STUPIDITY 2003: LIFE AFTER THE PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN

Dan steps up to meet absurdity!

THERE ARE ALWAYS stupid things said by politicians; it's one attribute that has always made politican so...well, charming isn't the word for it, but this is a family-access website so I'll stick to that. But certainly the 2000 presidential campaign wasn't proven any exception to this rule.

Below are quotes I've run across (some multiple times) made not only by the contenders and those closest to them, but also other related quips, queries, and outbursts related to today's political climate. All of them are quite authentic--with so much material to try making sense out of, who needs to make anything up? (Though every politician accuses his opponent of doing this, and every politician who charges this is, of course, absolutely right.)

I'm doing my best to have no partiality about my quotations, so if have some AD 1999-2003 dumb Republican, Democratic, Reform, or Green, Anarchist (would an elected Anarchist be an oxymoron?), et al sayings you'd like to pass along to me, though, just send them here. I don't discriminate when it comes to stupidity, and I like holding our representatives to what they say.

Make sure, though, that these are sincerely dumb quotes, and not just your run-of-the-mill campaign rhetoric (unless it's something stupidly obvious like George Bush or Al Gore saying they would fight "Big Oil"), or someone intentionally trying to be stupid (ala Rob Reiner at the Democratic Convention). There's not much difference, granted, but there is still a difference. (Note: a few really choice quotes may predate 1999. For the rest, check the Pundit-Pounding Archives.)

More neat stuff can be found at the bottom of this page. Now enjoy the reading, and always try to remember that a country as a whole is usually far better than those its citizens choose to represent it! . . .


QUOTES UNDER THE FOLLOWING SUBJECTS HAVE BEEN ADDED RECENTLY:

IRAQ


ABORTION

ELECTRIC ABORTIONS?

Al Gore, when asked if the execution of a pregnant woman should be delayed until she gives birth (7/00):

"The principle of a woman's right to choose governs in that case."

The next thing you know, guys on death row will be saying this is sexist.


ABORTION

KILLING THEM TO DEATH

George W. Bush, on abortion laws (6/29/00):

"States should have the right to enact reasonable laws and restrictions particularly to end the inhumane practice of ending a life that could otherwise live."

Some statements should be at least partially aborted before given birth.


ABSENTEE BALLOTS

I'LL BET THEY GET FREE ROOM AND BOARD, TOO

Time magazine's Margaret Colson on military absentee ballots from Florida, a state with no income tax (MSNBC's "Imus in the Morning," 11/8/00):

"Here we will have possibly a bunch of tax dodgers deciding the election."

Heck, it could be worse...we could end up with a draft dodger for president!


AFRICAN-AMERICANS

A SHORT ROAD TO TRAVEL

Al Gore, addressing the NAACP about one reason African-Americans should vote for him:

"I have made more trips to Africa than I've made to Asia."

Oops, Al! There go the Asian-American voters!


AFRICAN-AMERICANS

PRESIDENTIAL LANDMARK

Bill Clinton at the Image Awards ceremony, responding to comedian Chris Rock on why Clinton looked for an office in Harlem (3/3/01):

"That's why I went to Harlem, because I think I am the first black president."

They should've reported that in 1992, then--he could've gone into the history books right away.


ANIMAL RIGHTS

OF MILITANT ANTI-GOVERNMENT AND PRO-ANIMAL SURVIVALISTS

PETA member Bruce Friedrich, on why Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh could serve as a good example of their cause if he refused to eat meat before his execution (though he refused to turn vegetarian) (3/01):

"The tragedy of the bombing can serve to focus attention on the tragedy inflicted every day in the slaughterhouses of this country."

Are you also going to write pro-vegan letters to the families and friends of the 168 bombing victims, too?


APPEARANCE

DON'T HATE ME BECAUSE I'M BEAUTIFUL

Senator Hillary Clinton, giving the principal address at Yale's commencement exercises (5/01):

"The most important thing I have to say to you today is that hair matters. This is a life lesson my family did not teach me [and] Wellesley and Yale Law School failed to instill: Your hair will send significant messages to those around you. What hopes and dreams you have for the world - but more, what hopes and dreams you have for your hair. Pay attention to your hair, because everyone else will."

What can I say? That speech was shear brilliance.


ARGUMENTS

WHAT YOU SAID I SAID IS NOT WHAT I SAID

Sen. Edward Kennedy at the National Press Club in Washington D.C. (1/02):

"In the United States Senate, one of the things I observed in the early days--and it's still used--and that is that you take someone's argument and then you misrepresent it and misstate and disagree with it. And it's very effective. I've done it myself a number of times. But eventually, eventually people catch on."

Observed in the early days of the Senate? Is this what you learned, Senator, from Henry Clay and Daniel Webster?


ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY

CROSSED WIRES ON REMEMBRANCE

Dick Cheney, in the closing of his speech at the Republican Convention:

"Just before you settle down on the landing pad, you look upon Arlington National Cemetery...its gentle slopes and crosses row on row..."

Um, Mr. Cheney, there aren't any crosses in Arlington Cemetery. Maybe you're thinking of some other great national military cemetery close to D.C.?


JOHN ASHCROFT

A TERROR-BLE COMPARISON

NAACP Chairman Julian Bond's now-infamous analogy about Attorney General John Ashcroft (12/01):

"(Ashcroft) knows something about the Taliban, coming, as he does, from that wing of American politics. Even before September 11, he had moved the (Justice) Department to the far right."

