably. But these are not the ones.
Keep it coming, Republicans. All of your "best" attacks are outrageously dishonest. All Kerry has to do is ask "are you better off?". All Kerry has to do is ask "Was the Iraq war really a good idea? Were they honest about that with everyone?" All Kerry has to do is ask "So, Mr. National Security, have you 'gotten to the bottom' of that whole Plame thing yet? And, hey, how's that port security coming along?"
I can't believe there are enough Americans who will not listen to at least some of these kinds of questions and answers to give Bush a victory. I mean, I can even see how someone could be lukewarm about returning a Democrat to power, just because Democrats have a lot of stupid stuff in their history. But how can you be enthusiastic enough about Bush to vote for the guy? The man's a menace to this country!
Posted by Observer at September 2, 2004 09:29 AMComments on entries can only be made in pop-up windows while those entries are still on the main index page. Sorry for the inconvenience this causes, but this blocks about 99.99% of the spam the blog receives.
I'm better off. :)
Posted by: Humbaba on September 2, 2004 02:11 PMSo is Osama.
Posted by: Observer on September 3, 2004 09:19 AMI MUST say something regarding the Randi Rhodes show episode, because it was dead wrong and someone should make a public correction, especially since Rhodes herself won’t. I found that episode of the Randi Rhodes show to be one of the greatest embarrassments to liberal talk radio to date.
It started before 4, with Randi touting how she caught Arnold in a lie that nobody else would report. Her teasing of her great catch continued into the next hour and it took her until 18 after to reveal the lie: Arnold said he chose to become a Republican because of what he had heard during the Nixon-Humphrey debates, and guess what - they never debated!
Randi Rhodes continued to pat herself on the back for catching Arnold Schwarzenegger in this terrible lie. Unfortunately for her, she decided to actually play the clip at 4:41 pm, Eastern.
The problem was, as anyone who was listening soon noticed, Arnold didn't say a WORD about debates... not once. He mentioned the campaign generally, but that was it. The audio clipped rendered Randi Rhode's entire premise false. Her attack was wrong, based on a premise disproved by the clip itself.
It was awful. We expect better from progressives. Yet did Randi Rhodes apologize for wasting 40 minutes of her listeners' time on a rant based on a false premise? Did she admit she should have listened to the audio clip before she went on the attack? Did she promise to do a better job of show prep in the future? As of last I heard, Randi is STILL trying to pretend that she made this great catch - that she revealed some terrible lie that the right-wing controlled media won't tell you about.
A couple of her listeners sheepishly mentioned on Randi's message board that it didn't really sound like Schwarzenegger said anything about debates and maybe, just maybe, Randi might have made a very slight error?
Her defenders jumped in to say well, Arnold said "debates" is some OTHER speech and isn't it just like Republicans to trick her by having him not say it this time. You can read it for yourself.
Seriously, Randi Rhodes' shoot-from-the-hip style, her predilection to go off on attacks without bothering to check facts, is an embarrassment to liberal radio and has the potential of turning the progress made by others into a laughing stock.
Randi Rhodes needs to start doing serious show prep and she needs to check her facts before she goes off into the world of mindless ranting attacks like so many famous right wing hosts we know. Until she decides to do the necessary work toward getting things right, she will continue to be a stumbling block to the progressive movement.
Deleted duplicate comment. You make a good point. I saw the clip in question later on the Daily Show, and Rhodes was wrong. I mean, there was plenty of other questionable stuff in Arnie's speech (I still don't doubt he's lying about actually paying attention to politics), and Rhodes shouldn't have gone off on that.
I think Randi is a lot quicker on her feet and a lot sharper in her attacks, and I think liberal talk radio needs that for the entertainment value, to draw in the listeners, even if it means the error rate goes up some. I'm willing to cut her some slack. She doesn't lie *for a living* like the ConservaBorg, but she screws up once in a while.
There's a difference between a mistake and systematic dishonesty.
Posted by: Observer on September 4, 2004 03:17 PMI'd still feel a lot better if she'd be more careful about her facts. I don't think you need to distort information to make the points Randi wants to make. Or - perhaps more germaine - IF you must lie to make your point, then you didn't really have one.
I LIKE the sharpness of her attacks. I cringe at her factual errors, however, and while just making up stuff might have worked when she was on one station in Florida, it behooves someone with a national forum to act with greater care.
I have heard Randi blaming her critics, lately, claiming that there are "millions" of people waiting to jump on her words if she doesn't say something just right. While that may be true - if hyperbolic - I'm not one of them.
The above cited case simply required her to actually LISTEN to the audio clip of the speech she claimed to have heard, and then there wouldn't have been this embarrassing gaffe.
My husband suspects that she got the tale of the debates from another web site (which also gave her the information about there never having been a Nixon-Humphrey debate ...she didn't really 'remember' this bit of trivia) and then she went on a 45 minute rant as if it were her own idea. In the meantime, she had the producer get the Arnold clip, but she didn't bother to listen to it.
If this were KRUD in East Gebib nobody would care. The problem is that when you claim to be the voice of progressivism for America you need to meet a higher standard of credibility.
As good as she is at ranting and attacking, Randi so far been unable or unwilling to do the basic work to get things right - and that is sad.
Posted by: Chriss Pagani on October 8, 2004 03:14 PM