September 25, 2002
The formerly important Al Gore

Michael Kelly is not too impressed with Mr. Gore's speech bashing President Bush. The last paragraph sums it up:

Probably the purest example of the Gore style -- equal parts mendacity, viciousness and smarm -- occurred when Gore expressed his concern (his deep, heartfelt concern) over "the doubts many have expressed about the role that politics might be playing in the calculations of some in the administration." And then added: "I have not raised those doubts, but many have."

What a moment! What a speech! What a man! What a disgrace.

Go read the entire column. As I've said before: if Gore were our president, we would have fired off a couple of cruise missles, killed a few camels, and then surrendered to the Taleban because the war was unwinnable. It seems to be a race among democrats to see who can do the most damage to their own party.

Posted by nukevet at September 25, 2002 08:49 PM
Comments

Hey, the site looks great! Which reminded me that I still didn't have you on my links list. Now I do. Anybody who slams Al Gore is a friend of mine.

Posted by: Rachel on September 26, 2002 11:38 AM

Gore is such a slow-moving target that he's hard to miss.

Posted by: Neal on September 26, 2002 11:58 AM

As you may have heard, even his colleagues in the party are backing away from him, and the Democratic National Committee has ordered sanctions against Gore, according to ScrappleFace.

Posted by: Scott Ott on September 26, 2002 08:22 PM
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