Presidential Elections: The Ads
With presidential elections coming up, all TV channels are being flooded with Bush- and Kerry-commercials, and it's starting to bother me: how can the public ever form an opinion on any of the candidates when all you ever see is bashing the other candidate?
I'm doing some research on those ads, and here are some of my findings (yups, they're all Bush-ads... I'm sure someone will want to do the same with Kerry ads)
Kerry: "I actually did vote for the $87 billion before I voted against it."
This quote of Kerry is being used in Bush ads, but I'm pretty sure 99% of viewers of that ad have no idea what it is really about.
The $87 billion is the money needed by Bush for the military operations, and the reconstruction of Afghanistan and Iraq.
Kerry saying he voted for it, is a reference to his October 11, 2002 vote that granted Bush authority to use military force against Iraq at his own discretion.
What he voted against, is the $87 billion needed by Bush. There's a difference between those two, and the ad doesn't make that distinction.
At the time he voted against the $87 billion, Kerry was co-sponsoring an amendment (which was later rejected) that would pay for the $87 billion by rolling back the Bush tax cuts for incomes of over $400,000.
A Bush ad: "Kerry even voted against body armor for our troops on the front line of the War on Terror. "
In 16 of his 19 years in the Senate, Kerry voted for Pentagon authorization bills. The body armor the ad mentions, is part of the $87 billion package, which Kerry would have voted for if the amendment would have passed. Apparently, tax-cuts for those making $400,000+ are more important.
Kerry didn't vote against body armor in particular, he voted against a package of $87 billion (the body armour would cost $300 million, which is only .33% of the total package). And let's not forget that Gen. Abizaid was the first to acknowledge that over 40,000 troops had been sent to Iraq already without proper body armor (long before the $87 billion was even discussed).
A Bush ad: "As our troops defend America in the War on Terror, they must have what it takes to win. Yet, John Kerry has repeatedly opposed weapons vital to winning the War on Terror: Bradley Fighting Vehicles, Patriot Missiles, B-2 Stealth Bombers, F-18 Fighter Jets and more."
In 1984, Kerry indeed did vote against strategic weapons (the Trident nuclear missiles, mainly), and space-based anti-ballistic weapons systems (Star Wars, anyone?).
In 1989, Cheney (now VP, then Secretary of Defense) himself proposed a cancelling of the Apache program, and in 1991 he proposed a cancelling of the Bradleys, the F-14 and the F-16.
Wouldn't that make Cheney an opposer of "weapons vital to winning the war on terror", too?
Either both Cheney (and father Bush) and Kerry are opposers of weapons vital to winning the war on terror, or they both aren't...
A Bush ad: "Some people have wacky ideas. Like taxing gasoline more so people drive less. That’s John Kerry. He supported a 50 cent a gallon gas tax. If Kerry’s tax increase were law, the average family wouldpay $657 more a year.
Raising taxes is a habit of Kerry’s. He supported higher gasoline taxes 11 times. Maybe John Kerry just doesn’t understand what his ideas mean to the rest of us."
Kerry never voted for a 50 cent a gallon gas tax. All he ever did (over 10 years ago) was complain to some local journalists, saying he deserved more credit for trying to cut the deficit. Back then, gas cost a little over a buck for a gallon...
He doesn't support that tax anymore.
But wait... someone else does...
On May 24, 1999, a Harvard professor wrote an article entitled "Gas Tax Now!"
(http://post.economics.harvard.edu/fa...mns/may99.html). That name sounds familiar... oh looky! It's Mr. Mankiw, the chairman of President Bush's Council of Economic Advisors! What a "whacky" man!