My vote for US President
Published on October 29, 2004 By Istari In Republican

Voting for US President is a choice between two men. This year's choice is between George W. Bush and John Kerry. It is the most important job in the world - in the most literal sense.
 
 With George W. Bush, we know his positions. His positions are plainly stated and ones he consistently keeps - sometimes to a fault. In our post-9/11 world, I think we need to know where a candidate stands on certain issues, especially foreign policy. We know that George W. Bush will aggressively fight global terrorism. We know that because after the attacks of 9/11, the US swiftly and effectively responded by taking out Al Qaeda's main launching pads in Afghanistan. The government that supported Al Qaeda, the Taliban, was removed. And this past month democratic elections, for the first time in history, were held in that country.
 
 Bush also recognized that in our post 9/11 world that open enemies of the United States that significant resources could no longer be tolerated. That we must work towards their overthrow or reform. He identified 3 countries as an axis of "evil": Iraq, Iran, and North Korea. Iraq was the obvious first target. With over a dozen UN security council resolutions demanding that Iraq comply with the 1991 UN cease fire terms, Iraq was the easiest of the three to focus first on.
 
 Bush worked with the United Nations to pass a new UN resolution - 1441. In that resolution, Iraq was told that it needed to abide by the 1991 cease fire terms or it would face "serious consequences", diplomatic speak for military action as the world knew from the previous use of the term in Kosovo in the late 90s. Abiding by those cease fire terms means allowing UN weapons inspectors unfettered access throughout Iraq. It means being able to interview Iraqi scientists out of the country. It meant allowing the UN to inspect over the country using U2 planes.
 
 But Iraq, again, failed to comply. Even during this time Iraq fired upon US and British planes patrolling the no fly zone. It obstructed attempts to interview Iraqi scientists about Iraq's WMD programs. It would not permit the use of U2 planes to inspect from the air. In short, Iraq was failing to comply.
 
 Did Iraq have WMDs? No one could know for sure, that was what the inspections were for. What was known is that Iraq had WMDs at one time, had used them previously, and had clearly intended on obtaining them in the future. With Iraq not complying, again, with the United Nations and sanctions unraveling (which we would later discover was to a far greater extent than ever imagined), Bush decided that enough was enough. Iraq was a simmering threat to the United States that, in a post-9/11 world could not be "allowed to materialize". Bush never claimed Iraq was an imminent threat. Instead, he argued that Iraq was a threat that could not be permitted to fully materialize.
 
 In essence, Bush made a simple calculation: That we could either allow the status quo in Iraq to continue in which Saddam waited for France, Russia and China to lobby successfully for the end of sanctions on Iraq, something they had been doing since 1998, or we could remove Saddam now with military force while he had the support of the majority of the American people. Bush determined that if we didn't act, Saddam would be in a position to aid terrorists with WMDs that he either had on hand in stockpiles or simply wait out the sanctions and begin a WMD program and become a global menace down the road that would create the specter of something far worse than 9/11 in the future.
 
 So the US military acted. Despite critics claiming that such a war would cost hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilian casualties and cost tens of thousands of American lives, the government of Saddam was removed in around 6 weeks at a cost of only a few hundred American troops and very low Iraqi casualties. Bush did miscalculate though, the planners had anticipated a war that would take months. They also expected more of its opponents to stand and fight. Instead, faced by American military power, much of Iraq's military simply melted away.
 
 This led to the single biggest mistake by the Bush administration. Bush's military planners had intended on converting the Iraqi military into a stabilizing force after the war ended. To that end, senior Iraqi commanders were even bribed to stand down and wait for a new regime put in place by the United States. Paul Bremer, by contrast, disbanded the entire Iraqi military, relying instead completely on the relatively small US force to occupy a country of 25 million people that is the size of California until a new Iraqi force could be created from scratch.
 
 The hundreds of thousands of Iraqi military personnel, now without a job, had to find new things to do. This helped lead to the current insurgency in Iraq. While largely foreign sponsored from Syria and Iran and with plenty of volunteers from throughout the Middle East, these jobless soldiers served as a huge reservoir of man power for the new insurgency. Bremer, not having experience in creating a replacement force, vastly underestimated the time it would take to replace that Iraqi military with a new, "Bathist-free" one.
 
