Dean is bad medicine for Dems
George Will:
"Arthur Goldberg was a fine public servant -- secretary of labor, Supreme Court justice, ambassador to the United Nations -- but a dreadful candidate for governor of New York in 1970, when it was said that if he gave one more speech he would lose Canada, too. Howard Dean is becoming Goldbergean.
"Regarding foreign policy, Dean recently said not only that America is no safer because Saddam Hussein was captured but that America is 'no safer today than the day the planes struck the World Trade Center.' Well. He says he supported the war to remove the Taliban in Afghanistan, although he thinks it made us no safer. And even though he says the war in Iraq made us no safer, he says he would 'not have hesitated' to attack Iraq if the United Nations had given us 'permission.'
"Because Dean's foreign policy pronouncements have been curiouser and curiouser, his recent speech on domestic policy did not get the attention it deserved for its assertion that America is boiling with 'anger and despair.' Republicans are, Dean says, trying to 'dismantle' the welfare state -- presumably when they are not enriching Medicare's entitlement menu -- and they aim 'to end public education.' "
George Will:
"Arthur Goldberg was a fine public servant -- secretary of labor, Supreme Court justice, ambassador to the United Nations -- but a dreadful candidate for governor of New York in 1970, when it was said that if he gave one more speech he would lose Canada, too. Howard Dean is becoming Goldbergean.
"Regarding foreign policy, Dean recently said not only that America is no safer because Saddam Hussein was captured but that America is 'no safer today than the day the planes struck the World Trade Center.' Well. He says he supported the war to remove the Taliban in Afghanistan, although he thinks it made us no safer. And even though he says the war in Iraq made us no safer, he says he would 'not have hesitated' to attack Iraq if the United Nations had given us 'permission.'
"Because Dean's foreign policy pronouncements have been curiouser and curiouser, his recent speech on domestic policy did not get the attention it deserved for its assertion that America is boiling with 'anger and despair.' Republicans are, Dean says, trying to 'dismantle' the welfare state -- presumably when they are not enriching Medicare's entitlement menu -- and they aim 'to end public education.' "
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