posted on May, 13 2003 @ 10:26 AM
Gee Xaos, that was some pretty harsh and uncompassionate stuff there. Are you sure you're a love-filled and sensitive liberal?
Pez64, you might see it as campaigning, but you see, these guys just went to war and along with the rest of the military, did a fine job. There was a
good reason for shrub to do this.
Also, carriers make a good backdrop when speaking to or about the military, a carrier group is used to project our strength where needed around the
world.
As a matter of fact, I don't think shrub is the first to speak from the deck of a carrier:
(The spaces are where pictures should be. They are obviously not there)
As commander-in-chief, William Jefferson Clinton gave speeches on the USS Theodore Roosevelt, USS Independence and USS John F. Kennedy carriers to
name but three military photo-ops. Taxpayers paid to send Senator John Glenn back into space as a payoff for his scuttling of the investigation into
Red China's Democratic Party contributions. Mr. Clinton traveled more than any other president, and his wife used Air Force One as a jet for her
campaign. People died in three countries because Clinton used the military to distract from Monica Lewinsky's testimony. We could go on and on, but
why bother? Bush did what he did and looked great doing it. Democrats want to whine that he's acting like president, but that's one of the reasons
it's so hard to beat an incumbent - any incumbent.
President (Clinton) Photo-Ops on Aircraft Carriers
May 8, 2003
On March 12, 1993 - in his first visit as commander-in-chief to a navy vessel - President Clinton walked on the deck of the aircraft carrier USS
Theodore Roosevelt. Notice that the cockpit is open and Clinton is walking away from the jet as if he just landed it there. And looky! He's wearing a
flight jacket! Asked why he made the trip, Clinton said, "I think I need to be here because I'm commander in chief."
President Clinton on the carrier USS Independence: April 17, 1996
(Note: That's seven months before he faced re-election. Bush made
his carrier visit a year and seven months before his re-election effort.)
President Clinton administers the oath of enlistment to
recruits on board the USS John F. Kennedy: July 4, 2000.
[Edited on 13-5-2003 by Thomas Crowne]