Nice headline, eh? It's on CNN too. Hell hath no fury like the MSM scorned. 
Probably reading the polls... the one on MSNBC overwhelmingly said Rove 
should get the boot, last I saw.
 Dana
  How dumb do they think we are? 

Monday, July 18, 2005; Posted: 7:44 p.m. EDT (23:44 GMT) 

 [image: story.rove.bush.ap.jpg] President Bush departs the White House, 
Friday, with Karl Rove, left.

*WASHINGTON (Creators Syndicate) -- In my line of work, you get lied to a 
lot. *

There are the generally forgettable fibs, like a senator who's making his 
seventh political trip to New Hampshire since the first of the year 
insisting he has made no decision about a White House run. 

The falsehoods you remember are bold and brassy. I will never forget 
President George H.W. Bush stating with a straight face that the nominee's 
race had never even crossed his mind when he picked Clarence Thomas for the 
Supreme Court.

Presidential candidate Bill Clinton demonstrated early his flair for fiction 
by contradicting all his campaign's previous statements on his non-service 
in the military when he admitted that, yes, during the Vietnam War he 
actually had received a draft notice calling him to military service.

Why had Clinton never mentioned this fact before during the endless Q-and-A 
sessions about his military record? In a polygraph-punishing explanation, 
Bill Clinton lamely explained he had just "forgotten."

Let's be clear: If you were a young man of draft-eligible age during 
Vietnam, you might be excused for forgetting your first kiss or your first 
beer. But you would forever remember that ominous moment when the letter, 
carrying with it the full force and power of the U.S. government, arrived 
summoning you to bear arms.

So, too, did George H.W. Bush fully understand that his nomination of 
Clarence Thomas, an African-American jurist of modest legal achievement, 
would discomfort and demoralize many Democrats.

Today in Washington, the big, barefaced lie is very much back. 

For two years, the George W. Bush White House had asserted that Bush's 
closest political advisor, Karl Rove, had nothing to do with press leaks 
revealing that the wife of the former U.S. ambassador whose report had 
publicly refuted administration claims that Saddam Hussein had attempted to 
buy "yellowcake" uranium ore from Africa for nuclear weapons was an 
undercover CIA officer. 

Scratch those assertions: Karl Rove did tell Time magazine reporter Matt 
Cooper that former Ambassador Joe Wilson's wife worked at the CIA.

A senior Bush administration official told The Washington Post that, shortly 
after the publication of Wilson's piece in the New York Times -- which 
undercut the administration's case for launching a pre-emptive war against 
Iraq -- two top White House officials had called six journalists to disclose 
the identity and the position of Valerie Plame, Wilson's wife. 

That same senior administration official said: "Clearly it (the leak 
'outing' Plame) was meant purely and simply for revenge."

Are you ready for a barefaced lie? Listen to the Republican talking points. 
It is true that Rove did talk to Matt Cooper. But he was not trying to smear 
Wilson and thus silence a formidable critic of Bush's Iraq policy. 

No, Rove's only motive was to make sure that Cooper and Time did not publish 
something that could turn out to be false. This is a side of the man we have 
not seen before -- selflessly saving gullible newsmen from publishing 
anything inaccurate.

Imagine how busy Rove must have been during Bush's 1994 race for Texas 
governor, when his campaign was accused of launching a whispering campaign 
in East Texas about Democratic Gov. Ann Richards' affinity for gays. Try as 
he must have, Karl just couldn't stop the circulation of those ugly rumors.

In 2000,George W. Bush's campaign was accused of spreading the vicious 
charge that Bush's main rival, Sen. John McCain, was unstable because of the 
time he had spent as a POW in isolation. 

You just know Karl must have been speed-dialing reporters, valiantly trying 
to kill that slander. In 2004, the man who bankrolled the Swift Boat 
Veterans against John Kerry was one of Rove's oldest Texas allies.

Wayne Slater of The Dallas Morning News, who has covered Rove long and well, 
puts it this way: "Throughout his political career, bad things happen -- 
sometimes involving dirty tricks -- to his enemies or rivals." Is that 
because he's evil? "He's amoral. He doesn't set up a plan to damage, defeat 
or destroy his enemies because he's evil. He does it because he's so 
unbelievably competitive and amoral."

All of this raises one nagging question: Just how dumb do the Bush people 
believe we are, that we would swallow, for even a nanosecond, the 
fabrication that Karl Rove's only motive in calling reporters was to 
discourage inaccurate stories? Do they really think we are that stupid?


-- 
Nobody's laughing now
But you could always make me laugh out loud


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