I wonder if that then makes Julian Bond the attack bomber of the NAACP?


BALDNESS

COULD HAPPEN TO THE WORST OF US

President George W. Bush about a Texas reporter he knew, who was asking him questions about his stem cell decision (Crawford, TX, 8/24/01):

BUSH: "A fine, fine lad."
REPORTER: "You talked about the need to maintain technological..."
BUSH: "A little short on hair, but a fine lad. Yeah."
REPORTER (meekly): "I am losing some hair."
DEFENSE SECRETARY DONALD RUMSFELD: "I never would have guessed."

Maybe we can hope that along with the rest of his large someday inheritance, George W. also inherited a latent baldness gene.


EHUD BARAK

BEFORE THE FALL

Former Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak, shortly before his election defeat (2/1/01):

"We have only one candidate--me."

Except maybe for that what's-his-name, Sharon.


BLESSINGS

GENTILE DOGS

Sen. John D. Rockefeller IV (D-WV), a passionate advocate of the American steel industry, closing a Senate Finance Committee hearing after arguing with opponents of his idea to slap a 40% tariff on foreign steel (2/14/02):

"God bless most of you."

And God bless most of you too, Rev. Rockefeller! You can pick the anointed parts yourself.


PAT BUCHANAN

HE HAD THE GALL TO SAY THAT?

New York Times reporter Adam Clymer, on Pat Buchanan's gall bladder surgery (Washington D.C., 9/00):

"Pat Buchanan just had his gall bladder removed, so Pat Buchanan without bile will be interesting."

A reporter without bile would be a lot more interesting, don't you think, Mr. Clymer?


THE BUDGET

IS THIS ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW TO GET RICH?

George W. Bush, on the budget (5/5/00):

"It's clearly a budget. It's got a lot of numbers on it."

And look at all the pretty letters!


THE BUDGET SURPLUS

PATE DE WOOF

A Newsweek magazine "Conventional Wisdom" commentary on how they think George W. Bush's tax cut will affect the surplus (8/01):

"Adios, surplus. When retired boomers dine on dog food, will they say thanks for that $600?"

Though even the Democrats' new figure for the surplus--$153 million at this writing (garnered from the Congressional Budget Office)--is still $109 million higher than Bill Clinton's most optimistic projection. Good doggy.


GEORGE W. BUSH

SHE SAW THE LIGHT

Actress and New Age guru Shirley MacLaine, quoted in the New York Post (8/01):

"I had a vision. I saw this great white light shining in the Oval Office, enveloping George Bush in its warmth. I now know George Bush is God's divine plan for us."

Either that or GWB has a heck of a nightlight.


GEORGE W. BUSH

NOTHING PERSONAL, GEORGE

Former Clinton counselor Paul Begala in the introduction to his new George W. Bush biography Is Our Children Learning? The Case Against George W. Bush that he claims is not a personal election-year attack but is only "limited to Bush's public life and public record" (9/00):

"W, you're going to hate me when someone reads this to you (I know you're not big on books yourself). But you don't have what it takes to be president. Even your most loyal defenders say you're a few beans shy of a full burrito intellectually.

"Let's face it, Dub: you were born on third base, and you think you hit a triple. You're lighter than my grandma's biscuits."

Well hey, Paul, as long as your book isn't going to get personal.


BUSINESS

George W. Bush, on small business (2/19/00):

"I understand small business growth. I was one."

Maybe that growth will go away if you rub some oil on it.


CAMPAIGNS

YEE-HAH!

Al Gore's description of the opening of his Gore 2000 Headquarters (10/6/99):

"A rip-tootin' campaign."

Well shut my mouth and stuff it with ballots!


CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORM

SOFT ON MONEY

Al Gore, on his experience with campaign financing:

"I know firsthand on what is wrong with the way we fund our political campaigns."

And he's demonstrated that knowledge a great deal.


CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORM

NEW EVIDENCE FOR TIME TRAVEL

Al Gore, on why campaign finance reform failed during 1993, Clinton's first year of office (12/19/99):

"Because all the Republicans voted against it. And they controlled the Senate."

Actually, Mr. Gore, the Democrats controlled the Senate until the 1994 elections. But who's counting?


CHRISTIANS

Media mogul Ted Turner at CNN anchor Bernard Shaw's retirement party, commenting on why some people had ashes on their heads (for Ash Wednesday, as it happened) (2/28/01):

"I was looking at this woman and I was trying to figure out what was on her forehead. At first I thought you were in the earthquake (in Seattle). I realized you're Jesus freaks. Shouldn't you guys be working for Fox?"

Well, Mr. Turner, if Fox keeps trumping CNN in the ratings and CNN keeps having to lay people off, they probably will be soon, won't they?


HILLARY CLINTON

CURSES, FOILED AGAIN!

Washington Post reporter's subheading about Sen. Hillary Clinton versus her conservative critics (cover story "The Liberation of Hillary," Washington Post Sunday magazine, 1/27/02):

"A supportive spouse, surprisingly accepting colleagues, and a mandate to legislate. For Sen. Clinton, life is almost perfect. If only they weren't still out to get her."

Yah, cause otherwise Hillary could get what she wanted now now now now NOW! WAH!


CLONING

CLONING FOR ALLAH

Washington Post reporter Rick Weiss in a 1/17/02 "Federal Page" article about President Bush's Council on Bioethics, comparing American conservatives with the Taliban:

"In November, researchers announced that they had made the first human embryo clones, giving immediacy to warnings by religious conservatives and others that science is no longer serving the nation's moral will. At the same time, the United States was fighting a war to free a faraway nation from the grip of religious conservatives who were denounced for imposing their moral code on others."

Coming up next: Mr. Weiss' expose of religious conservatives' reaction to the evil new Star Wars film, Attack of the Clones!


COMPUTERS

GIVE THAT MAN A COOKIE

Al Gore's now-classic line to CNN (3/9/99):

"During the service in the United States Congress, I took the initiative in creating the Internet."

That would explain why it's always changing and reinventing itself.


COMPUTERS

YOU CAN TRUST US--WE'RE MICROSOFT

Al Gore on Y2K:

"How could this be a problem in a country where we have Intel and Microsoft?"

Al Gore has crashed...Blue Screen approaching.

Ditto:

"We feel, and the Defense Department feels, that problem is not going to be a problem. Of course, it can't be a problem. We won't allow it to be a problem...We're confident that it is going to be solved, but we're going to be doubly, triply and quadrupally confident that it's going to be solved before September of this year."

Elsewhere in the article he said it would be solved by 2/28/99. But a "9" does look a lot like a "2" on the calender.


CONFESSIONS

THINGS THAT ARE GOOD FOR THE SOUL

Bill Clinton, during his first Monica Lewinsy Confession (8/00):

"I don't think anybody can say that their spiritual life is great."

We must all be too busy trying to get the planks out of our eyes.


CONVENTIONS

A BEASTLY REPUBLICAN CONVENTION

"The Philadelphia Zoo confirmed Wednesday that a bus stopped Tuesday night by the Philadelphia Police Dept was carrying hundred of animals including poisonous scorpions and tarantulas...Police believe that the red London-style bus was headed for the Republican National Convention where they believe the animals would have been unleashed to create maximum chaos." (8/2/00)

Now there's a show of the good old American spirit of free protest!


CONVENTIONS

AND...ACTION!

From Ellen Goodman's 8/3/00 column on the Republican convention:

"Now that it's over, let's hear it for the casting director. The Republican variety show featured more women and minorities in the acts than in the delegations. If America actually looked like the convention stage, every dot-com would be run by a woman or Hispanic.

"By the time Dick Cheney and George Bush made their appearances, it was something of a shock to see that the headliners were two middle-aged white guys. But, hey, that's entertainment."

Yep...and next we got to watch the carefully choreographed and "A cabinet that looks like America" minority-parading Democratic convention which, oddly enough, is run by middle-aged white guys and picked for their presidential bid...two middle-aged white guys. Something about pots and black kettles comes to mind here.


COURT

HOLDING COURT IN THE WHITE HOUSE:

Gene Lyons, on why it was OK for Clinton to lie in the Paula Jones lawsuit:

"If legally bound to tell the truth, most people would accept the argument that Clinton had a moral right to hide his sin. (A morally defensible lie? Sure. 'Is your Daddy home, little girl? Or are you here all alone?')"

I'll have to remember that excuse if anyone ever charges me with sexual harassment.


CRIME

UP THE DOWN JAIL CELL

New York Times reporter Fox Butterfield on prisoners and crime rates ("Tight Budgets Force States to Reconsider Crime and Penalties", 1/21/02):

"Since the early 1970s, the number of state prisoners has increased 500 percent, growing each year in the 1990s even as crime fell."

How about giving us the statistics on the increase in reporters who failed their basic math classes?


CROSS-COUNTRY BANK

DON'T GIVE THEM TOO MUCH CREDIT

Florida governor Jeb Bush, escorted through a new Applied Card Systems (aka Cross-Country Bank) facility in Flordia by ACS chairman Rocco Abessinio:

"I'm impressed with the growth of Applied Card Systems, with the foresight of its leadership, and the enthusiasm of its employees. I'm pleased Applied Card Systems is in Florida. It's a great partnership."

Fortunately for him, Governor Bush doesn't have a Cross-Country Bank card. See Cross-Country Bank.


DEMONSTRATIONS

ALL YOU NEED IS LOVE

Demonstrator "Vermin Supreme," protesting at the Democratic Convention (8/00):

"We have you surrounded by love! Come out with your hands up and your pants down!"

I hope he's practicing safe demonstration.


DIVERSITY

BRING OUT YOUR DEAD!

Pro-Gore campaign sign spotted in Los Angeles by the Associated Press (8/00):

"ZOMBIES FOR GORE"

Now that's what I call welcoming diversity into the party.


DRUGS

CUT AND PASTE THE CONSTITUTION

Rep. Chris Cannon (R-UT) on an anti-methamphetamines bill (S.486 / H.R. 2987) that would allow federal officers to search a house without a warrant, sieze evidence not related to the investigation, copy computer hard drives without notifying the owner what was copied or even that it was done, and not provide the owner with a list of items taken from the house for at least 90 days (5/00):

"Anything we can do to win the war on drugs is worth doing."

Damn the Constitution, full speed ahead!


ELECTION 2002

IT TAKES A WINNER TO WIN

Former president Bill Clinton commenting on the chances of the Democrats retaking the House of Representatives in the November 2002 elections (CNN interview with Judy Woodruff, 4/24/02):

"Even if we win, I think we have a pretty good chance to win."

And even if we lose, we have a pretty good chance to spin.


ELECTION 2000

DEMOCRATIC PERSISTENCE

Al Gore to an aide, on his attempt to win the 2000 presidential election (Newsweek, 1999):

"I'm not like George Bush. If he wins or loses, life goes on. I'll do anything to win."

