Dumb Socialist redundant.

--- "Helio W." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Same old story. Here in Brazil with a bit of a
> twist: leftist union
> leader Lula won presidency by lying to public on
> both sides of the
> ideological spectrum. He betrayed even his dumb
> socialist supporters.
> 
> 
> On 4/25/07, Robert Calco <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > http://tinyurl.com/2mzy2v
> >
> > - - -
> > Ségolène Royal, the first woman with a chance of
> leading France,
> > began re-shaping her campaign yesterday as she
> faced a runoff with
> > the clear favourite in the presidential election,
> the rightwing
> > former interior minister Nicolas Sarkozy.
> >
> > Ms Royal began the difficult task of convincing
> France that she was
> > not merely an off-the-shelf traditional Socialist
> in designer
> > clothing and could break away from her party roots
> to capture the
> > centre ground.
> >
> > With the candidates racing to win over the 7
> million people who voted
> > for the centrist third-man François Bayrou, party
> advisers said Ms
> > Royal would stand no chance of winning if she
> fought a traditional
> > socialist campaign of "left versus right". Instead
> she set out to
> > reassure the centre ground she could be all things
> to all people, to
> > prove, despite her critics, she could reinvent the
> nation.
> >
> > - - -
> >
> > This article is chock full of nuggets. Consider:
> >
> > 1. Royal and her supporters openly admit they have
> to lie about her
> > to fool the voters. Typical left wing
> condescension. On the other
> > hand, it worked for the Dems last year in the
> elections.
> >
> > 2. Read on:
> >
> > ***
> > Nicolas Sauger, a political analyst, said Ms Royal
> also had to
> > convince the nation she was not the hesitant,
> incompetent party
> > outsider her critics described. He said it was
> crucial to hammer out
> > policies that fitted the centrist vote, such as a
> pro-European
> > message with a promise of a referendum on any new
> constitution. She
> > also had to pick up Mr Bayrou's quest to reform
> French democracy.
> > France's public debt, now at 66% of GDP, was
> crucial to the centrist
> > campaign and Ms Royal is likely to increase calls
> to curb spending
> > deficits.
> >
> > But in a campaign focused on personality, Ms Royal
> faces a difficult
> > fight. Even socialist voters yesterday said they
> were let down by her
> > speech after Sunday night's results, appearing
> stiff, wooden and
> > uncomfortable. She is often accused of having a
> grating voice.
> >
> > Mr Sauger said: "Her problem isn't really one of
> policies, it's one
> > of image, how she communicates."
> > ***
> >
> > Some observations:
> >
> > 1. You think we have a lot of public debt! I bet
> if the article
> > mentioned French unemployment rates it would be
> equally
> > embarrassing.... for France.
> > 2. If her problem isn't one of "policies" but "how
> she
> > communicates" ... why does she have to avoid a
> clear left-versus-
> > right battle, in which both she and her opponent
> are honest about
> > being left and right, respectively? Why does she
> have to be "pushed
> > to the centre"?
> > 3. Speaking of grating voices, have these folks
> heard Hillary! or
> > Pelosi?
> > 4. The West is doomed if Royal and Hillary win.
> >
> > (Hillary or Obama for that matter, who are both
> wacko lefties who
> > have to pretend to be centrist in order to have a
> shot.)
> >
> > - Bob
> >
[excessive quoting removed by server]

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