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  #1
Le Mod Pol
 
Default Dems unwilling to let facts get in the way of a good smear




Dems unwilling to let facts get in the way of a good
smear

by Jack Kelly


Democrats — through overreach, overkill, and character
assassination, are in the process of converting what
should be a political ace into a joker. As a swift boat
commander in Vietnam, Lt. (jg) John F. Kerry behaved
admirably and heroically. He was awarded the Bronze
Star, and the Silver Star, and received three Purple
Hearts for wounds sustained in combat. Kerry's military
record compares favorably with that of President Bush,
who served honorably in the Texas Air National Guard,
but who never heard a shot fired in anger.

But Democrats combine deserved praise for Kerry with
unfair and dishonest denigration of Bush. Filmmaker
Michael Moore has called Bush a "deserter." The
Democratic National Chairman, Terry McAuliffe, has said
Bush was AWOL (absent without leave) from the Texas Air
National Guard.

These charges were investigated, and found baseless, in
2000 by the AP, the New York Times and the Washington
Post. But Democrats are unwilling to let facts get in
the way of a good smear.

Bush joined the Texas Air National Guard on May 28,
1968, upon graduation from Yale. He trained as a
fighter pilot, serving a total of 21 months on active
duty — just a little less than the typical draftee, and
substantially more than the typical Guardsman or
Reservist of the time — before receiving an honorable
discharge in October, 1973.

There was a waiting list for the Air Guard, and it is
probable that Bush wouldn't have gotten a slot if his
father hadn't been a Congressman at the time, though
there is no evidence the elder Bush exerted any
influence on behalf of his son.

If Bush were seeking simply to avoid service in
Vietnam, it is doubtful he would have chosen to become
a fighter pilot, a dangerous activity. It is especially
unlikely in view of the fact that at the time Bush
joined the 147th Fighter Interceptor Group, it had
pilots in Vietnam. Bush said in his autobiography that
he and a squadron mate volunteered for the Palace Alert
program, which sent National Guard pilots to Vietnam,
but were rejected because they had too few flying
hours.

We have only Bush's word that he volunteered for
Vietnam. But retired Col. Maury Udell, who trained him
to fly the F-102 Delta Dagger, told the AP he had no
doubt Bush was willing to go to Vietnam.

"He was a war-type guy," Udell was quoted in an AP
dispatch July 3, 2000. "George got really good at
air-to-air combat."

The AWOL smear stems from the period September to
December, 1972, when Bush was temporarily assigned to a
non-flying billet in the Alabama Air National Guard
while he was managing the U.S. Senate campaign of
Winton Blount. He missed some scheduled drills, but
made them up later, as regulations permit, and which
was common practice then and now.

The Boston Globe claimed to be unable to find evidence
that Bush had attended any drills in this period, but
Bush's military records indicate he did 4 days of
active duty ending Nov. 29 and 8 days ending Dec. 14,
the New York Times reported.

After returning to Houston, Bush attended drills with
his old unit in January, April and May, the New York
Times reported. "Another document showed that Mr. Bush
served at various times from May 29, 1973 through July
30, 1973, a period of time questioned by the Globe,"
the Times said.

So the AWOL myth stems from some bad reporting by the
Boston Globe. But even the Globe acknowledged that "in
the 22 month period between the end of his flight
training and his move to Alabama, Bush logged numerous
hours of duty, well above the minimum requirements for
so-called 'weekend warriors.'"

The truth about the AWOL myth has been known for nearly
four years. That some Democrats — knowing it is a lie —
are resurrecting it says more about their lack of
character than it does about Bush's service.

** Jack Kelly, a former Marine and Green Beret, was a
deputy assistant secretary of the Air Force in the
Reagan administration.

© 2003, Jack Kelly
Posted by Permission
--
LP
In politics, moderation is the best policy.
 
  #2
Glenn
 
Default Re: Dems unwilling to let facts get in the way of a good smear

On Sun, 15 Feb 2004 06:14:41 -0500, Le Mod Pol <mod_pol@igs.net>
wrote:

>
>
>
>Dems unwilling to let facts get in the way of a good
>smear
>
>by Jack Kelly
>
>
>Democrats — through overreach, overkill, and character
>assassination, are in the process of converting what
>should be a political ace into a joker. As a swift boat
>commander in Vietnam, Lt. (jg) John F. Kerry behaved
>admirably and heroically. He was awarded the Bronze
>Star, and the Silver Star, and received three Purple
>Hearts for wounds sustained in combat. Kerry's military
>record compares favorably with that of President Bush,
>who served honorably in the Texas Air National Guard,
>but who never heard a shot fired in anger.
>
>But Democrats combine deserved praise for Kerry with
>unfair and dishonest denigration of Bush. Filmmaker
>Michael Moore has called Bush a "deserter." The
>Democratic National Chairman, Terry McAuliffe, has said
>Bush was AWOL (absent without leave) from the Texas Air
>National Guard.
>
>These charges were investigated, and found baseless, in
>2000 by the AP, the New York Times and the Washington
>Post. But Democrats are unwilling to let facts get in
>the way of a good smear.
>
>Bush joined the Texas Air National Guard on May 28,
>1968, upon graduation from Yale. He trained as a
>fighter pilot, serving a total of 21 months on active
>duty — just a little less than the typical draftee, and
>substantially more than the typical Guardsman or
>Reservist of the time — before receiving an honorable
>discharge in October, 1973.
>
>There was a waiting list for the Air Guard, and it is
>probable that Bush wouldn't have gotten a slot if his
>father hadn't been a Congressman at the time, though
>there is no evidence the elder Bush exerted any
>influence on behalf of his son.
>
>If Bush were seeking simply to avoid service in
>Vietnam, it is doubtful he would have chosen to become
>a fighter pilot, a dangerous activity. It is especially
>unlikely in view of the fact that at the time Bush
>joined the 147th Fighter Interceptor Group, it had
>pilots in Vietnam. Bush said in his autobiography that
>he and a squadron mate volunteered for the Palace Alert
>program, which sent National Guard pilots to Vietnam,
>but were rejected because they had too few flying
>hours.
>
>We have only Bush's word that he volunteered for
>Vietnam. But retired Col. Maury Udell, who trained him
>to fly the F-102 Delta Dagger, told the AP he had no
>doubt Bush was willing to go to Vietnam.
>
>"He was a war-type guy," Udell was quoted in an AP
>dispatch July 3, 2000. "George got really good at
>air-to-air combat."
>
>The AWOL smear stems from the period September to
>December, 1972, when Bush was temporarily assigned to a
>non-flying billet in the Alabama Air National Guard
>while he was managing the U.S. Senate campaign of
>Winton Blount. He missed some scheduled drills, but
>made them up later, as regulations permit, and which
>was common practice then and now.
>
>The Boston Globe claimed to be unable to find evidence
>that Bush had attended any drills in this period, but
>Bush's military records indicate he did 4 days of
>active duty ending Nov. 29 and 8 days ending Dec. 14,
>the New York Times reported.
>
>After returning to Houston, Bush attended drills with
>his old unit in January, April and May, the New York
>Times reported. "Another document showed that Mr. Bush
>served at various times from May 29, 1973 through July
>30, 1973, a period of time questioned by the Globe,"
>the Times said.
>
>So the AWOL myth stems from some bad reporting by the
>Boston Globe. But even the Globe acknowledged that "in
>the 22 month period between the end of his flight
>training and his move to Alabama, Bush logged numerous
>hours of duty, well above the minimum requirements for
>so-called 'weekend warriors.'"
>
>The truth about the AWOL myth has been known for nearly
>four years. That some Democrats — knowing it is a lie —
>are resurrecting it says more about their lack of
>character than it does about Bush's service.
>
>** Jack Kelly, a former Marine and Green Beret, was a
>deputy assistant secretary of the Air Force in the
>Reagan administration.
>
>© 2003, Jack Kelly
>Posted by Permission
>--


Are any Democrats going to refute this?
 
  #3
Le Mod Pol
 
Default Re: Dems unwilling to let facts get in the way of a good smear



Glenn wrote:

> On Sun, 15 Feb 2004 06:14:41 -0500, Le Mod Pol <mod_pol@igs.net>
> wrote:


> >Dems unwilling to let facts get in the way of a good
> >smear


> >by Jack Kelly


> >Michael Moore has called Bush a "deserter." The
> >Democratic National Chairman, Terry McAuliffe, has said
> >Bush was AWOL (absent without leave) from the Texas Air
> >National Guard.
> >
> >These charges were investigated, and found baseless, in
> >2000 by the AP, the New York Times and the Washington
> >Post. But Democrats are unwilling to let facts get in
> >the way of a good smear.


> >** Jack Kelly, a former Marine and Green Beret, was a
> >deputy assistant secretary of the Air Force in the
> >Reagan administration.


> >© 2003, Jack Kelly
> >Posted by Permission


> Are any Democrats going to refute this?


So far I have not seen any.
--
LP
In politics, moderation is the best policy.
 