 Meanwhile, in the United States, a relatively obscure Senator with longstanding political ambitions was preparing to run for President. John Kerry, a career senate Dove began to take on more mainstream positions. He voted for military action in Iraq. He did NOT vote merely for the President to have the authorization to use force to get the UN in line. By that line of reasoning, he should have voted for the 1991 force authorization. But he did not. If Kerry had had his way in 1991, Saddam would be in control of Kuwait today and possibly Saudi Arabia as well and 9/11 would have still happened except that the US would have been in a much weaker position to respond.
 
 Kerry's senate record was born from his experiences in Vietnam. An outspoken critic of the Vietnam war, he had made a career of having taken both sides on that issue. He turned his 4 week stint in Vietnam in which he used his political connections and own lobbying to secure a remarkable 3 purple hearts in 4 months of action (none requiring a hospital stay which any soldier will tell you is basically impossible to do legitimately). He also wrote up his own citation and recommended himself for a silver star and bronze star as captain of a US Navy swift boat. By being able to play both sides on the Vietnam issue, Kerry had been able to secure a 20 year career as a Senator.
 
 In the Senate Kerry wasn't particularly active. His main efforts were in voting against US military programs. His long distrust of US military might coupled with his belief that the best way to deal with the Soviet Union was peaceful coexistence were the halmarks of his tenure.
 
 But since he was planning for running for President, the life long political opportunist couldn't help but vote for the war in Iraq.
 
 Meanwhile, Bush also pursued an aggressive economic recovery policy. The Dot-Com bubble of the 90s, which gave us such wonders as Pets.com and numerous other over inflated but doomed companies came to an end. The market lost several trillion dollars and left many investors, including many retirees, bankrupt. This sent the economy into a recession that made its presence felt at the start of 2001 when Bush was elected. The attacks of 9/11, which essentially shut down US business for the month of September of that year, put the US into a deep recession and combined cost the United States millions of jobs.
 
 Bush's economic recovery policy was to try to soften the blow of the dot-com collapse. The belief was that if Americans could get capital back into their hands they could jump-start the economy. So Bush got passed a across the board tax cut. All Americans who paid taxes got a tax cut. As a percentage cut, those who made less money actually did better and the 15% tax rate was lowered to a 10% tax rate.
 
 But Democrats seized on the ignorance of many Americans. The public education system, something heavily supported by Democrats, had not done a very good job in teaching Americans basic math skills. If you give a 10% tax cut to someone who pays a million dollars in taxes, they are going to get a lot more back than somebody who pays only $1,000 in taxes. A family of 3 with an income of $40,000 can only get so much back in taxes. By contrast, your local restaurant owner, filing under his own personal S chapter corporation $930,000 per year is going to get a lot more back in taxes. It's basic math. So the Democrats seized on this to claim that the tax cuts were "for the rich" and may gullible people bought into this.
 
 Bush also got passed the first significant public education reform in many years. Called the "No Child Left Behind" act, it was designed to force schools to conduct a standardized test once per year to measure their effectiveness. If the school was not doing well, the act provided extra federal funds to help the school out. If the school continued to fail, students would eventually have the right to go to different schools. To his credit, Kerry voted for this but, like he would on many issues, he would later behave as if this were a bad idea which would lead to him being accurately described as a "Flip flopper".
 
 Unlike most federal programs, No Child Left Behind was even largely funded. It's not commonly known but many programs of this nature, such as Clinton's infamous 10,000 new policemen program, or the Brady Bill, are not federally funded - just federally mandated. Bush didn't just get No Child Left Behind passed, but he got it mostly funded. Unfortunately, large spending increases (such as the 43% increase in federal education spending) has led to a very large budget deficit. One that Kerry criticizes even as he complains that No Child Left Behind is not funded enough.
 
 Bush also co-opted the concept of a Homeland security department. After 9/11, it became apparent that the US needed to better coordinate its various branches (particularly law enforcement). This would be done via a new department. Taking what was originally a Democratic concept and converting it to his own vision, the Department of Homeland Security was passed and implemented in Bush's first term.
 
 Bush also favored the passage of a temporary act called the Patriot Act - that Kerry also voted for but, like many other things, has pretended to be against it when convenient. The Patriot Act, like many such hastily passed acts in American history, has problems in some parts. It's a very large bill. But it has allowed law enforcement to more effectively deal with terrorism. Both Bush and Kerry support adjusting it in the future (though you wouldn't know that from the press that makes it sound like the Patriot act is essentially an act of martial law foisted upon the public by a fascist Republican administration).
 
