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"DNC: Hyper-Hypocrites
September 13, 2004
Political commentator Susan Estrich, (best known for her 'adroitness' as Walter Mondale's campaign manger during the '84 presidential election) -- spewed the following in her September 1 column: 'those who served in Vietnam instead of the privileged draft-dodging president, and ended up as names on the wall instead of members of the Air National Guard.'
It seems that Ms. Estrich has consumed far too many psychotropic drugs. Or maybe her mind has been fried by the toxic vapors that rise from the vats of Kool-Aid prepared daily by DNC chief Terry McAullife. Either way her comment far exceeds the usual political shrill--it is, without question-- hyper-hypocritical dung.
Perhaps Estrich has forgotten that her party's much celebrated leader, Bill Clinton--was a bona fide draft-dodger. As a matter of record, he not only avoided service in Vietnam by way of subterfuge--but also denounced his U.S. citizenship while visiting the Soviet Union in the late sixties.
Yet during Clinton's '92 presidential campaign sycophants like Estrich and Senator John Kerry emphatically stated that how and where anyone served during Vietnam should never be an issue: I guess that doesn't apply to those (as a matter of record)--who served honorably in the Air National Guard. "
September 13, 2004
Political commentator Susan Estrich, (best known for her 'adroitness' as Walter Mondale's campaign manger during the '84 presidential election) -- spewed the following in her September 1 column: 'those who served in Vietnam instead of the privileged draft-dodging president, and ended up as names on the wall instead of members of the Air National Guard.'
It seems that Ms. Estrich has consumed far too many psychotropic drugs. Or maybe her mind has been fried by the toxic vapors that rise from the vats of Kool-Aid prepared daily by DNC chief Terry McAullife. Either way her comment far exceeds the usual political shrill--it is, without question-- hyper-hypocritical dung.
Perhaps Estrich has forgotten that her party's much celebrated leader, Bill Clinton--was a bona fide draft-dodger. As a matter of record, he not only avoided service in Vietnam by way of subterfuge--but also denounced his U.S. citizenship while visiting the Soviet Union in the late sixties.
Yet during Clinton's '92 presidential campaign sycophants like Estrich and Senator John Kerry emphatically stated that how and where anyone served during Vietnam should never be an issue: I guess that doesn't apply to those (as a matter of record)--who served honorably in the Air National Guard. "
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