-Caveat Lector-

Get ready for FEMA, I doubt Bush will
be able to much of anything and from what
I see - Bush does not believe the USA will
be here as such.

Sit in the middle of the continent
use sound waves, hydroponics, and irradiation
and let the chemical ridden bacteria and fungus
battle it out.  The rest of the current population?
Why didn't he think that he needed to learn the names
of other countries?  They wouldn't be there either!

But they have living bacteria and fungus in their
bodies and even if they kill all of those they
have the residues from immunizations and bacteria
and fungus can 'read' DNA to when they grow again
- since you need bacteria to digest food -
it will grow again

http://ThePiedPiper.tripod.com/
Laura Lee Lanning~Shipton 08 Nov 2000

Nurev Ind Research wrote:
>
> -Caveat Lector-
>
> -------- Original Message --------
> Subject: The "Brains" behind Bush
> Date: Mon, 6 Nov 2000 23:00:32 -0600 (CST)
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Rich Winkel)
> Organization: PACH
> To: undisclosed-recipients:;
>
> http://www.guardianunlimited.co.uk/US_election_race/Story/0,2763,393863,00.html
>
> The brains behind Bush
>
> There's the conservative prophet who espouses Victorian values.
> Then there's the born-again Christian who bases his morality on
> Hollywood westerns... Julian Borger unveils the key thinkers advising
> a would-be president
>
> Special report: the US elections
>
> Tuesday November 7, 2000
>
> The world's most powerful capital is today holding its breath,
> waiting to discover who its new tenants will be. If Al Gore pulls
> off a miracle it will presumably be business as usual - more or
> less the same breed of earnest young Democrats that has been
>
> filling the Starbucks branches on Pennsylvania Avenue for the past
> eight years.
>
> If George W Bush triumphs, however, Washington will have to brace
> itself for a cultural tidal wave rolling in from Texas. If elected,
> the governor from Austin would inevitably bring a new crowd of
> advisers, wonks, gurus and hangers-on from the governor's mansion
> in Austin.
>
> There will be many immediate changes. Overnight, cowboy boots will
> become de rigueur with business suits, and the Texas twang (in both
> its authentic and ersatz varieties) will reverberate around the
> cafes of Georgetown.
>
> But beneath the froth, there will be another, more profound, cultural
> transformation at the epicentre of the world's sole superpower.
> Gore has the reputation of making key decisions on his own. To know
> him is to know who is going to be behind the wheel.
>
> Bush is an entirely different kind of operator. He keeps normal
> business hours, and expects his team to agree on a policy decision
> and present it to him in digestible form, rather like Ronald Reagan.
> So, as with Reagan, the identity of those advisers will take on a
> particular significance for the US and the world should America
> swing right today.
>
> They are, to say the least, a pretty interesting bunch - a different
> tribe entirely from the slick, pragmatic New Democrats in power at
> the moment. They have more in common with the Reaganauts than the
> subsequent court run by Bush the Elder.
>
> Bush's key economic adviser is Larry Lindsey, an early adherent
> from the Reagan era of supply-side economics. The doctrine (famously
> derided as "voodoo economics" by the governor's dad), provides an
> academic rationale for giving tax cuts to the rich. The theory is
> that rich people would invest their windfall in the stock market,
> providing a morale-boosting injection of funds and investment
> capital to create jobs, providing "trickle-down" wealth to the
> ordinary people. The supply-siders thus provide a do-gooder gloss
> to the Bush tax-cut plan, which would hand $81bn (60% of the total
> reduction) to the richest 13m taxpayers.
>
> The foreign affairs team also has an 80s feel to it. Condoleeza
> Rice, the likely national security adviser in the event of a Bush
> win, worked for the governor's father, but is a child of the cold-war
> mentality which reigned supreme under Reagan. Together with Paul
> Wolfowitz (another hard-line Reaganaut and possible defence
> secretary), she advocates a much tougher, adversarial stance towards
> Russia and China, and a much more hard-headed assessment of vital
> national interests, stripped of the humanitarian interventions
> which have flourished under the Clinton-Gore administration.
>
> In terms of economic and foreign policy then, a Bush White House
> is likely to be merely a throwback.  It is the underlying ethos
> (what the governor would undoubtedly call "the heart") of a future
> Republican administration that would be truly exotic, even bizarre.
>
> Bush's favourite slogan "compassionate conservatism" is no empty
> jingle - it is actually borrowed from a body of work by a pair of
> obscure conservative gurus, whose influence would surely grow
> exponentially if the Republicans recapture the White House. One is
> Myron Magnet, a cultural hawk from the right-wing Manhattan Institute.
> His rival for George W's heart and soul is a Marxist turned born-again
> Christian from Texas, Marvin Olasky, who believes the whole machinery
> of state-provided social welfare should be scrapped in favour of
> a return to 19th-century-style religious charities and soup kitchens.
>
> Olasky has come on a long intellectual journey. Born into a Boston
> Jewish family in 1950, he renounced his religion at the age of 14
