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Robert Sterling
Editor, The Konformist
http://www.konformist.com
http://www.konformist.com/2000/unelectable-son.htm


The Unelectable Son
Dave McGowan

http://www.davesweb.cnchost.com

November 10, 2000

Those crazy Bush boys really seem to have fucked up this time. If you
haven't done so lately, get up from your computer, walk outside and
take a few deep breaths. Did you catch a whiff of that stench
drifting across the country? If I'm not mistaken, it seems to be
coming from the state of Florida. The drive to put chosen son George
W. into the White House just might have gotten a little out of
control.

It's been pretty clear for some time now that George was the chosen
one. The problem was that George is a pretty tough sell as a
presidential candidate. He is after all - can we be honest here? - an
unfathomably stupid and shallow man. So even with enormous sums of
money behind him, and the rather obvious support of the corporate
media, it was an uphill battle for the Bush clan.

Winning the primary was easy enough, especially after the only real
competitor - John McCain - took a dive by denouncing the Christian
Coalition, the kiss of death for a Republican candidate. That left
just a bunch of rather comical contenders like Gary Bauer and Alan
Keyes to deal with. Keyes, by the way, was apparently supposed to
represent the 'diversity' of the Republican Party, which he rather
bizarrely did by simultaneously channeling Jesse Jackson and Pat
Buchanan.

As for McCain, he had shown that even a hideously
fraudulent 'reformer' could kick Bush's ass in the primaries, so he
had to bow out. You overplayed your part there a little bit, John.
Maybe it was that whole "pity me for the mistreatment I suffered at
the hands of my Vietnamese captors after I indiscriminately dumped
Napalm on their children" approach. Be that as it may, with the
Admiral's son out of the race, Bush basically picked up the
Republican nomination by default.

The general election was a little tougher though. Senator Bob Smith
could have posed a real problem when he denounced the Republican
Party as too liberal for his tastes and bolted the party to run as a
far-right 'Independent.' Fortunately though, Smith quickly saw the
error of his ways and bolted back to the flock, to be received with
open arms.

The Reform Party could have posed a real problem as well. Candidate
Ross Perot had, after all, siphoned off a considerable number of
Republican votes in the last two presidential contests. But not this
year. No, this was the year that saw the Reform Party gloriously
implode, producing the ludicrously fascistic Pat Buchanan as a
candidate, whose campaign commercials were so over-the-top that it's
hard to imagine anyone taking his candidacy seriously.

It was also, notably, the year that the Reform Party stopped
receiving media exposure and invitations to the debates. But even
with no one else in the race to tap conservative voters, Bush was
such an absurd candidate that he couldn't hope to defeat even as weak
an opponent as Al Gore.

Pollsters struggled mightily to suggest otherwise. For weeks now,
while calling the polls 'statistical deadlocks,' Bush has been
portrayed as consistently out-polling Gore by a margin of from three
to six points. The popular vote count showed this to be complete
bullshit, however, and likely an effort to create a self-fulfilling
prophecy, as well as to condition the American people to accept a
Bush victory.

The truth was that getting George into the White House was not an
easy task. The sudden emergence of the Green Party, which had been
dormant for ages, certainly helped. Interestingly, Nader's campaign
got considerably more, and better, press than did Buchanan's, a major
shift from previous years.

But even with a spoiler on the left, and one given at least limited
legitimacy, the Bush campaign was in trouble. Even though Gore seemed
at times to be working on sabotaging his own campaign - such as
distancing himself from Clinton, who is, despite being thoroughly
corrupt, unquestionably the most popular politician in the country -
Bush remained seemingly unelectable.

Even when George, Sr.'s supposed nemesis, H. Ross Perot, and George
Jr.'s purported nemesis, John McCain, jumped on board the Bush team
bearing ringing endorsements, the American people appeared
unconvinced. Even the endorsements of such notable war criminals as
Colin Powell and Norman Schwarzkopf didn't seem to help much.

Apparently though, those Bush boys just don't know when to throw in
the towel. The operative principal seems to have been: when all else
fails, resort to massive voter fraud. And if you're going to steal an
election, where better to do it than in Jeb Bush's Florida, where
rabidly fascist anti-Castro Cubans and assorted Mafioso have long
specialized in dirty tricks.

Make no mistake about it, the evidence of fraud is overwhelming.
Among the numerous voting 'irregularities' reported are:

~ Nine ballot boxes were reported missing in Broward County. This was
disputedby an election supervisor, who claimed that nothing was
missing, though numerous ballot boxes had taken longer to receive
than expected. The official conceded though that one box was left
behind at a polling station, by an inexperiencedvolunteer naturally.