  #4
Jamorg
 
Default Re: Dems unwilling to let facts get in the way of a good smear


"Le Mod Pol" <mod_pol@igs.net> wrote in message
news:402F54A0.709DCCA9@igs.net...
>
>
>
> Dems unwilling to let facts get in the way of a good
> smear
>
> by Jack Kelly
>
>
> Democrats - through overreach, overkill, and character
> assassination, are in the process of converting what
> should be a political ace into a joker. As a swift boat
> commander in Vietnam, Lt. (jg) John F. Kerry behaved
> admirably and heroically. He was awarded the Bronze
> Star, and the Silver Star, and received three Purple
> Hearts for wounds sustained in combat. Kerry's military
> record compares favorably with that of President Bush,
> who served honorably in the Texas Air National Guard,
> but who never heard a shot fired in anger.


Whoa--okay, I haven't bought into the huge fake debate about Bush's and
Kerry's war records, but how does a record that includes combat "compare
favorably" with that of someone who never saw action? They shouldn't compare
at all--apples and oranges. I'll bet plenty of soldiers on active duty would
be happy knowing that their records "compare favorably" with those
stateside.






> But Democrats combine deserved praise for Kerry with
> unfair and dishonest denigration of Bush. Filmmaker
> Michael Moore has called Bush a "deserter." The
> Democratic National Chairman, Terry McAuliffe, has said
> Bush was AWOL (absent without leave) from the Texas Air
> National Guard.
>
> These charges were investigated, and found baseless, in
> 2000 by the AP, the New York Times and the Washington
> Post. But Democrats are unwilling to let facts get in
> the way of a good smear.
>
> Bush joined the Texas Air National Guard on May 28,
> 1968, upon graduation from Yale. He trained as a
> fighter pilot, serving a total of 21 months on active
> duty - just a little less than the typical draftee, and
> substantially more than the typical Guardsman or
> Reservist of the time - before receiving an honorable
> discharge in October, 1973.
>
> There was a waiting list for the Air Guard, and it is
> probable that Bush wouldn't have gotten a slot if his
> father hadn't been a Congressman at the time, though
> there is no evidence the elder Bush exerted any
> influence on behalf of his son.
>
> If Bush were seeking simply to avoid service in
> Vietnam, it is doubtful he would have chosen to become
> a fighter pilot, a dangerous activity. It is especially
> unlikely in view of the fact that at the time Bush
> joined the 147th Fighter Interceptor Group, it had
> pilots in Vietnam. Bush said in his autobiography that
> he and a squadron mate volunteered for the Palace Alert
> program, which sent National Guard pilots to Vietnam,
> but were rejected because they had too few flying
> hours.
>
> We have only Bush's word that he volunteered for
> Vietnam. But retired Col. Maury Udell, who trained him
> to fly the F-102 Delta Dagger, told the AP he had no
> doubt Bush was willing to go to Vietnam.
>
> "He was a war-type guy," Udell was quoted in an AP
> dispatch July 3, 2000. "George got really good at
> air-to-air combat."
>
> The AWOL smear stems from the period September to
> December, 1972, when Bush was temporarily assigned to a
> non-flying billet in the Alabama Air National Guard
> while he was managing the U.S. Senate campaign of
> Winton Blount. He missed some scheduled drills, but
> made them up later, as regulations permit, and which
> was common practice then and now.
>
> The Boston Globe claimed to be unable to find evidence
> that Bush had attended any drills in this period, but
> Bush's military records indicate he did 4 days of
> active duty ending Nov. 29 and 8 days ending Dec. 14,
> the New York Times reported.
>
> After returning to Houston, Bush attended drills with
> his old unit in January, April and May, the New York
> Times reported. "Another document showed that Mr. Bush
> served at various times from May 29, 1973 through July
> 30, 1973, a period of time questioned by the Globe,"
> the Times said.
>
> So the AWOL myth stems from some bad reporting by the
> Boston Globe. But even the Globe acknowledged that "in
> the 22 month period between the end of his flight
> training and his move to Alabama, Bush logged numerous
> hours of duty, well above the minimum requirements for
> so-called 'weekend warriors.'"
>
> The truth about the AWOL myth has been known for nearly
> four years. That some Democrats - knowing it is a lie -
> are resurrecting it says more about their lack of
> character than it does about Bush's service.
>
> ** Jack Kelly, a former Marine and Green Beret, was a
> deputy assistant secretary of the Air Force in the
> Reagan administration.
>
> © 2003, Jack Kelly
> Posted by Permission
> --
> LP
> In politics, moderation is the best policy.



 
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