Guilty Until Proven Innocent. And Probably After, Too.

Posted By on September 8, 2004 at 11:38 pm

The Left bleats, but for all their raving, it isn’t Ashcroft who’s conducting “show trials” in this country.
Neither is it Rumsfeld, Cheney, nor a cabal of Halliburton executives.
You’d think it would be this guy, but no.
It certainly isn’t Bush. Quite the contrary.
It’s the New York Times, the Boston Globe, and 60 Minutes II conducting the kangaroo court. Bush is the one on trial for alleged “crimes” of one sort or another.
I thought we had a rule about double-jeopardy in this country. How many times can the same old discredited lies and smears be re-used?
Update: Do you suppose this article:
   Sharon Bush Denies Kitty Kelley Account
will get as much air time as the smears? Don’t count on it.
Update 2: Did CBS use forged documents? Oh, this just keeps getting better and better and better.

Vigor

Posted By on September 7, 2004 at 11:13 pm

Anyone remember Paul Tsongas?
He was the Massachussets Democrat (former) Senator who left the Senate in 1984 to deal with cancer. John Kerry was elected to the open seat.
In 1992, he was deemed healthy enough to re-enter politics, and ran in the presidential primary campaign. Not being economically liberal enough for the majority of Democrats, he lost to Bill Clinton. He was, from all the accounts I’ve heard, a decent fellow.
During the ’92 campaign, his earlier battle against cancer was — rightly, to my way of thinking — an issue. Americans prefer that their candidates be in good health.
In 2003, Tsongas’ successor in the Senate, John Kerry, underwent surgery to remove his cancerous prostate gland. We have yet to get any glimpse whatsoever of Kerry’s medical records.
Meanwhile, like the previous JFK, Kerry spends a great deal of time being photographed while engaged in vigorous pursuits — in Kerry’s case: skiing (and cussing at Secret Service Agents), bicycling, sailboarding, shooting.
Robert Musil notes:

So why does Senator Kerry bring the media along on his sporting jaunts so often, even with a potential downside so obvious and potentially serious and sometimes clearly experienced? Certainly some physical activity helps present the image of a vigorous leader. But the current and most past presidents have not felt the need to go beyond taking the media along on presidential jogs or periodic wood chopping on the ranch. Why does John Kerry go so much further?
Well, one thing an over-documented sporting life has been used for in the past is to conceal serious health problems – with the most notorious example being John F. Kerry’s idol, John F. Kennedy. John Kennedy is now known to have been a very sick man, with a seriously injured back and Addison disease, among other problems. At critical points in his term he was impaired by powerful painkilling and anti-inflammatory drugs. It is now also known that John Kennedy and his organization used an ultra-active media campaign depicting Mr. Kennedy in sporting and physical activities to distract attention and counter adverse consequences arising from his precarious health.

(Emphasis in the original; link via JustOneMinute.)
After the 1992 primary campaign, Paul Tsongas lived just five years. The cancer that everyone thought he had beaten finally killed him. He was only 55 years old.
It’s time for Kerry to release his medical records.