~ Thousands of voters have reported being turned away at the polls
with claims that ballots had run out, because their names had
conveniently disappeared from the lists of registered voters, or
because the polling locations had illegally closed with voters still
waiting in line to vote; some have alleged willful destruction of
ballots from Democratic precincts.

~ In at least one precinct, in Leon County, the Florida Highway
Patrol set up a police checkpoint near a polling place and, according
to angry voters, intimidated Blacks attempting to reach the polls.

~ Abandoned ballot boxes seem to be popping up more frequently than
Elvis sightings. Boxes were found in three different Palm Beach
County schools, as well as in an upscale, gated residential
community. All were allegedly empty. Another was found in a Miami
church.

~ Also in Palm Beach, calls flooded in complaining of a confusing
ballot which caused many voters to mistakenly cast their vote for Pat
Buchanan rather than Gore. In the staunchly Democratic county,
Buchanan received 3,407 votes, nearly three-and-a-half times his
tally in any other Florida county. Given the purported margin
of 'victory' in the state's popular vote, these ballots alone would
be enough to throw the election to Gore.

~ In that same Palm Beach County, another 19,000 ballots were
disqualified because voters had punched more than one hole, again due
to the deceptive ballot design. These ballots presumably would have
heavily favored Gore.

~ Another 1,600 ballots cast primarily for Gore were voided due to
what was described as a 'computer glitch.'

~ One of the men primarily responsible for getting out the Republican
vote, particularly absentee ballots, was previously declared guilty
of massive voterfraud in his run for mayor of Miami in 1997. So
blatant was the fraud that his election victory was overturned by the
courts and a number of officials were convicted.

~ London's Independent has reported that a 71-year-old pastor
observed two men suspiciously loitering at a polling location bearing
armloads of what appeared to be ballots. The pastor told his story to
the Independent after local police and reporters refused to report on
or investigate his claims.



The problem now is that the fraud is so obvious as to border on the
absurd. A large sector of the population has already caught a whiff
of the stench wafting in from the country's southeastern appendage,
and a slew of lawsuits have already been filed by private citizens
and local officials. This surely creates a bit of a problem for the
Bush boys. What to do now?

They could choose to stay the course, attempting to perpetuate the
fraud and sweep George into the White House, the people be damned. As
the sense that something is rotten in Florida grows among the
American people though, this could bring a rather hostile reaction
from a fairly broad spectrum of the population. Even with Gore
playing along and conceding defeat, this might not play too well.

The smarter thing to do, it seems, is to swing the election back to
Gore, without of course admitting to massive voter fraud. Perhaps
some voting improprieties could be admitted to, while blaming lower
level, overzealous staffers. There would naturally be a good deal of
hostility to Gore from the other side of the aisle, but that's all a
part of the game anyway.

A relentless attack on a Gore presidency would serve the same
function as it did with the Clinton presidency - to create the
illusion of a liberal administration while a reactionary agenda is
pursued, thereby keeping the American 'left' confused and steadfastly
behind another false idol. But, like I said, that would be the smart
thing to do, and in case I haven't mentioned it yet, George isn't
real bright.

That reminds me of a question I've been meaning to ask. The Bush
family have long been big fans of eugenics programs, and have
themselves been careful not to marry 'outside their class,' so to
speak. But doesn't the fact that generations of selective breeding
have produced such an extraordinarily stupid man refute the eugenics
beliefs of his forbears? Just checking.

Anyway, it seems a near certainty that with the chosen son so close
to the White House, the Bush team will push on. The media will gamely
play along, portraying Gore as the villain for being a whiny, poor
loser. Every effort will be made to turn public opinion against the
vice-president, and in favor of the Bush crime family. This is not
necessarily a bad thing, however.

Even with a national media consensus for Gore to graciously step
aside, a large swath of the American people will view the Bush
presidency as fundamentally illegitimate. Adding to the hostility
will be the overtly reactionary agenda that the Bush team will
pursue, which is not to be confused with the covertly reactionary
agenda pursued for the last eight years by Mr. Bill, though the
results are largely the same.

Bush will likely go so far as to claim some sort of imaginary mandate
from the people ("The American people elected a Republican president
and a Republican congress for the first time in decades. What does
that tell you?" will be the battle cry, or words to that effect). And
maybe, just maybe, that will be enough to awake the country from its
slumber.

Maybe the country needs an embarrassingly dim-witted son of an
extraordinarily corrupt political family foisted into power against
the will of the people through a transparently fraudulent election,
and committed to pursuing a decidedly anti-democratic agenda. If that
isn't enough to get the people up off their asses, then there is
little hope that anything will.


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