Kerry Campaign Veterans Dismiss Complaints Over Obama's Bin Laden Ad

Really, CG? If true, that explains some things. But if you are, good for you.
 
John Kerry, while still in Navy uniform, spent a great deal of time in Paris discussing the surrender of the United States in Vietnam with Madame Binh, the head of the North Vietnamese delegation.
In another place and another time in American history, John Kerry's life would have likely ended in front of a firing squad. Instead the Democratic Party nominated him as their candidate for President in 2004.
You have to keep in mind who is saying what. Mr Kerry is not an honorable man.
Once a gigolo.....
 
At the risk of repeating myself, if I was his adviser, I'd have told him 'give the credit to the troops, commend SEAL 6 for their courage and ability and say how honored you are to be their Commander in Chief'. If he had done that, no one could have criticized him and he'd have scored a big one with non Democrat voters... and left the GOP nothing to bitch at him for. More fool him for putting ego first.

He certainly could have come across presidential and said what you suggested. But, I haven't seen him presidential that much.

The two of you are lying.

Ill go get tape to prove it

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J-J1LYjaXW4]Full Video-Obama's 2012 State Of The Union-Enhanced - YouTube[/ame]
 
John Kerry, while still in Navy uniform, spent a great deal of time in Paris discussing the surrender of the United States in Vietnam with Madame Binh, the head of the North Vietnamese delegation.
In another place and another time in American history, John Kerry's life would have likely ended in front of a firing squad. Instead the Democratic Party nominated him as their candidate for President in 2004.
You have to keep in mind who is saying what. Mr Kerry is not an honorable man.
Once a gigolo.....

No, he did not, and, no, he would not, and you are still drunk like the rear admiral who was lying for decades about Kerry because Kerry kicked his ass.
 
By Sam Stein

WASHINGTON -- For veterans of John Kerry's 2004 presidential campaign, the past week of debate over the fairness of making political attacks out of national security issues has brought about a bit of nostalgia and, in many cases, the chance to sit back and smirk.

The Massachusetts senator was famously submarined by attacks over his own personal service and his capacity to handle modern terrorist threats. At the time, aides to Kerry cried foul, arguing that former President George W. Bush's re-election campaign and allied groups were playing on people's fears for electoral gains. With the shoe now firmly on the other foot -- and Republicans griping over an Obama campaign web ad suggesting that Mitt Romney wouldn't have approved the raid that killed Osama bin Laden -- the collective response from the Kerry crowd is something akin to: "tough shit."

"That was then, this is now," said Steve Elmendorf, Kerry's 2004 deputy campaign manager. "This is what people do with challengers. One of the advantages of incumbency is you get to do the job and make the tough decisions and you get to make suggestions about whether the challenger is up to the job."

There is a lengthy history of presidential campaigns using the threat of terrorism, war or even nuclear annihilation to raise questions about their opponent. The most infamous remains the Daisy Ad, run just once by President Lyndon Johnson against Republican Barry Goldwater in 1964, but forever memorialized as the dawn of airwave campaigns.

Bush's re-election team brought the practice to a heightened level. The president's advisers produced the infamous Wolves ad, warning voters about the nebulous threats on the horizon. His campaign attacked Kerry as un-appreciative of the troops and unwilling to make tough wartime decisions. Allied groups openly wondered if Kerry could have shown the leadership needed to respond to 9/11. The genre turned into outright character assassination when the group Swift Boat Veterans for Truth began raising doubts about the senator's record from Vietnam.

It is that latter attack that serves as a line of demarcation for the Obama campaign, which has argued that it's not engaging in the same tactics that Democrats once decried.

"The difference here is that we won't be swift boating Mitt Romney," Stephanie Cutter, Obama's campaign manager said in an email. "We are sticking to actual facts, not dishonest attacks and distortions. Romney said he wouldn't go into Pakistan to get Bin Laden, and then hit one of his opponents Mike Huckabee when he said that he would. That's important information to voters, because it shows a lack of judgment and a lack of strength, particularly if Romney is now saying that he would have given the same order the President did to get Bin Laden. He had a chance to get it right, without the enormous pressure of being the Commander in Chief, and he got it wrong."

More: Kerry Campaign Veterans Dismiss Complaints Over Obama's Bin Laden Ad

What do you expect from a less than honorably discharged vet who has spent his entire post-military life trashing the military for political gain?
 
John Kerry, while still in Navy uniform, spent a great deal of time in Paris discussing the surrender of the United States in Vietnam with Madame Binh, the head of the North Vietnamese delegation.
In another place and another time in American history, John Kerry's life would have likely ended in front of a firing squad. Instead the Democratic Party nominated him as their candidate for President in 2004.
You have to keep in mind who is saying what. Mr Kerry is not an honorable man.
Once a gigolo.....

No, he did not, and, no, he would not, and you are still drunk like the rear admiral who was lying for decades about Kerry because Kerry kicked his ass.

jakie, Kerry is considered a traitor by MANY people in this country..that is just a fact..
you stomping your feet isn't going to change that..
 
By very few, except some of the RINOs on the far, far right. You can get all red-eyed and weepy you want and that changes nothing. Just helping you out.
 

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