 Amazingly enough, these are all things that were done in a single term. When one considers the 8 years that Bill Clinton was in office and how little actually got done in those 8 years when compared to the 4 years Bush has been in office one cannot help but conclude that Bush is an effective leader. Even if you disagree with Bush's policies, he has certainly gotten a lot accomplished.
 
 In a single term so far Bush has moved to overthrow a hostile regime in Afghanistan and replace it with a democratically elected one. Iraq has been removed as a state sponsor or terrorism and Saddam, long defiant, now sits in US custody in a prison cell. A huge tax cut was passed and its benefits turned what should have been a depression level recession into a rapid economic recovery (3.4% economic growth for last fiscal quarter) with unemployment reaching a very low point.
 
 His opponent, far from being specific on an issue, has continued his trend of trying to have it all ways. What will he do in Iraq? Nobody knows for sure. What will he do to continue the fight on global terror? No one really knows. He talks about plans but they aren't plans, they're platitudes. "I will find and kill terrorists" is not a plan, it's just rhetoric. "I will bring our allies together" is not a plan, it's a wish. "I will make us no longer be dependent on foreign energy sources" is not a plan, it's an empty dream. Plans require specific proposals of action. But Kerry, whose record in the Senate indicates he's not a man of action, simply doesn't want to get pinned down on any given plan. Even his health care plan is pointlessly vague.
 
 Bush, for example, has put forward a plan to pass a law that will enable small businesses to group together to buy health care plans from insurance companies in bulk. While there is room to criticize this plan, that's only because it's specific enough that people know that this can be done. Kerry, however, wanting to raise taxes on "the rich" to give free health care to other people isn't a plan, it's a give-away whose costs are largely unknown and politically unfeasible. Not that Bush is totally innocent from such empty rhetoric such as Bush's vague hope to have private social security accounts. But while Bush does have a few politically unfeasible wishes such as the private social security accounts, most of Bush's plans are politically viable and can actually be implemented. Not a single Kerry proposal that has been named on JohnKerry.com is specific enough to figure out whether it can even be done or not.
 
 More troubling is Kerry's stance on foreign policy. Because we don't know what he'll do in Iraq because he won't get specific except where he says he'll do pretty much what Bush does "but better", we only have Kerry's record to go by which is the record of a life-time dove and political opportunist.
 
 John Kerry is not a serious man. Men of empty and mindless ambition are not the type of men we want at this time. Serious times call for serious men. And Bush, even with his negatives, is a serious man with serious plans. John Kerry is not a serious man and does not deserve to be elected as President of the United States.


Comments (Page 2)
2 Pages1 2 
on Oct 30, 2004
The key question is is the country better off now than four years ago?

Lets look at areas that will help answer that essential question:

The deficit has gone from $5.8 Trillion to $7.5 Trillion with no end in sight. That will add to future interest payments from our tax dollars.

We have added 5 million new workers during the last four years and have less jobs than four years ago.

Energy and health care costs have increased far more then wage increases.

More of the total Federal taxes are paid by the middle income group in 2004 than in 2000.

We have overcommitted our military to attack a country that did not pose any real threat to the United States.

The Terrorists are as or more active then ever and their leaser has not been brought to justice.

We are more dependent of foreign energy than ever.

We have made the funding for Medicare worse than ever with a prescription drug plan that we did not fund.

We have done nothing to solve the fiscal problems of Social Security.

Good American jobs continue leaving the country and we have the corporate loopholes un repaired.

The trade deficit is worse than evey.

The political discontent is even worse then in 2000.

WE have done nothing to begin repairing the bridges, dams, schools, water/sewer systems or electrical grid in America but are spening tax dollrs to repair these same things in Iraq.

We have under funded the "NO Child Left Behind" by 24 Billion below the Bush pledge.

We have the worst relationship with other nations in modern history.