Let's run those numbers again just for old times sake, shall we?


ELECTION 2000

MORE DEMOCRATIC PERSISTENCE

Monica Lewinsky's comment on the 2000 election:

"I voted for the Republicans this year. The Democrats left a bad taste in my mouth."

Like eating ashes, was it?


ENERGY

I'LL LEAVE THE LIGHTS ON FOR YA

Gov. Gray Davis (D-CA) to the editorial board of the San Diego Union-Tribune about the California energy crisis (3/02):

"This is like a war. This is worse than being in Vietnam. This is a full-out war against me...I kept the lights on. And this sounds a little presumptuous, but I think I should get a round of applause. I don't get squat."

When asked by the paper if the pricy energy contracts he made were panic reactons, Gov. Davis added, "If I didn't panic, you wouldn't be able to put out your paper. I saved this friggin' paper. I kept the lights on in this state. Do you understand that? I kept the lights on." And for good measure he added further, "You're probably looking at the last governor of California who is not a billionaire."

Gotta say it...the lights may be on, but obviously no one's home.


ENGLISH

WHOSE LANGUAGE IS IT?

The comment Ted Nugent made that ultimately got him banned from performing an August concert with Kiss in Houston (4/00):

"If you are going to live in this country you should learn to speak English."

Is not speaking English in an English-speaking country a "cultural imperative," or just plain rude?


EQUALITY

SOME ARE MORE EQUAL THAN OTHERS

Vice-president Al Gore, on equality between the sexes (8/11/00):

"When my sister and I were growing up, there was never any doubt in our minds that men and women were equal, if not more so."

Some stupid statements are equally better than others, too.


FARMING

MILKING THE VOTERS FOR ALL THEY'RE WORTH

Al Gore to Wisconsin dairy farmers (6/00):

"I'm very familiar with the importance of dairy farming in Wisconsin. I've spent the night on a dairy farm here in Wisconsin. If I'm entrusted with the presidency, you'll have someone who is very familiar with what the Wisconsin dairy industry is all about."

I've spent several nights in Washington D.C. Can I be a presidential advisor now?


FBI

WHAT A WACO...ER, WACKY QUESTION!

President Bill Clinton's response to WorldNetDaily reporter Paul Sperry (verified by Seattle Times reporter James Grimaldi) when asked about charges made two days before by three acting, veteran FBI agents that Justice Department lawyers kept them from pursuing a campaign-finance investigation back to Clinton after they had found paper trails supporting the "ChinaGate" links to Clinton (Fall 1999):

"Yeah, the FBI wants you to write about that rather than write about Waco."

It does seem that FBI agents got burned more than once under the Clinton administration, doesn't it?


FOOD

WHO'S PICKIN' YOUR CHICKEN?

From "News of the Weird" (9/4/00):

"The U.S. Department of Agriculture is actively proposing that animal carcasses with cancers, tumors or open sores be regarded merely as unaesthetic but safe for human consumption as long as the offending part is cut away. The proposal is part of a general loosening of slaughterhouse inspection standards, whose public comment period ended Aug. 29. One critic already weighed in, saying she did not want to "eat pus from a chicken that has pneumonia," but also included as benign by the proposal are glandular swellings, infectious arthritis and diseases caused by intestinal worms."

Yum-yum!...that chicken is tumor-lickin' good!


FOREIGN POLICY

BUT IF YOU ASK ME...

George W. Bush, on being a foreign policy president (6/00):

"The fundamental question is, 'Will I be a successful president when it comes to foreign policy?' I will be, but until I'm the president, it's going to be hard for me to verify that I think I'll be more effective."

Just do what Clinton does to be certain about something: take a poll.


FOREST FIRES

BLAZING TRAILS THROUGH THE WEST

From the story "Money To Fight Western Fires Was Diverted" by Audrey Hudson in the 8/21/00 Washington Times:

"Money to prevent forest fires now ravaging the west went instead to President Clinton's prized land legacy iniative and to his new national monuments.

"Congressional and Interior Department aids confirmed the White House cut the Interior Department's request of $322 million for fire preparedness, or prevention, to $305 million this year. At the same time, the White House increased its budget request for land acquisitions from $15 million to $49 million...

"Firefighters yesterday battled 98 fires in 11 states covering 1.3 million acres, the largest in Montana and Idaho."

Wonder if any of the new acquisitions are ablaze now with more than just angry ex-landowners?


FREE SPEECH

SHUT UP ABOUT FREE SPEECH!

Dr. Kathleen Dixon, Director of Womens' Studies at Bowling Green State University, Ohio, commenting on the resignation of Dr. Richard Zeller, who wanted to teach a course in how liberalism has led to political correctness (9/00):

"We forbid any course that says we restrict free speech!"

And we'll silence anyone who says otherwise!


FUND-RAISING

WHAT'S WITH ALL THE ROBES?

Al Gore, on his possibly illegal fund-raising "meeting" in a Buddhist temple:

"I didn't realize I was in a Buddhist temple."

Maybe he thought he was on the set of "Kung Fu."

And here's Gore's explanation via FBI notes of why he could have missed the fact that it was a fund-raiser (3/00):

"He drank a lot of iced tea during meetings, which could have necessitated a restroom break."

Oh gimme a...well, you know.


RUDOLPH GIULIANI

YET ANOTHER CONFUSING BALLOT?

Rev. Al Sharpton at a Democratic mayorial rally, on New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani's performance after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks (9/01):

"We elected you mayor, not Messiah."

