Ugh

Oct. 28th, 2004 10:35 am
ceebeegee: (Red Heather)
[personal profile] ceebeegee
Just another reason I can't stand our current Emperor with No Clothes. God forbid he be confronted with the knowledge that some of his constituents (you know, the people who pay his salary and to whom he is beholden) disagree with him:

As Bush has traveled the United States during this political campaign, the Secret Service and local police have often handled public protest by quickly arresting or removing demonstrators, free-speech advocates say.

...

"It's clear that some of these security zones are not based on legitimate security concerns. They are based on the idea of the president not seeing someone who disagrees with him, which basically undermines the whole idea of the First Amendment."

...

The Kerry campaign says it does not limit attendance based on political views, a point Kerry has made frequently when confronted by hecklers on the campaign trail."


If this happened to me, I would sue the shit out these people for false arrest. Arrest should not be a political tool to suppress dissent--it should an enforcement of the law. What law is there against telling the President you disagree with him? But I'm disgusted, not surprised--it's clear from Bush's policies that he intends to give the big middle finger to half the country's population, despite his running as "a uniter, not a divider" and notwithstanding that less than half the country voted for him. Why can't he talk to these people, why can't he acknowledge that a lot of voters disagree with his policies, why can't he reach out? Oh, because he thinks God told him to do this. I guess if God is in the Cabinet, you don't need to listen to the little people.

Date: 2004-10-28 12:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ceebeegee.livejournal.com
I think you may mean Paul Wellstone, not Paul Simon. Simon was a Senator from Illinois, famous for his bowtie. Wellstone was from Minnesota, and was just weird (though not as weird as Sen. Mark Dayton, his successor, who many think will eventually leave the Senate in a straightjacket).

Uh, yeah, that's it. That's who I meant. ;) The one who died in a plane crash recently.

Peace :) We'll drink about this on Saturday, over roasted pumpkin seeds.

Date: 2004-10-29 12:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] minstrel70.livejournal.com
Rich Lowry of National Review has an interesting, and I think fairly accurate explanation of the politics of the upper midwest. You may not like the overall point of the article, but the analysis is worth a read.

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