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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 11 Mar 2004 19:42:26 -0800
From: Greg Williams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: John Kerry: Further Left Than He Lets On     By John Perazzo
    February 17, 2004   www.frontpagemag.com


John Kerry: Further Left Than He Lets On
By John Perazzo
www.frontpagemag.com | February 17, 2004


When analysts look back on the moments that catapulted Sen. John Kerry to frontrunner 
status in his quest for the Democratic presidential nomination, they will acknowledge 
that one of the biggest turns of the campaign occurred on January 25. On that day, 
Kerry campaign strategists whisked Jim Rassmann from Florence, Oregon, straight to 
Iowa for an emotional, "surprise" public reunion with Kerry. As Rassmann's fellow 
soldier in the Vietnam War, Kerry saved Rassmann's life by dodging a hail of enemy 
gunfire to drag him out of a river and carry him to safety. As John Hurley, director 
of the Veterans for Kerry campaign, acknowledges, Rassmann's appearance with Kerry 
gave the senator an enormous boost. "It was just thrilling to get [Rassmann's] phone 
call out of the blue," Hurley said. "Normally I'm a calm guy, but I was dancing and 
shrieking."

Kerry has made frequent references to his military background, depicting himself as a 
proud American who served his nation honorably during the Vietnam War. However, what 
most people do not realize is when Kerry returned from combat, he became a key figure 
in the early-1970s, anti-American and pro-Hanoi movement personified by Jane Fonda. 
Like so many of those protesters, Kerry publicly maligned American soldiers, and went 
on to become a prominent organizer for one of America's most radical appeasement 
groups, Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW). He developed close ties with 
celebrated activists like Fonda and Ramsey Clark, the radical Attorney General who 
served under President Lyndon Johnson. (Clark went on to head the pro-North Korean 
International Action Center.) Kerry also supported a document known as the "People's 
Peace Treaty," which was reportedly composed in Communist East Germany and contained 
nine points - all of them extracted from a list of Viet Cong conditions for ending the 
war.

By participating in VVAW demonstrations, Kerry marched alongside many revolutionary 
Communists. Exploiting his presence at such rallies, the Communist publication Daily 
World prominently published photographs of Kerry addressing anti-war protestors, some 
of whom were carrying banners with portraits of Communist Party leader Angela Davis. 
Openly organized by known Communists, these rallies were typified by what the December 
12, 1971, Herald Traveler called an "abundance of Vietcong flags, clenched fists 
raised in the air, and placards plainly bearing legends in support of China, Cuba, the 
USSR, North Korea and the Hanoi government."

In early 1971, Kerry organized one of the most confrontational anti-war protests of 
the period, in which nearly 1,000 purported Vietnam veterans gathered on Washington, 
D.C.'s Mall for what they termed "a limited incursion into the country of Congress." 
As part of a carefully orchestrated buildup toward that demonstration, Kerry had 
recently testified before the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, claiming to have 
personally heard U.S. soldiers boast about having raped, dismembered, tortured, 
poisoned and randomly executed innocent civilians - sometimes even razing entire 
villages in a manner reminiscent of Ghenghis Khan. During that same time period, Kerry 
charged that American-perpetrated war crimes in Vietnam were the norm, not the 
exception - and were carried out with the full awareness and blessing of officers at 
all levels of American military command.

Today, many American veterans and their families deem Kerry's past public excoriation 
of U.S. troops as unforgivable acts bordering on treason. As a result, veterans have 
formed several groups opposing Kerry's presidential ambitions. The root cause of their 
anti-Kerry sentiment is summarized by the publication U.S. Veteran Dispatch, which 
notes that Kerry's aforementioned testimony "occurred while some of his fellow Vietnam 
veterans were known by the world to be enduring terrible suffering as prisoners of war 
in North Vietnamese prisons." Indeed, Senator John McCain has stated that his North 
Vietnamese captors had used reports of Kerry-led protests to taunt him and his fellow 
prisoners. Retired General George S. Patton III angrily charged that Kerry's actions 
were giving "aid and comfort to the enemy."

One anti-Kerry group, Vietnam Veterans Against John Kerry (VVAJK), recently formed a 
national coalition with two other groups: Vietnamese-Americans for Human Rights in 
Vietnam (VAHRV), and Vietnamese-Americans Against John Kerry (VAAJK). "We represent 
hundreds of thousand of American veterans," says VVAJK founder said Ted Sampley, "who 
do not want to see John Kerry anywhere near the Oval Office." A formal VVAJK statement 
reads, "As a national leader of VVAW, Kerry campaigned against the effort of the 
United States to contain the spread of Communism. He used the blood of servicemen 
still in the field for his own political advancement by claiming that their blood was 
being shed unnecessarily or in vain . . . Under Kerry's leadership, VVAW members 
mocked the uniform of United States soldiers by wearing tattered fatigues marked with 
pro-communist graffiti. They dishonored America by marching in demonstrations under 
the flag of the Viet Cong enemy." In a similar spirit, VAAJK member Dan Tran says, "On 
behalf of tens of thousands of Vietnamese-Americans, we are determined to demonstrate 
against Senator Kerry all across this nation . . . John Kerry aided and abetted the 
Communist government in Hanoi and has hindered any human rights progress in Vietnam."