Maybe a few thousand people punched the wrong place on the ballot again.


HANDICAP ACCESS

A Gore staff member to Flint (MI) Journal reporter Chad Swiatecki about why his wheelchair would deny him access to a Gore campaign stop and why the campaign motorcade wouldn't be able to accomodate him (9/00):

"We've never run into a situation like this before."

So what you're saying is that as long as Al Gore doesn't run into any unforeseen situations while he's president, he should be all right?


HATE SPEECH

MESSENGER MASSACRE

Talk show host Bill O'Reilly on Web journalist Matt Drudge, after Drudge revealed that O'Reilly's producers were paying radio stations up to $300,000 each to carry O'Reilly's show ("Imus in the Morning", 5/8/02):

"There is no other cure than to kill Matt Drudge...I just want to tell everybody that Matt Drudge is smoking crack--right now, in South Miami Beach on Washington Avenue... And the authorities should know it."

So let me get this straight...O'Reilly does something stupid but it's all Drudge's fault for reporting it. So much so that O'Reilly wants to kill the messenger. Who does he think he is, anyway--Bill Clinton?


HATE SPEECH

EVERYBODY MUST GET STONED

Actor Alec Baldwin on "Late Night With Conan O'Brien" after the Clinton impeachment, about chairman Henry Hyde and other Republicans on the committee:

"I'm thinking to myself if we were in other countries, we would all, right now, all of us together ... would go down to Washington and we would stone Henry Hyde to death! We would stone him to death! Wait! ... Shut up! No, shut up! I'm not finished. We would stone Henry Hyde to death, and we would go to their homes and we'd kill their wives and their children. We would kill their families."

Now play nice, little Alec. You don't want Hollywood to be a bad influence, do you?


HATE SPEECH

THEY PROBABLY OFFERED GOOD BENEFITS, TOO

The words over a picture of George W. Bush as shown by CBS' "The Late Show With Craig Kilborn" (8/4/00):

"Snipers Wanted"

Since when did CBS become such a big supporter of the 2nd Amendment?


HOMOSEXUALS

THAT WAS THEN, THIS IS NOW...TILL THE NEXT NOW, ANYWAY

An anonymous senior Gore staffer on why Al Gore may have come out so vehemently against gays during the 1980's (10/00):

"Look, he was running for office from a conservative southern state, maybe he had to say those things to get elected. I am sure he did not mean them."

Reassuring to know that Gore has the backbone to say whatever it will take to get elected.


HUMANITY

YOU TELL 'EM...AND THEM, TOO

George W. Bush in an interview with the Today show (8/1/00):

"And if he continues that, I'm going to tell the nation what I think of him as a human being and a person."

Maybe while he's at it he'll tell the country, too.


INDECISION

UM, CAN I SLEEP ON IT?

Donald Trump, on deciding whether or not he should run for president (2/00):

"It doesn't seem like I am. No, I am serious. I'll be announcing next week something, and we'll see what happens. I hope I have your vote if I run."

Well, as long as you're sure, Mr. Trump.


IRAQ

PRAISE THE LORD AND PASS THE AMMUNITION

Former President George Bush, addressing the 332rd Air Expeditionary Group at Ahmad Al-Jaber Air Base in Kuwait, about their enforcement of the Iraqi No Fly Zones (1/14/00):

"I'm delighted that I've been invited out here today to salute you, who, in my view, are doing the Lord's work."


ISRAEL

BEHIND THE ZION CURTAIN

Senator Orrin Hatch's (R-UT) vision of a peaceful Israel:

"A united and indivisible Jerusalem as the capital of Utah."

Maybe it would just be easier to get Disneyland to move there instead?


ITALIANS

EYE-RAQIS VS. EYE-TYES?

Senator John Kerry concerning the Iraqi army, on the Don Imus show:

"The Iraqi army is in such bad shape, even the Italians could kick their butts."


JEWS

"ICH BIN EIN BERLINER" IT AIN'T

Sen. John D. Rockefeller IV (D-WV), closing a speech at the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (8/12/00):

"I wish I were a Jew."

Well, Senator, there's still time. I'll go get the knife.


JEWS

WHISTLING A DIFFERENT TUNE

President Clinton, quoting comedian Red Buttons (8/13/00):

"In Los Angeles, the Democrats are changing their theme song from 'Happy Days Are Here Again' to 'Hava Nagila.'"

Will they dance to it, too?


JEWS

A FREUDIAN SKIP

Dan Rather, on Al Gore's choice of Joseph Liebeman for his veep running mate (8/00):

"The prevailing logic in the Democratic camp has been, anyone who won't vote for a Gore-Lieberman ticket because Lieberman is Jewish wouldn't have voted for it in the first place."

Um, did Dan just call everyone to the Right of Rather an Anti-Semite?


LEADERSHIP

CHARGING FORTH

George W. Bush, on his ability to lead (8/18/00):

"I have a different vision of leadership. A leadership is someone who brings people together."

And it takes a lot of guts to be a leadership, too.


MEDICAL ISSUES

ISN'T THAT METRIC?

Vice-president Al Gore talking about a potential problem for female breast cancer victims (9/18/00):

"A long waiting line before they could get a biopsy or, uh, or a uh, another kind of, what am I looking for, a sonogram or...."

The crowd helpfully shouted "Mammogram!" At least Gore knew it was gram something.


