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| נשלח ב-29/10/2004 21:36 |
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זיידי KEEP אפ די גוטע ארבעט, חזק ואמץ! מיא אלע אויף היידפארק גלייכען דיר חוץ פון די פארשטיקנע ליבראלע זיסקייט, 
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| נשלח ב-29/10/2004 22:09 |
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די לינקע New York Times שרייבט אז יעדער מוז זען Stolen Honor
''Stolen Honor: Wounds That Never Heal,'' the highly contested anti-Kerry documentary, should not be shown by the Sinclair Broadcast Group. It should be shown in its entirety on all the networks, cable stations and on public television.
בעל כורחו יענה אמן
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B0DE2D9103AF932A15753C1A9629C8B63
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| נשלח ב-31/10/2004 07:06 |
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זיידי, וואס מיינסטו, וועט דער נייער טעיפ פון בין-לאדין העלפן בוש? ווי איך זעה פרובירט קערי צו ציען צימעס דערפון.
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| נשלח ב-31/10/2004 07:39 |
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Saturday October 30, 2004--Three days to go and the race for the White House is getting even closer.
The latest Rasmussen Reports Presidential Tracking Poll shows President George W. Bush with 47.9% of the vote and Senator John Kerry with 47.1%. The Tracking Poll is updated daily by noon
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| נשלח ב-31/10/2004 10:25 |
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דער פרעזידענט שטייגט אין די פאולס
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20041031/ap_on_el_pr/campaign_rdp&cid=694&ncid=716
Poll Shows Bush Moving Ahead of Kerry
APPLETON, Wis. - As President Bush and John Kerry crisscrossed Midwest battleground states Saturday, a new poll showed the incumbent moving ahead of the Massachusetts senator in the popular vote, and Democrats said their private surveys also hinted at momentum for the president.
A Newsweek poll showed Bush ahead of Kerry 50-44 percent. A week ago, the same survey had the race tied. The president briefly opened a small lead in an ABC poll, but it had vanished by Saturday night.
Throughout the battlegrounds, Kerry's mostly paid army of organizers was pitted against Bush's largely volunteer-driven team to get supporters to the polls Tuesday. It's too late for some: Early voting mushroomed this year and, in Florida alone, nearly 2 million voters have already cast ballots.
"It looks like the All-American tradition of voting on Election Day is going out the window," said Fred D. Galey, elections supervisor in Brevard County.
In a presidential race this close, both sides are on the alert for below-the-radar nastiness. Democrats said a bogus letter was circulating in South Carolina, threatening the arrest of voters who had outstanding parking tickets or failed to pay child support.
The congressional races did not lack for intensity, an unexpectedly close Senate campaign in Kentucky among them. "I think we've all broken the Ten Commandments," said Sen. Jim Bunning, accused by his Democratic rival of violating two of them. Dan Mongiardo made his charge after Republicans suggested he is gay, which he denied.
Wrapping up a campaign shadowed by war and terrorism, Bush and Kerry on Saturday responded to the recent Osama bin Laden tape in ways reflecting their long-held campaign strategies.
"It's very helpful to the president," contended Bush ally Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., although the president didn't mention the menacing new message from bin Laden at his first campaign stops on a four-state, 14-hour swing.
Rather, Bush declared, "The terrorists who killed thousands of innocent people are still dangerous and they are determined."
Campaigning 25 miles from the president in eastern Wisconsin, Kerry responded to bin Laden's re-emergence with his months-old criticism of Bush's post-Sept. 11 tactics in Afghanistan, the terrorist mastermind's once and perhaps current home.
"It was wrong to divert our forces from Afghanistan so that we could rush to war in Iraq without a plan to win the peace," said the Democratic challenger. "It was wrong to outsource the job" of capturing bin Laden to local warlords.
The president has sought to offset voter concerns about the war in Iraq, the economy and his overall job performance by fueling fears about terrorism and raising doubts about Kerry's ability to respond.
At his first stop in GOP-leaning western Michigan, the president raised the stakes in the election while reminding voters of the 2001 attacks. "Americans go to the polls at a time of war and ongoing threats unlike any we have faced before," Bush said.
In response to the videotape, the Bush administration warned state and local officials that the tape may be intended to promote or signal an attack on the United States.
Bush brushed aside questions about whether bin Laden was trying to influence Tuesday's election.
"He will not be successful if he is," Bush told Cleveland television station WKYC, in an interview conducted aboard Air Force One. "The American people will not be influenced or intimidated by an enemy of the people."
Kerry has tried to tap deep anti-war sentiment within the ranks of the Democratic Party while assuring swing voters that he would keep them safe. The decorated Vietnam War veteran pledged anew to "destroy, capture, kill Osama bin Laden and all of the terrorists."
With a touch of swagger, Kerry began one sentence by saying, "When I am president," and pledged to provide "leadership and hope" to U.S. troops seeking a quick return home from Iraq.
After his Appleton rally, Kerry handed out campaign literature to volunteers knocking on doors in the battleground state.
With up to 40 states already in the Kerry or Bush camps, the race is concentrated in closely fought Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, New Mexico and Nevada. Another six to 12 states could come into play before their unconventional campaigns draw to a close.
In Maine, a state Bush expects to lose to Kerry, the Democrat poured last-minute money into a Social Security ad aimed at elderly voters in the north. Unlike most states which have a winner-take-all system, Maine awards two of its four electoral votes based on congressional district votes.