> and became an avowed atheist. At Yale, he joined the Communist
> party and in 1972 travelled to Moscow on a Russian freighter, to
> prove his Marxist-Leninist ardour.
>
> His 180-degree transformation came only a year later, apparently
> as a result of watching a lot of Hollywood westerns. He was doing
> a graduate degree in American culture at the University of Michigan,
> focusing on US cinema.  He later said that the profound moral sense
> of right and wrong he found in the western genre, raised in his
> Marxist mind the nagging question: "What if there is a God?"
>
> The answer seems to have been not far behind, because Olasky quickly
> renounced his Communist affiliation, and converted to evangelical
> Christianity.
>
> He now teaches journalism at the University of Texas, but most of
> his effort is spent in publishing a right-wing Christian conservative
> journal ambitiously called World (largely devoted to the denunciation
> of Bill Clinton and all his evils) and running the church he founded
> in Austin, the Redeemer Presbyterian.
>
> The Redeemer church teaches that women have no place in leadership,
> having already engineered the fall of man in the Garden of Eden.
> Olasky once said that there was "a certain shame attached" to the
> idea of voting for a woman, because it meant that men had failed
> in their role.
>
> Olasky also believes that liberal journalists have "holes in their
> souls" and practice "the religion of Zeus", which came as something
> of a surprise to the east-coast press. "What could he mean?" they
> wondered. Frank Rich, a veteran columnist at the New York Times,
> and one of those accused of having a hole in his soul, said: "He
> still hasn't told me whether the religion of Zeus goes in for Bar
> Mitzvahs."
>
> These distractions aside, the driving force behind Olasky's church
> work and his prolific writing is the war against social welfare.
> His 1992 book, The Tragedy of American Compassion, argues that the
> Great Society programmes launched in the 1960s sapped the moral
> strength from the poor by providing a prop: "Every time we tell
> someone he is a victim, every time we say he deserves a special
> break today, every time we hand out charity to someone capable of
> working, we are hurting rather than helping," he argued.
>
> Instead, Olasky teaches that charity should be channelled through
> faith-based organisations, which would distribute largesse accompanied
> by the required religious fortification, to counter the character-rotting
> impact of giving things away for nothing. To stand up his conclusions,
> he once dressed up as a beggar and wandered the streets, reporting
> back that although he was given food and shelter, his true craving,
> for a bible, was left unfulfilled.
>
> Olasky's golden age for Christian charitable works was the 1890s,
> when the grateful poor were ministered to by "slum angels" who gave
> "gladly" through "Jesus's love". It is Thatcherism plus God.
>
> All this explains a lot about what has been going on over the past
> five years in Texas, where social services and government health
> care have been under intense pressure, even as Governor Bush was
> informing the rest of the world of his heartfelt compassion.
>
> Myron Magnet is cut from similar cloth as Olasky. The conservative
> prophet sports big Dickensian bushy whiskers (apparently inspired
> by a stay at Cambridge University), and a Victorian philosophy to
> match. His seminal work, The Dream and the Nightmare, espouses many
> of the same ideas as Olasky, arguing that many of the country's
> present social problems are a direct result of the 60s counterculture,
> which "permitted, even celebrated, behaviour that when poor people
> practice it will imprison them inextricably in poverty."
>
> Bush said the book "really helped crystallise some of my thinking
> about cultures, changing cultures, and of part of the legacy of my
> generation". The underlying philosophy has surfaced in his campaign
> rhetoric in the form of his biting criticism of the philosophy of
> "If it feels good, do it".
>
> >From an examination of the brains behind Bush's catchphrases, this
> is more than a promise not to have oral sex in the Oval Office. It
> suggests a Bush victory next week would bring a new political class
> to town which looks backwards for its inspiration, not just to the
> halcyon days of Reagan, but far further, to a bygone Victorian age
> where there were bibles in the soup kitchens, and the poor knew
> their place.
>
> (c) Guardian Newspapers Limited 2000
>
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--
Any person can stand adversity,
The true test is to give a person power.

If you treat a relationship as if you are the only one in it, eventually
you will be.

Atrocities happen when the people about you -
 start considering you surplus.

"I tolerate with the utmost latitude the right of
others to differ from me in opinion"
      ---- Thomas Jefferson <br><br>

My Grandfather told me there are two kinds of people:
those who do the work and
those who take the credit.
He told me to be in the first group -
 there is less competition there. -
Indira Gandhi

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That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
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Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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