If you want to know what the Bush policies have done and will do if continued, read "Four More For George W?" Look at www.amazon.com to see what readers are saying about this book!
on Oct 30, 2004
Your piece seems to be full of many half truths, which you appear to have gotten from Bush literature and/or 527 political ads. If by knowing GWB's positions, you dont include broken promises, then perhaps you may be on to something. He identified the "axis of evil" as Iraq, Iran, and North Korea and as you said "Iraq was the obvious first target." Did you ever ask yourself why they were the obvious first target? Its easy to deflect to the 12 year old UN resolutions as an excuse. But there was no proven link between Saddam and al-Qaeda, and there were no WMDs to be found. If Bush were truly after the WMDs, and only the WMDs, he would have waited until better intelligence came along instead of the outdated crap he sent his sacrificial lamb Colin Powell to the UN with. Besides, if the US really wanted to know what WMD Saddam had, they could have just checked their receipts from the 80s. All I heard was "Saddam has chemical weapons, and has used them in the past." Well yes, he used them in the Iran-Iraq War, but he didn't get them internally, he was given them by the US to kill Iranians, because at that time the Islamist regime in Iran was considered more of the threat to the US than the Iraqi dictator was. The next excuse for was was the link between al-Qaeda and Saddam. This link was never proven and the logic behind it was faulty and full of smoke and mirrors. The excuse was that "both hate America" and would see anything to bring America down. This doesn't work because of the ideologies both possess. While they both do hate America, Osama is on a religious jihad and is very connected with fundamental Islam, Saddam was a secular dictator who although ruled a predominantly muslim country didn't allow religion and politics to mix. Osama was a staunch opponent to Saddam because he refused to rule according to the laws of Islam. Anyways, do not take this as condoning the actions of a ONCE dangerous and insane man. But rather to make you ask the question of the world being a safer place now that he is not in power. I argue no, it is just as dangerous now as it was then and any rhetoric contrary is simply pandering to the fears of the average American. Were the people of Madrid or Bali any safer? If it can happen there, it can happen here. To say the Bush has prevented future attacks after 9/11 would be to use an argument borrowed from my favourite TV show "The Simpsons" and the episode with the Bear Patrol. Simply because the Bear Patrol was in full force and there were no bears around doesn't mean there is a proven link between the two. Its a fallacy, just like the Bush doctrine.
on Oct 30, 2004

Not widely known but heavily documented in Senator Byrd's book "Confronting an Reckless and Arrogant Presidency".

Sheets Byrd?  Royal member of the KKK?  You know how to pick sources!  Who next, Hitler? Stalin?

on Oct 30, 2004

One has to wonder how many of you on the left actually bothered to read the full article since it covers many of the points discussed.

on Oct 31, 2004
You are correct Jonn. What is hard to understand is why a country like ours can not produce better people to be successful in running for office. I think it is the way the two parties operate and the control of powerful groups within the parties.

I, as a moderate Republican, have voted for Kerry because I want the power split. I do not want either the left or the right to have control of both Congress and the White House. We are getting only what benefits the conservatives and not what any other group wants. A split in the power will require compermise to get anything done!
on Oct 31, 2004
Very good article. Very well written. Though some have commented that you are just speaking the "Party Line", I do not believe so. You have captured the essence of what has gone on in the last 3 to four years, and have pointed out the main difference between these two candidates. Character. Many can debate policies and actions of a president, many are just arm chair commanders that think they know better than the people doing the job. Character, however, will define what type of policies and actions a president will do, and how far they would go.

As you pointed out, President Bush follows through on his actions, something that is lacking in many past presidents. I know on almost every major issue where he stands. He really does care for the American People and I believe he would not do anything intentionally to put this country in harms way. Sure we have many brave soldiers in Iraq dieing every day, but I would rather fight the terroists there than here and see American civilians dieing in the streets.

John Kerry however, his voting record for the last twenty years speaks volumes about the man. Especially since now he is trying to protray himself as a complete opposite of his past record. According to my research, John Kerry has not once voted to reduce taxes, and nearly everytime the oppurtunity came to increase taxes he was for it. John Kerry, as you said, has nearly everytime also voted against the military and intelligence services. So how can he stand there and say that he is for the middle american, will reduce taxes and protect us.

Sure people do change, but we have not seen any proof of it. Sure we could elect him and he could follow through with what he says he will do. An abusive husband can change, but before any woman returns to him, he has to prove he has changed. A few votes in the last year or two does not necessarily indicate change, it could just be for his own ambition as you stated. I cannot understand why anyone could look at Senator Kerry's past records and not wonder. To me, all the man wants is to be president no matter what it takes to get there. That is a dangerous person to put in such a powerful position.

Very good article. I do not care if a person is left, right, middle, republican, conservative, liberal or democrat. All I care is that you take the time and the thought like Tandis did to weigh your decision for November 2nd. Do not vote because of your political affliation, do not vote based on information told to you. Research. Research. Read. Learn. Make an informed decision.
2 Pages1 2