Reflections on 2004

What a year! I must say I’ve enjoyed myself immensely. When Matt did me the honor of inviting me to write on this blog, I never imagined what an important part of my life it would become. The invite was back in September of 2003 and my first post, rather prescient if I do say so myself, appeared on October 20, 2003. From that day to this, it has been my immense pleasure to come here day after day and put out my thoughts – some of our readers have been kind enough to send me a line lauding me for my efforts, and for that I am eternally grateful. Its nice to know that in some small way you are having a positive effect on other people.
It was a year of massive ups and downs – as a political blog, our primary function was to cover the political scene; but as economics, culture and the war intersected with political matters, we ended up covering just about everything except the Peterson trial. In the dark of night, from time to time, I must admit that sometimes I doubted the ultimate outcome. Mostly I was staunch, but every now and again a confluence of bad news from Iraq, weak news on the economy, a couple bad polls and my naturally depressive nature would combine to make me lose heart – fortuantely, our Democrats always came to our rescue.
When Matt was roughed up by some Democratic union thugs in March, it told me that there was desperation on the other side…after all, Matt is just this guy who runs a blog, certainly not someone with the power and influence of a Democrat-dominated union; but they saw his existence as an affront and a threat. People who are headed for a win don’t beat up their critics.
And so it went through the whole year – you could always count on the Democrats to help us out; even at the worst moment of the campaign, after the first debate when the MSM was having an orgasm over what it was pumping up as a Kerry victory in the debate, we here at Blogs for Bush sat serene, knowing that Kerry’s Global Test was going to kill him politically. The MSM ignored the phrase for the most part and it took the blogosphere to really make them pay attention to it. This, to me, was really when the blogosphere became “real”; Rathergate made the bigger splash, but when the MSM was incapable of putting it away for Kerry because of blog commentary post first debate, we knew we were on to something with our blog.

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ABC’s People Of The Year: Bloggers

That’s right, it’s true.
To their credit, they note the contribution of blogs in firsthand reporting of the Tsunami disaster, but when it came to recognizing blogs and political coverage..

As a driving force in politics this year, bloggers covered the 2004 presidential campaigns and election. Political candidates also used them as valuable campaign tools.
“The Internet taught us, rather than the other way around,” said former Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean.
This year, for the first time, bloggers were permitted to cover the national political conventions firsthand.

Howard Dean… After everything that has happened in 2004, they go back to Howard Dean as the face of political blogging for 2004? Are they nuts? Of course, Joe Trippi was interviewed, and cites the Trent Lott story, not the Dan Rather Memogate story as the big blogger moment of the year. But, if it wasn’t for Memogate I think it is safe to assume that ABC wouldn’t even have thought to name bloggers as “Person of The Year.”
All that side, I’d like to say mazel tov to all us bloggers, the Dean campaign may have put blogs on the map, but we’re the ones who all contributed to making them a landmark.


Podhoretz Blasts Liberals Politicizing The Tsunami Disaster Relief

John Podhoretz is livid over the tasteless use of the tsunami disaster for untimely Bush-bashing.

Don’t we owe the dead, dying and injured the minimal grace not to convert their suffering into a chat-show segment ó the latest left-right clash over the Bush presidency?
And couldn’t the editorialists at The New York Times have forborne ó even just for a week ó making use of the tsunami to complain about U.S. government spending on “development aid”?
Development aid is the blanket term for American grant money handed out to other countries, supposedly to help their economies grow. Development aid has nothing ó nothing ó to do with what has happened.
The aid at issue now is disaster relief.

Read the whole thing here…


Loony Left finds a new Daddy.

The Loony left has had a new Pied Piper the last few months. Michael Moore and Al Franken are soÖPre Election. The Lefts new go-to guy is none other than Keith Olbermann. Yes MSNBC are the parents of a bouncing baby Wing nut.
K.O., as the Left refers to their new guy in Blog Posts, has been ìAll Overî this Ohio Election Recount ìstoryî. My gut tells me he thinks he can corner the market on Wing nuts, thus bringing his ratings up. They really have nowhere to go but up.
The only problem seems to be the fact that if he attracted any Wing nuts he drove away others, because his numbers have not moved.
So anyway, ìK.O.î is popping his cork early with word that Congressman John Conyers of Michigan confirmed this afternoon that he and several other Congressmen are planning to object to the vote of the Ohio electors when the Electoral College ballots are opened before the joint session of Congress next Thursday.
The rest will be the usual suspects.
Now they need a Senator to jump into this mess.
Reviewing the Wing nut sites, the two Senators that they are really hoping will make fools of themselves seem to be California Senator Barbara Boxer and/or Vermont “Independent” Senator Jeffords?
Fat chance I say.

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Third Party Candidates Want A SECOND Ohio Recount!!

That’s right, stupidity and insanity have joined forces, and they want to waste taxpayer dollars again to do another recount in Ohio

Two third-party presidential candidates asked a federal court Thursday to force a second recount of the Ohio vote, alleging county election boards altered votes and didn’t follow proper procedures in the recount that ended this week.
Lawyers for Green Party candidate David Cobb and the Libertarian Party’s Michael Badnarik made their request in federal court in Columbus.
The two candidates, who received less than 0.3 percent of the Ohio vote, paid $113,600 for a statewide recount after the vote was certified earlier this month by the secretary of state. They have said they don’t expect to change the election results, but want to make sure that every vote is proply counted.

Enough is enough already. Bush won. Kerry lost. You can count the votes over and over and over and over and over and over and nothing will change that.


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