In 2004, I thought Howard Dean should have had the chance to win over the US-presidential contest. He was a doctor and governor, albeit of a smaller state, who not only said that going into Iraq was a mistake, but also saw it as an achievable objective to reduce the growth rate of the federal government medical liabilities from 10% to 6% a year. His Iowa scream was so much blown out of any proportion that John Kerry followed him as the best face on a Democratic comeback.
I had grown to like Kerry and hoped he'd win. Then we had to whole presidential election being decided by the Ohio vote, or so most of us thought/saw. Several reports about vote-irregularities came up, after (while?) Kerry hastily conceded to the official count, in Ohio. This did not feel right and left many unanswered questions about the whole Kerry candidacy.
In retrospect, Kerry's indecisively countering the swift-boat allegations is at odds with his principled positions during the Vietnam War. Yeah, he conveniently had the Shrum-curse to fall on for the swift-boat episode, but that should have been a personal matter rather than political maneuvering and calculation for somebody like him.
As for Kerry's flip-flopping on the Iraq War, one should only ask: Why is it that people look at this as a relief of sorts for his fall? At least, one can argue that opinions change with the facts or evidence.
The latest straw, which also broke Kerry's moral high ground, came with the occasion of the Senate debates on taxing private equity funds that go IPO. Why is it that Kerry (and Schumer, for that matter) are not in favor of such tax? Is it revealing of principled action or the true nature of the politiko?
I had grown to like Kerry and hoped he'd win. Then we had to whole presidential election being decided by the Ohio vote, or so most of us thought/saw. Several reports about vote-irregularities came up, after (while?) Kerry hastily conceded to the official count, in Ohio. This did not feel right and left many unanswered questions about the whole Kerry candidacy.
In retrospect, Kerry's indecisively countering the swift-boat allegations is at odds with his principled positions during the Vietnam War. Yeah, he conveniently had the Shrum-curse to fall on for the swift-boat episode, but that should have been a personal matter rather than political maneuvering and calculation for somebody like him.
As for Kerry's flip-flopping on the Iraq War, one should only ask: Why is it that people look at this as a relief of sorts for his fall? At least, one can argue that opinions change with the facts or evidence.
The latest straw, which also broke Kerry's moral high ground, came with the occasion of the Senate debates on taxing private equity funds that go IPO. Why is it that Kerry (and Schumer, for that matter) are not in favor of such tax? Is it revealing of principled action or the true nature of the politiko?
September 18, 2007
Here's another angle on the whole Kerry affair: