Thanks to Pokey Anderson of Pacifica's KPFT-Houston for this.  
Her outstanding interview/news show, Monitor, airs Sun @ 4pm PDT.
You can log on thru the Pacifica website.  She sends me great 
cartoons and graphics, like this one.  Enjoy!  -Ed






Source: http://allhatnocattle.net/red-state-vanish.gif

Note: SUSA would be Survey USA Polls -- 
http://www.surveyusa.com/50State2006/50StateBushApproval060315Approval.htm

Check the link -- amazing lack of support for Bush, even in states that "voted" 
for Bush only 16 months ago.  

For instance, Ohio, which gave Bush the 20 electoral votes in November 2004 he 
needed for a national victory, is now showing in current polls:

Bush   Approve:      34%
             Disapprove   64%

Did Ohio really give Bush a 118,000-vote victory in November 2004?

***

http://select.nytimes.com/2006/03/20/opinion/20krugman.html?th&emc=th

Bogus Bush Bashing
By PAUL KRUGMAN
NY Times Op-Ed: March 20, 2006

"The single word most frequently associated with George W. Bush today is 
'incompetent,' and close behind are two other increasingly mentioned 
descriptors: 'idiot' and 'liar.' " So says the Pew Research Center for the 
People and the Press, whose most recent poll found that only 33 percent of 
the public approves of the job President Bush is doing.

Mr. Bush, of course, bears primary responsibility for the state of his 
presidency. But there's more going on here than his personal inadequacy; 
we're looking at the failure of a movement as well as a man. As evidence, 
consider the fact that most of the conservatives now rushing to distance 
themselves from Mr. Bush still can't bring themselves to criticize his 
actual policies. Instead, they accuse him of policy sins - in particular, of 
being a big spender on domestic programs - that he has not, in fact, 
committed.

Before I get to the bogus issue of domestic spending, let's look at the 
policies the new wave of conservative Bush bashers refuses to criticize.

Mr. Bush's new conservative critics don't say much about the issue that most 
disturbs the public, the quagmire in Iraq. That's not surprising. 
Commentators who acted as cheerleaders in the run-up to war, and in many 
cases questioned the patriotism of those of us who were skeptical, can't 
criticize the decision to start this war without facing up to their own 
complicity in that decision.

Nor, after years of insisting that things were going well in Iraq and 
denouncing anyone who said otherwise, is it easy for them to criticize Mr. 
Bush's almost surreal bungling of the war. (William Kristol of The Weekly 
Standard is the exception; he says that we never made a "serious effort" in 
Iraq, which will come as news to the soldiers.)

Meanwhile, the continuing allegiance of conservatives to tax cuts as the 
universal policy elixir prevents them from saying anything about the real 
sources of the federal budget deficit, in particular Mr. Bush's 
unprecedented decision to cut taxes in the middle of a war. (My colleague 
Bob Herbert points out that the Iraq hawks chose to fight a war with other 
people's children. They chose to fight it with other people's money, too.)

They can't even criticize Mr. Bush for the systematic dishonesty of his 
budgets. For one thing, that dishonesty has been apparent for five years. 
More than that, some prominent conservative commentators actually celebrated 
the administration's dishonesty. In 2001 Time.com blogger Andrew Sullivan, 
writing in The New Republic, conceded that Mr. Bush wasn't truthful about 
his economic policies. But Mr. Sullivan approved of the deception: "Bush has 
to obfuscate his real goals of reducing spending with the smokescreen of 
'compassionate conservatism.' " As Berkeley's Brad DeLong puts it on his 
blog, conservatives knew that Mr. Bush was lying about the budget, but they 
thought they were in on the con.

So what's left? Well, it's safe for conservatives to criticize Mr. Bush for 
presiding over runaway growth in domestic spending, because that implies 
that he betrayed his conservative supporters. There's only one problem with 
this criticism: it's not true.

It's true that federal spending as a percentage of G.D.P. rose between 2001 
and 2005. But the great bulk of this increase was accounted for by increased 
spending on defense and homeland security, including the costs of the Iraq 
war, and by rising health care costs.

Conservatives aren't criticizing Mr. Bush for his defense spending. Since 
the Medicare drug program didn't start until 2006, the Bush administration 
can't be blamed for the rise in health care costs before then. Whatever 
other fiscal excesses took place weren't large enough to play more than a 
marginal role in spending growth.

So where does the notion of Bush the big spender come from? In a direct 
sense it comes largely from Brian Riedl of the Heritage Foundation, who 
issued a report last fall alleging that government spending was out of 
control. Mr. Riedl is very good at his job; his report shifts artfully back 
and forth among various measures of spending (nominal, real, total, 
domestic, discretionary, domestic discretionary), managing to convey the 
false impression that soaring spending on domestic social programs is a 
major cause of the federal budget deficit without literally lying.

But the reason conservatives fall for the Heritage spin is that it suits 
their purposes. They need to repudiate George W. Bush, but they can't admit 
that when Mr. Bush made his key mistakes - starting an unnecessary war, and 
using dishonest numbers to justify tax cuts - they were cheering him on.








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