NEW YORK

"THERE AREN'T AS MANY MURDERS AS THERE USED TO BE"

George W. Bush, on NYC mayor Rudy Giuliani (5/18/00):

"He has certainly earned a reputation as a fantastic mayor, because the results speak for themselves. I mean, New York's a safer place for him to be."

It's just those darn other few million people you've got to worry about.


NEW YORK

WHICH WAY TO SHANGRI-LA...I MEAN, NEW YORK?

Senator Charles Schumer (D-NY) on Hillary Clinton's run for the New York Senate (5/00):

"With Hillary's victory, we're going to tell Trent Lott that he's no longer running the United States Senate ... that his dream of a Supreme Court that overturns Roe vs. Wade and an NRA that writes all gun legislation is dead, buried, gone with Hillary Rodham Clinton's victory."

Today New York, tomorrow the world!


OIL

THERE GO YOUR GAS PRICES

Al Gore, on the skyrocketing oil prices:

"It takes somebody who is independent from Big Oil to take on Big Oil, and I'm independent from them."

Better not let the big oil company Occidental know that, since they've been sending contributions to Al Gore for years.


PANDERING

CAN YOU BEND DOWN JUST A LITTLE FARTHER?

Quotes from both right and left on political pandering:

John McLaughlin, GOP pollster:
"Pandering with a purpose really creates the debate democracy runs by."

Paul Begala, former Clinton advisor:
"I always tell my clients: A man never stands so tall as when he stoops to kiss (a rear end)."

Nice to see that democracy and integrity can still survive without substance.


POLITICS

WHAT WERE OUR CHOICES AGAIN?

David Borenstein, on politics in the 1990's:

"Bush Sr. was a jerk, Quayle an idiot, Clinton was atrocious and disgusting, most of those who persecuted him were hypocritical, Gore is shallow and weak, Bradley is an idealist, Bush Jr. a fool, and all of the independent candidates act like they're on drugs."

Oh don't hold back, David, tell us how you really feel!


POLLS

CRUNCHING THE NUMBERS

Ed Rendell, general chairman of the DNC and former mayor of Philadelphia, on Gore's poor showing in the polls:

"Let me get started about polls. Polls are always fairly unreliable because they just catch a mood, particularly when citizens haven't started concentrating [on politics]. . . . And the polls this year have produced results that are so disgraceful we should just chuck them. Or at least chuck them until after Labor Day. . . . Trying to capture the mood of a country that's paying no attention is pretty much a meaningless exercise."

That must be why they touted polls so heavily during the 1996 campaign. But it's refreshing to know how apathetic they think we silly little voters are.

Post-DNC P.S.: With Gore even or ahead in the polls, now are we supposed to pay attention to them?


THE PRESIDENCY

UNCERTAINTY OF THE TIMES

George W. Bush, on the election (8/21/00):

"I don't know whether I'm going to win or not. I think I am. I do know I'm ready for the job. And, if not, that's just the way it goes."

Fools do rush in where angels fear to campaign.

Ditto (4/3/00): "I think anybody who doesn't think I'm smart enough to handle the job is underestimating."

Well, politicians do like to think of the people as stupid.


THE PRESIDENCY

A CHIP OFF THE OLD BUSH

President Clinton, on why George W. Bush wants to be president (7/00):

"(His) daddy was president."

And Al Gore Senior tried and failed for that honor. But maybe Al Junior doesn't remember that.


PRIVACY

THE "ANTI-MONICA" INITIATIVE

Story lead from a WorldNetDaily article of May 11, 2000:

"In what sounds like something from one of Ian Fleming's or George Orwell's books, President Clinton signed off on the installation of eavesdropping devices on the phones of White House staffers."

That'll certainly "tripp" up the anti-Clinton forces!


PRIVACY

SOMEONE TO E-WATCH OVER ME

Dr. Peter Zhou, president of Applied Digital Solutions, on his "Digital Angel" ID chip that can be implanted in humans to monitor and track them, and will be unveiled in October 2000 (3/00):

"(It) will be a connection from yourself to the electronic world. It will be your guardian, protector. It will bring good things to you...We will be a hybrid of electronic intelligence and our own soul."

While you're at it, Peter, could you e-mail me an attachment of your soul?


PROSPERITY

A RELIABLE SOURCE

Steve Forbes, starting an explanation of how he knows so much about generating extra wealth for average Americans and Social Security (9/9/99):

"I know something about creating wealth."

And you do happen to be better at it than most.


RACISM

CAN WE MEASURE THAT?

Rep. Cynthia A. McKinney (D-GA) on the discrimination lawsuit filed against Al Gore by several African-American Secret Service agents, and "the N Word" being used frequently at Gore gatherings (9/00):

"Gore's Negro tolerance level has never been too high. I've never known him to have more than one black person around him at any given time. I'm not shocked, but I am certainly saddened by this revelation."

OK then, on a scale of 1 to 10 . . .


RACISM

THE SOUTH WILL...WHAT WILL THEY DO, AGAIN?

George W. Bush, when asked if he had a personal reaction to the Confederate flag:

"Not in South Carolina."

Yes, much safer to have an opinion on the Confederacy and implied racism while you're campaigning in, say, Idaho.


RACISM

DOWN ON THE OLE OILRIG

Gore campaign manager Donna Brazile's description of George W. Bush (8/00):

"Honey, he is a white cracker."

Mmm...I think any comment I make about this one will get me in trouble, but probably not her.


