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Gould,
What was Kerry doing when he said "W stands for wrong", in reference to Bush? Is it possible he was relying on a sound bite to swing the undecided voters? When Kerry said "He's cut the VA (Veterans Administration) budget and not kept faith with veterans across this country. And one of the first definitions of patriotism is keeping faith with those who wore the uniform of our country." The truth is Bush voted for a 25% increase in those who are eligible for veterans health care and in the first three years of his presidency, funding for the Veterans Administration increased 27%. When you include Bush's 2005 recommended budget, funding for his full four-year term will amount to an increase of 37.6%. Kerry came up with the "sound bite" because Bush did not vote for as large of an increase and the democrats proposed. So is it possible that Kerry is guilty of the exact same thing that gets your panties in a wad? Is Kerry using slogan, rumor, insult, and easily remembered but out-of-context sound bytes to attract that portion of the electorate that is more numerous, but less mentally adept." When Kerry's supporters said that "George Bush wants to eliminate overtime pay for 8 million workers," referring to new overtime rules that the Department of Labor has proposed. The 8-million figure comes from a study by the labor-funded Economic Policy Institute. The same EPI concedes that many low-income workers would be gaining the right to overtime pay. Under the proposed rules any employee making less than $425 per week would be eligible for overtime benefits, up from the present level of $155, a figure that hasn't been changed since 1975. In its study , published in June 2003, EPI said that change "is sorely needed." The ad misquotes the study, however. What the study actually says is that an estimated 8 million would lose the legal right to premium overtime rates should they work more than 40 hours per week. It does not say they would actually lose pay as the ad says. In fact, the 8-million figure is inflated by many part-time workers who never get overtime work, or overtime pay, even though they now have the right to it. The proposal would change the rules for determining when white-collar workers can be classified by their employers as exempt from overtime pay for extra hours. The proposed rule changes are extensive, covering executive employees who can hire and fire others, administrative employees in a "position of responsibility", so-called "Learned Professional Employees" who have "knowledge of an advanced type," creative professionals, outside sales workers and certain computer workers such as systems analysts or software engineers. (None of these groups look very much like the blue-collar factory hand in the Moveon.org ad, by the way.) Is it possible that the Kerry supporters used the ad of a blue collar worker punching a time card to appeal to an unfounded fear of blue collar workers, who are too lazy to look up the facts? Is it possible that this ad below "...relies on slogan, rumor, insult, and easily remembered but out-of-context sound bytes to attract that portion of the electorate that is more numerous, but less mentally adept." http://www.bushin30seconds.org/view/2472_large.shtml Is it possible that you are blinded when Kerry supporters are doing the exact same thing you accuse Bush supporters of doing? Or are you distorting the truth and relying on slogans, rumors insults and easily remembers sound bytes to attract that portion of the electorate that are less mentally adept? "Gould 0738" wrote in message ... Gould, Your memory must be fading. This conversation started when you said: " Kerry's supporters publish well documented, thoroughly researched items like the one you posted-" "Meanwhile, the right wing relies on slogan, rumor, insult, and easily remembered but out-of-context sound bytes to attract that portion of the electorate that is more numerous, but less mentally adept." And that's true. The Republicans are trolling for votes among the least educated, most easily confused, least circumspect portions of the population. I don't see where I said these mental midgets were Republicans, only that the Republican campaign attempts to appeal to that element. Example: Take the claim that Kerry voted to increase taxes 350 times, or whatever. You will hear the sheeple repeating that as if it had a shred of truth. In fact, the republican spin machine counted a large number of Kerry's votes to *decrease* taxes in the "voted to increase" category! The pseudo logic was that although Kerry was voting to decrease taxes, some Republican introduced a bill to decrease them even more- so if the bill Kerry voted for had passed the tax bill wouldn't be lowered as much as it was when the more aggressive tax cut passed- therefore "increasing" (?!) taxes. Maybe that's how college graduates think in your neck of the woods. We hold them to a higher standard out west. A campaign tactic such as that outlined above won't appeal to people unless those folks are inclined to rely on slogan, rumor, insult, and easily remembered out-of-context sound bytes. |
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