Hawaii's four electoral votes drew Democrat Al Gore to the islands he won in 2000. Wearing a green-and-red flower lei, the former vice president tried to shore up Kerry's campaign in the Democratic bastion.
Rock musician Jon Bon Jovi and actor Ashton Kutcher campaigned with Kerry in Iowa, another Gore-won state looking shaky for Democrats. "You have the power to give America a fresh start," Kerry said, borrowing the campaign slogan of former Democratic rival Howard Dean.
Kerry's wife, Teresa Heinz Kerry, meanwhile, joined former President Clinton on the stump in Santa Fe, N.M. Clinton was thinner but sounded strong after quadruple bypass heart surgery seven weeks ago. "This is part of my rehabilitation therapy," he said to cheers. "You're good for my heart."
Vice President Dick Cheney told Pennsylvania Republicans that the bin Laden tape is "a reminder that we are engaged in a global war on terror."
McCain, who has repeatedly campaigned on Bush's behalf, said the terrorists' videotape "focuses America's attention on the war on terrorism. I'm not sure if it was intentional or not, but I think it does have an effect," he said.
Kerry spokesman Mike McCurry rejected Republican assertions that the Democrat was playing politics with the bin Laden tape.
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| נשלח ב-31/10/2004 10:56 |
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ער רעדט צום זאך. דער ניו יורק פאוסט פון היינט
http://www.nypost.com/postopinion/opedcolumnists/31404.htm
HEY, JEWS: WAKE UP!
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By ADAM BRODSKY
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October 31, 2004 -- On Tuesday, my tribe the Jews may blunder big- time, voting maybe 3-1 or more for John Kerry and perhaps giving him the edge.
Which raises a simple question: ARE YOU ALL NUTS?
Jews, the old stereotype suggests, earn like Episcopalians but vote like Puerto Ricans that is, for Democrats.
Al Gore beat George Bush 4-1 among Jews in 2000.
But this election, Jews have more to lose than ever.
Sorry, but I need to be shrill: As Ed Koch (a Jewish Democrat backing Bush) said about Jesse Jackson, Jews would be crazy to pull the lever for John Kerry.
Let's face it: A vote for Kerry is a vote for European anti-Semitism. And terrorists. In Iraq . . . and Israel.
It's a vote for Hamas and Hezbollah, Syria and Iran.
Al Qaeda.
And Arafat, if he's alive.
Think that's over-the-top?
Then why are all these monsters praying for a Kerry win?
Why, in a new tape, do terrorists threaten to massacre Americans for "electing George Bush" and in another does Osama bin Laden deride Bush specifically?
I'll tell you why: Because they fear Bush and see weakness in Kerry.
They believe Kerry will defer to terror-appeasing, Jew-hating France. And "negotiate" with terrorists.
Certainly, there'll be no more "wrong wars in the wrong place at the wrong time" in their sacred Middle East.
As my mom might warn: Who exactly, my co-religionists, do you think they'll come for first?
New York was targeted because it symbolizes Western capitalism and freedom. Such, to Osama & Co., is a product of the Jews (more of whom, by the way, live in New York than Jerusalem). And speaking of Israel, don't Jews care that it's Target No. 1 for Islamists?
To them, Zionists are blaspheming dogs who had the nerve to survive the Nazis and invade the Muslim Middle East.
They must be eradicated.
Will Kerry, a lifelong dove, stop them? Ha.
He wants to defer to the Europeans and the Zionism-is-racism United Nations. "Negotiate" with Iranians. Handcuff U.S. agents by scrapping the Patriot Act.
Kerry spent 30 years trying to cut defense and intelligence spending. He wants Israel to restart a "peace process" that led to a bloody Intifadah. He sees Israel's fence, which has saved lives, as "a barrier to peace."
Kerry may not jettison the Jewish state right away, as Europe hopes. But he'd likely as Charles Krauthammer, William Safire, Edward Lasky and others note move alarmingly in that direction.
Why do Jews support Kerry?
Because they don't like Bush.
They fear the born-again Texan will stack the Supreme Court with anti-abortion zealots.
He'll force Christianity on schools. And give tax cuts to the rich, including (gasp!) Jews.
It's nonsense, of course.
Bush hasn't pushed domestic policy far in that direction, and he's not likely to. Congress, the Constitution and a split electorate won't let him. It would take decades, for instance, to roll back Roe v. Wade, even if it were Bush's top priority.
Meanwhile, Israelis think the world of Bush for his support and for taking out Saddam. (You should have heard those I talked with while in Israel this month.)
And no U.S. shuls (let alone cities) have been hit since 9/11.
For everyone, Jews most of all, the terror-fire that's raging should dwarf all else.
Kerry wants Americans to vote their hopes, not fears — lest he lose. Yet 2,000 years of Jewish history argues otherwise.
In an old joke, two Jews face a Nazi firing squad. The first accepts a blindfold, but the second refuses, prompting his friend to warn, "Don't make trouble."
Bush will make trouble.
And save lives.
It's a powerful reason for Jews, and everyone else, to back him.
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| נשלח ב-1/11/2004 03:58 |
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Presidential Tracking Poll: Bush-Kerry
Updated Daily by Noon Eastern Election 2004
Presidential Ballot
Bush 48.1%
Kerry 47.1%
Other 2.2%
Not Sure 2.6%
RasmussenReports.com
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| נשלח ב-1/11/2004 05:01 |
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אויב קערי וועט פאלירן וועט ער זאגען "I actually won this election before I lost it "
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