RACISM

A "SUPREME" ENDORSEMENT

From "Presidential Campaign Rhetoric 2000," by Andrew R. Cline (2/6/00):

"Former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke said today that he doesn't like any of the Republicans in the race, so he's considering endorsing Reform Party hopeful Pat Buchanan."

You'd have to be three sheets to the wind to want an endorsement like that.


RECOUNT 2000

A DISCLAIMER WHEN IT COUNTS

From the British newsweekly The Economist (11/01):

"In the issues of December 16th 2000 to November 10th 2001, we may have given the impression that George Bush had been legally and duly elected president of the United States. We now understand that this may have been incorrect, and that the election result is still too close to call. The Economist apologizes for any inconvenience."

Just like the old saying goes: lay a million copies of The Economist end to end and they still couldn't agree on a president.


REPUBLICANS

GOOD FOR THE GOOSE AND GANDER

New York Times reporter Adam Clymer's description of election-vulnerable Republicans, at the American Political Science Association convention in Washington D.C. (9/00):

"The turkeys who got elected in the '94 Gingrich sweep."

Mr. Clymer is the reporter George W. Bush referred to as an a--hole. So then you're saying, Mr. Clymer, that calling someone a "turkey" is actually OK?


REPUBLICANS

SANTA VS. SCROOGE

Al Gore campaign manager Donna Brazile, describing Republicans in an interview with Bloomberg.com (1/00):

"They have no love and no joy."

Casey must be at the bat in Washington again.


REPUBLICANS

THANK HEAVEN FOR LITTLE EXILES!

Director Robert Altman, on why he would move to France if George W. Bush wins the presidency (9/6/00):

"I don't think show business personalities should get involved publicly and show their feelings because that ends up working against them. That's why I stay discreet about these questions in America, but, no matter what, it would be a catastrophe for the whole world if George Bush is elected."

And as we all know, France isn't part of the whole world.


REPUBLICANS

BUT WHAT ABOUT THE DONKEY?

From a Democratic National Committee history of the Democratic and Republican party symbols, contributed to by DNC chairman Terry McAuliffe (3/01):

"The Democrats think of the elephant as bungling, stupid, pompous and conservative."

Oops...you don't want to get PETA mad at you, now do you?


SCHOOL FUNDING

IS THIS IN THE THREE W's?

President Clinton, on why schools shouldn't be able to decide how to spend federal money sent to them (11/9/99):

"Because it's not their money."

How silly of us to think that schools know what is most needed in their own districts.


SCIENCE

MR. UNIVERSE IS GOOD TO THE LAST PLOP

Natural Law Party candidate John Hagelin, on astrophysics (9/00):

"The unified field percolates infant universes at the rate of 10 to the 143rd per cubic centimeter per second."

Interesting notion, except there is no unified field theory yet. I think Mr. Hagelin is a little universe all to himself.


SELF-PROMOTION

GOING ON TO BIGGER THINGS

Gore campaign manager Donna Brazile about Donna Brazile, to New York Post reporter Cindy Adams (8/00):

"This will be the first campaign an African-American woman ran to victory...I'm like the eighth wonder of the world."

I'm assuming she's not talking about her size here.


SOCIAL SECURITY

SHAKING THE GOVERNMENT TREE

George W. Bush, on the future of Social Security (6/9/00):

"There's not going to be enough people in the system to take advantage of people like me."

I'm sure a few will find their way to your door.


SOCIAL SECURITY

BILLIONS AND BILLIONS

Vice-president Al Gore on George W. Bush's proposed Social Security privitization plan (10/25/00):

"He is proposing to privatize a big part of Social Security and he's proposing to take $1 trillion, a million billion dollars out of the Social Security trust fund and give it as a tax incentive to young workers."

Actually a trillion is one thousand billion, not one million billion. But as the Congressman once said, a billion here and a billion there, and pretty soon you're talking about real money.


THE SUPREME COURT

A SNAP DECISION

Vice-president Al Gore, on George W. Bush's potential nominations for the Supreme Court:

"When my opponent, Governor Bush, says he'll appoint strict constructionists to the Supreme Court, I often think of the strictly constructed meaning that was applied when the Constitution was written--how some people were considered three-fifths of a human being."

So will whips and chains become standard Supreme Court judge issue along with the robe?


TAXES

THAT TAXING QUESTION AGAIN

George W. Bush, deciding after some consideration why he couldn't give the rich a tax break:

"I wasn't able to justify it."

Well, governor, maybe you just weren't thinking hard enough.


TAXES

President Clinton, on why he didn't want to give tax cuts during a time of budgetary surplus (Buffalo, NY, 1/20/99):

"We could give it all back to you and hope you spend it right...But...if you don't spend it right, here's what's going to happen. In 2013 -- that's just 14 years away -- taxes people pay on their payroll for Social Security will no longer cover the monthly checks...I want every parent here to look at the young people here, and ask yourself, 'Do you really want to run the risk of squandering this surplus?' "

Apparently Mr. Clinton thinks that ordinary Americans have the same spending habits as Congress.


TELEVISION

ANOTHER AL GORE CREATION

Presidential candidate Al Gore to American Spectator:

"I introduced the very first free TV legislation."

Not including, of course, the 100-plus free TV bills introduced in Congress since 1960.


TERRORISM

DIVINE RIGHT

Rep. James Inhofe (R-OK) on Israelis being divinely "entitled" to the West Bank and why God allowed the terrorist attacks of September 11th to happen (Senate floor, 3/02):

"One of the reasons I believe the spiritual door was opened for an attack against the United States of America is that the policy of our government has been to ask the Israelis, and demand it with pressure, not to retaliate in a significant way against the terrorist strikes that have been launched against them."