As chairman of the Select Senate Committee on POW/MIA (Prisoners Of War/Missing In 
Action) Affairs, which was created in 1991 to determine whether any American POWs or 
MIAs were still alive in Vietnam, Kerry doggedly pushed the panel to conclude all 
Americans were dead. According to U.S. Veteran Dispatch, "[N]o one in the United 
States Senate pushed harder to bury the POW/MIA issue, the last obstacle preventing 
normalization of relations with Hanoi, than John Forbes Kerry." Controversy erupted in 
December 1992, however, when, according to the nonpartisan Center for Public 
Integrity, "Hanoi announced that it had awarded Colliers International, a Boston-based 
real estate company, an exclusive deal to develop its commercial real estate 
potentially worth billions. Stuart Forbes, the CEO of Colliers, is [John] Kerry's 
cousin."

Kerry's career in the U.S. Senate began in 1984. Since then - and notwithstanding his 
efforts to portray himself as a political moderate - he has established a long record 
of support for a wide array of left-wing causes, ideologies, and associated pieces of 
legislation. Among the most significant features of this record are the votes he has 
cast with regard to national defense and security issues. During his Senate career, 
Kerry has voted for at least seven major reductions in defense and military spending. 
Even after the 1993 World Trade Center bombing by Islamic terrorists, he voted to cut 
intelligence spending by $1.5 billion for the five years prior to 2001. In 1996 he 
voted to slash defense spending by $6.5 billion.

However, Kerry has been a big spender on non-defense projects, having earned a 
lifetime rating of only 26 percent from the organization Citizens Against Government 
Waste. Over the years, Kerry has voted against a Balanced Budget Amendment at least 
five times, and against lowering overall government spending at least three times. In 
2001, he voted against President Bush's $1.35 trillion tax cut package, marking at 
least the tenth anti-tax relief vote of his Senate career. By contrast, Kerry voted in 
favor of President Clinton's 1993 tax hike, which was the largest tax increase in 
American history. In fact, Kerry recently called for "a return to the fiscal 
responsibility we gave this country in 1993 when we passed the Deficit Reduction Act." 
Kerry's consistent pattern of voting in favor of high taxes has earned him a meager 
25.2 percent rating from the National Taxpayers Union (NTU) for the period of 
1985-2001. Similarly, the group Americans for Tax Reform (ATR) gives him a paltry 12.5 
percent rating for the years 1999-2002. The issue of taxation, of course, has enormous 
implications for entrepreneurs and small businesses. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce 
gives Kerry a 36 percent rating for the years 1985-2001, and the National Federation 
of Independent Business rates him a pathetic 21.4 percent for the years 1997-2001.

Kerry's positions on most political and social issues are consistently leftist. In 
2000, he voted to expand federal hate-crime protections to include such categories as 
gender, sexual orientation, and disabilities. He has consistently voted in favor of 
Affirmative Action and set-asides in employment and contracting. With regard to 
environmental issues, he consistently supports the positions of radical leftist groups 
like the League of Conservation Voters (LCV), which has endorsed him for the 2004 
presidential election. During the past six years, the LCV has approved of 95 percent 
of Kerry's votes on environmental matters. According to the Capital Research Center, 
which rates the political leanings of nonprofit organizations, this group's rating 
places it at the extreme Left of the political spectrum.

Kerry has voted in favor of federal funding for abortions, and against requiring 
parental notification for minors' abortions. On at least three occasions he has voted 
against proposed bans of partial-birth abortions. While Kerry has earned a 
Zero-percent rating from the National Right To Life Committee, his National Abortion 
And Reproductive Rights League rating is consistently 100 percent, year after year.

With regard to criminal justice, Kerry opposes the death penalty "because I think it's 
applied unfairly." After 9/11, however, he conveniently changed his tune. Said the 
senator, "I am for the death penalty for terrorists because terrorists have declared 
war on [our] country. I support killing people who declare war on our country." But 
this is a new position for Kerry, who, between 1989 and 1993, voted at least three 
times to exempt terrorists from the death penalty, on grounds that anti-death penalty 
nations would refuse to extradite suspected terrorists to the United States.

As Michael Dukakis' Lieutenant Governor from 1983-1985, Kerry supported a furlough 
program for hundreds of Massachusetts' inmates, a program that many critics deemed too 
lenient toward criminals. In a case that garnered national attention during the 1988 
presidential debates between Mr. Dukakis and George H.W. Bush, a prisoner named Willie 
Horton brutally raped a woman while he was free on such a furlough.



