Father Kerry vs. Boy George

Father Kerry vs. Boy George


By Steven Rosenfeld and Jan Frel, AlterNet.org



John
Kerry came across as a mature candidate during the debate, while George
Bush squirmed repeatedly at challenges to his record




The John
Kerry that America saw on television Thursday night was not the John
Kerry that the American people were told to expect by George
W. Bush.




In
Kerry, they saw a man who knew himself, knew his values, and knew how,
when, and where he would lead the nation in war and peace. Kerry wasn't
shy about stating his agenda, defending it, and saying why it was an
example of more mature leadership than that of Bush. Most
important of all, Kerry was adult enough to admit to the nation that he
could change his mind when events called for it. And in doing so, he
dominated the evening by setting the tone of the debate.




Bush, in
contrast, presented himself as a resolute, unwavering leader, saying
that was what the nation needed to win – in Iraq and the greater war on
terrorism. He held to his belief that he could do no wrong by always
putting American interests first. “We would all rue the day if Saddam
were still in power… believe me,” Bush said, repeatedly adding that
he exhausted all political and diplomatic remedies before going to war.




But
Kerry showed that it just wasn't so. By citing Bush's record, Kerry
demonstrated that Bush had diverted the country from tracking down
Osama bin Laden, the real target in the war on terrorism. In fact, he
said Bush “outsourced” the job of capturing or killing bin Laden to
Afghani warlords who, only a week before, had stood with bin Laden.




(Click here to read the complete article.)





Short Takes on the Debate


AlterNet.org



The
first presidential debate lasted 90 minutes, and while it covered a
range of topics, it also revealed some central points about the two
candidates. Below are short takes from AlterNet's editors and invited
commentators summing up what they took out of the debate.




Steve
Cobble, Political Consultant
A clear win for Kerry. Since I did debate
prep for Dennis Kucinich during the Democratic primaries, I got to
watch Kerry in dozens of debates. This was one of his better efforts.
He kept it concise; separated Iraq from Bush's “war on terror” cover
story; and even criticized W's “colossal misjudgments” in Iraq – not
exactly “Bush lied, people died,” but not “ditto” either.




Bush
never hit his stride until his closing. It took him all of ten seconds
to first mention 9/11. Mostly he repeated stock phrases over and over,
never looked in command, and often seemed irritated. Bush ended with
some of his usual religious rhetoric. One line was: “I believe in the
transformational power of liberty.” Well, so do I. Our right to vote,
won with the blood of marchers and freedom fighters, can change
America's direction. If we use it.




(Click here to read the complete article.)




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