TERRORISM

DON"T REMIND ME

One can argue how stupid it was to say this at the time, but it is an extraordinarily nasty case of bad timing. The following quote was written in the New York Times by State Department counterterrorism specialist Larry C. Johnson on July 10, 2001 (summaries quoted from the Washington Post):

Americans "seem to believe that terrorism is the greatest threat" to the United States and becoming more widespread. "And they almost certainly have the impression that extremist Islamic groups cause most terrorism...None of these beliefs are based in fact," he said, citing worldwide facts and figures that conclusively proved his point. "The greatest risk is clear. If you are drilling for oil in Colombia--or...Ecuador, Nigeria or Indonesia -- you should take appropriate precautions; otherwise Americans have little to fear." Terrorism is around of course, he said, but while nukes "are still aimed across the continents, terrorism is not the biggest security challenge confronting the United States, and it should not be portrayed that way."


TERRORISM

HITTING THE BROAD SIDE OF AN OIL RIG

Filmmaker Michael Moore, written on his website right after the 9/11/01 terrorist attacks (but deleted shortly afterwards):

"Many families have been devastated tonight. This is just not right. They did not deserve to die. If someone did this to get back at Bush, then they did so by killing thousands of people who DID NOT VOTE for him! Boston, New York, D.C. and the planes' destination of California--these were places that voted AGAINST Bush!"

Maybe next time the terrorists should take a voter-on-the-street survey, then?


TOURISTS

...AND THE KITCHEN SINK

A new sign posted for tourists at the U.S. Capitol (2001):

"Prohibited inside are animals, oversized backpacks, balloons, beverages, chewing gum, electric stun guns, fireworks or firecrackers, food, guns or ammunition, knives with blades over three inches or eight centimeters, mace, nunchakus, smoking, or suitcases."

Now if they could just prohibit politicians and lobbyists from going inside, then it would be safe.


TOWN HALL MEETINGS

A BUSY BEE

Al Gore, on town hall meetings while he was in Congress:

"I certainly learned a great deal from 3,000 town hall meetings across my home state of Tennessee over a 16-year period."

That works out to about one meeting every other day, including holidays, weekends, etc. It's amazing he had the time to do any legislating. Or maybe he created the Internet so he could watch them online?


TRASH TV

A LITTLE TASTE OF BENNETT AND JERRY'S

Jerry Springer, on William Bennett's comment that "The Jerry Springer Show" was one of the "worst offenders" of trash television (8/00):

"Listen, he doesn't like my show. That's fine. It just shows he has good taste."

Makes me want to wash my hands. Who knows where that show's been?


VIOLENCE

GOVERNOR ROCHAMBEAU

Tim Russert interviewing Jesse Ventura (I-MN) on Meet the Press:

RUSSERT: "Who would you rather have a beer with, George Bush or Al Gore?"

VENTURA: "Both of them, so I could knock both their heads together."

Especially after a few beers, ay?


WAR

TALKING CROW

Singer Sheryl Crow's alternative to war, given at the American Music Awards (1/13/03):

"The best way to solve problems is to not have enemies."

America doesn't have any enemies--they're just misunderstood.


WAR

GEN'RL TED

Ted Turner addressing an audience at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, on being raised in Georgia, an ex-Confederate state (10/10/01):

"I come from a country that was conquered so I know how the Japanese and Germans feel."

I wonder if Ted still has the pardon printed for him at Appomattox?


WASHINGTON D.C.

HELL-BOUND TO BE PRESIDENT

John McCain's description of Washington D.C. (1/00):

"The city of Satan."

I don't know, the Smithsonian Museums aren't so bad.


WEALTH

AN EXCEPTION TO EVERY RULE

CNBC / MSNBC commentator Chris Matthews, challenging Sen. Edward Kennedy's call on "Hardball" for the repeal of "future tax cuts that overwhelmingly benefit the wealthiest taxpayers" (1/17/02):

MATTHEWS: "You've called for the retraction of some of the tax cuts for people making over $130,000. That would include all of the United States Senate and members of the U.S. Congress. Do you believe that everybody who works in the bodies of Congress is wealthy because of the salary they draw?"
KENNEDY: "I wouldn't use the term 'wealth', but I understand people are sacrificing today."

The itemized list of Ted's sacrifices will be displayed during the next 2 am Congressional vote.


WELFARE RECIPIENTS

UP AT THE CRACK OF NOON

Senator John Kerry on the Don Imus show, describing former Republican governor Bill Weld:

"A guy who takes more vacations than people on welfare."


WORKING FAMILIES

HI-HO, HI-HO, WE'RE WORKING FOLKS YOU KNOW

Britt Hume on the Fox News Channel commenting on Rep. Dick Gephardt's (D-MO) statement that "working families" means anyone who works:

HUME: "If you work at all? So George W. Bush's family, that's a working family, right?"
GEPHARDT: "I think so."
HUME: "And Bill and Hillary Clinton, the first family, they work, right?"
GEPHARDT: "I think so."
HUME: "Now, is there an income limit?"
GEPHARDT: "No, no income limit."
HUME: "So you could be extremely rich, but as long as you still work, so Steve Forbes' family is a working family?"
GEPHARDT: "Working is good."

It's heartening to see Democrats joining the fight to protect the working rich.


Danny's "Stupidity 2002" page was brought to you by the words "Gravitas" and "Disenfranchisement," and the letter W.