Though Kerry characterizes himself as a political moderate, his voting record is, in 
fact, every bit as far-Left as that of his fellow Massachusetts senator, the candidly 
left-wing Ted Kennedy. According to Congressional Quarterly, over the course of 
Kerry's Senate career, he has sided with Kennedy fully 94 percent of the time for key 
votes. In a number of different years - 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1992, 1993, 
1998, 1999, and 2001 - that figure stood at 100 percent. Kerry's lifetime Vote Rating 
from the leftist group Americans For Democratic Action (ADA) is 93 percent. Senator 
Kennedy's ADA rating is a slightly lower 88 percent; that is, a avowedly leftist group 
states that John Kerry's voting record is to the Left of Ted Kennedy's. By contrast, 
Kerry's lifetime rating from the American Conservative Union (ACU) stands at just 5 
percent - the third lowest figure in the entire Senate, higher only than the ACU 
ratings for Ted Kennedy and Barbara Boxer. The ACU ratings for some other notable 
Democrats are: 13 percent apiece for Richard Gephardt, Hillary Clinton, and Tom 
Daschle; 14 percent for John Edwards; 15 percent for Dennis Kucinich; and 19 percent 
for Joe Lieberman. Senator John Breaux, one of the upper chamber's few moderate 
Democrats, has a 46 percent ACU rating.

Kerry's stated positions on various major political issues have, on numerous 
occasions, been inconsistent and contradictory. For instance, he fiercely condemns the 
Patriot Act as the slippery slope toward a police state, and excoriates Attorney 
General John Ashcroft for violating Americans' civil liberties. "We are a nation of 
laws and liberties, not of a knock in the night," says Kerry. "So it is time to end 
the era of John Ashcroft. That starts with replacing the Patriot Act with a new law 
that protects our people and our liberties at the same time." But in 2001, Kerry in 
fact voted for the Patriot Act - parts of which he himself originally wrote. He said 
at the time that he was "pleased at the compromise we have reached on the 
anti-terrorism legislation as a whole." "It reflects," he said on the Senate floor, 
"an enormous amount of hard work by the members of the Senate Banking Committee and 
the Senate Judiciary Committee. I congratulate them and thank them for that work."

In 1991, Kerry voted against authorizing the use of force in the Persian Gulf. Yet he 
now claims that he fully supported Operation Desert Storm, but voted against it only 
because he wanted the first President Bush "to take a couple more months to build the 
support of the nation." At the dawn of that war, Kerry warned that the elder Bush's 
"unilateral" action constituted a "rush to war" that might lead to "another generation 
of amputees, paraplegics, burn victims." "Is the liberation of Kuwait so imperative 
that all those risks are worthwhile at this moment?" he asked rhetorically. Eleven 
days later, he wrote a letter to a constituent explaining that he opposed military 
action and preferred to give economic sanctions "more time to work." Nine days after 
that, however, he wrote to the same constituent and said that he "strongly and 
unequivocally supported President Bush's response to the crisis."



More recently, Kerry has exhibited similar shifts in his stated stance on the 2003 
Iraq war. Amid his blistering criticisms of President George W. Bush's foreign policy, 
Kerry has said, "We did not empower the president to do regime change." Yet in fact, 
Kerry supported an October 2002 Senate resolution that specifically cited regime 
change as a goal. That resolution, which passed by a 77-to-23 margin, authorized 
President Bush to attack Iraq if Saddam Hussein refused to abide by UN mandates. Kerry 
had similarly voted to make regime change a U.S. objective back in 1998.



Throughout 2003 and into 2004, Kerry has condemned what he calls President Bush's 
needless "rush to war" against Iraq. But in October 2002 Kerry himself addressed the 
Senate with a stern speech declaring Iraq "capable of quickly producing [and] 
weaponizing" biological agents that could be delivered against "the United States 
itself." In a January 23, 2003, foreign policy speech at Georgetown University, Kerry 
stated, "Without question, we need to disarm Saddam Hussein. He is a brutal, murderous 
dictator, leading an oppressive regime. He presents a particularly grievous threat 
because he is so consistently prone to miscalculation. He miscalculated an eight-year 
war with Iran. He miscalculated the invasion of Kuwait. He miscalculated America's 
response to that act of naked aggression. He miscalculated the result of setting 
oilrigs on fire. He miscalculated the impact of sending scuds into Israel and trying 
to assassinate an American President. He miscalculated his own military strength. He 
miscalculated the Arab world's response to his misconduct. And now he is 
miscalculating America's response to his continued deceit and his consistent grasp for 
weapons of mass destruction."



Despite his consistently leftist stance on the issues, John Kerry has staked out 
public positions all over the political map since the early 1970s. But one thing has 
remained troublingly consistent: He prefers to hide his three decades of left-wing 
activism from the American public. We hope the American people will not be so easily 
fooled.

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