3.5.04 @ 12:01AM
Hillary for what? The early returns. Plus: Big Daddy Stein. Crossover Republican. Speaking French to M. Croft.
CLASSIC STEIN
Re: Ben Stein's The Daddy
Trap:
Ben: You made me cry. Thanks. Could anyone have said it better?
Anyone?
-- Dave Simon
Prospect, Kentucky
EXIT POLLS
Re: R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr.'s The Woman in
Kerry's Future:
Hello, Mr. R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr.
You just write articles with comments that show how easily
Hillary could become V.P. to make me run out of the room screaming,
don't you?
-- Carole
Mr. Tyrrell may very well be correct in his piece. I just can't
help but think that if I'm Kerry, I don't want the brightest light
on my ticket to be my number two. I want it to be me. And Kerry is
not a bright light compared to Hillary (shudder). I can see it now.
"LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, THE NEXT PRESIDENT AND VICE PRESIDENT OF THE
USA, HILLARY and oh, yeah, John Kerry too."
-- Bill Deady
Manchester, New Hampshire
Since Hillary has indicated a strong interest in the crux of Ralph
Nader's campaign, and we know that she does not want a Democrat to
win and keep her out of the White House for another eight years,
you missed the obvious -- she will be Nader's vice-presidential
candidate.
-- Bruce Cornett
"The Clintons might become active again"? Since when were they ever
inactive? They're there -- like rats in a granary, gnawing away in
secret at the booty.
-- Nancy Bronwell
Texas
If Hillary Clinton were to go on the ticket with John Kerry it
would require her to flip her position on several issues in order
to show unity with Kerry. Joe Lieberman did this when he joined Al
Gore in the 2000 race and paid for it in terms of loss of
credibility. It might help explain his very poor showing in the
recent primaries. I doubt Hillary would want to risk that. I also
tend to doubt she'd want to have to deal with the heat and
questions such flip-flopping would provoke.
-- Dick Melville
Ozone Park, New York
If Hillary is added to the ticket and she and Mr. Kerry win the
White House, is it proper for her to offer the V.P. office to Mrs.
Kerry since that was protocol in the Clinton White House? Also,
what is the proper seating arrangement for Mr. Clinton? After all,
with his track record in the Oval Office, the man will require a
good deal of privacy.
Confused in Catharpin,
-- Brian G. Fortin
Catharpin, Virginia
If I were John Kerry, knowing Hillary's past history of "friends,"
colleagues," and enemies dropping dead of mysterious circumstances,
I would think LONG & HARD before even asking or allowing her to
become my Vice President!
-- Clay Miller
Brandon, Mississippi
I read this. My stomach turned, my world tilted -- and I lost my
lunch:(
-- unsigned
TAKE NOTE
Re: Todd Anderson's Rock 'n'
Rolled Over:
Ted Nugent is a voice for conservatism/libertarianism in rock.
He is not as mainstream as he was in the 70s/80s, but he has his We
the People Foundation, foundations to support the second amendment,
a camp for kids, etc. I also found another site called conservativepunk.com. It is dedicated to refuting the
whiny left wing pop punk acts. I think on of the influential voices
that inspired it was Johnny Ramone of the Ramones who is a
conservative. I do however agree that like in Hollywood, uninformed
liberalism is the norm for the music industry.
-- Adam Grace
CROSSOVER REPUBLICAN
Re: John Tabin's Stuck With
Kerry:
John Tabin mentioned exit polls in Georgia, Maryland and Ohio
that showed John Edwards won among Republicans and self-described
conservatives.
The same was true in Tennessee where he came in second place
above Wesley Clark. I vote Republican but I crossed over in the
Tenn. primary and elected to vote on the Democrat ballot. I
intended to vote for Clark since he, at the time, was putting what
eggs he had left in his basket into the state. But before voting I
checked the exit polls so far and saw Edwards was the likely second
place winner. In the booth, I voted for Edwards.
I don't know about Maryland, but in Tennessee, Georgia, and I
think Ohio, anyone can vote on any ballot they choose. Many, many
Republicans and conservatives crossed over to help tweak the
Democratic primary. I wanted Edwards to stay in until Super Tuesday
on March 2nd and he did. I wanted him to keep fighting, keep
spending money and keep Kerry spending his.
So it requires a heck of a lot of ability to spin or lie or to
be just plain delusional as when we saw Edwards and Kerry, along
with moron pundits on TV, argue about who is connecting better to
independents and Republicans based on their votes in open primary
states.
-- Greg Barnard
Franklin, Tennessee
VIVE LES DIFFERENCES!
Re: Robert Croft's letter ("Freedom Follies") in Reader Mail's
Power
Outrages:
French words in TAS? Ah, mon Dieu! However, I
can empathize with your dilemma, M. Croft, since a few years stand
between my three years of French and moi. But we must keep
up with the Kerrys, certainement! So if I need a
translation, I go to www.dictionary.com and click on "Translator." Folie
de grandeur means madness of size, and épater les
bourgeois means to impress middle-class men.
Ce n'est rien!
-- Kitty Myers
Painted Post, New York
Mr. Croft: I too am an IT person, arisen from the '70s. But take
heart my fellow cubicle denizen! A lot of the readers of
Spectator would not fathom any of these either: RAID,
RFID, "Inward subjoin of the main index," OSI, ISO, 802.11x, or
"subfunction stack fault." Just as incomprehensible and it's in
English!
-- John McGinnis
Arlington, Texas
topics:
Hillary Clinton, Hollywood, Conservatism, Libertarianism