| REVIEWER | RATING & REVIEW |
 | bibliophile (10) 09/27/2004 | Absolutely true, though this is nothing new or unique in politics. People within this administration do seem to have elevated it to an art form, though.
(1 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | CapAnson (1) 09/17/2004 | This argument is absurd on the face of it.. Business runs the engine that is the American economy.. It kind of like saying.. the President believes in the free market.. impeach him!
(2 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | VirileVagabond (36) 08/11/2004 | Pandering to big business is another issue that doesn't really resonate with voters, save for those who will vote Democrat anyway. Hell, most people don't really understand what a corporation is, much less the public policy reasons why they exist. Nevertheless, those who complain about this issue would be the first ones to complain when the loss of economies of scale starts to hit their cost of living.
(0 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | sld31879 (0) 08/04/2004 | Not the magic bullet, but I think the corruption of this administration could be set out in a way that would hurt Bush quite a bit and I think Edwards would be the perfect man to do it. If he doesn't go after Cheney on this one in the debates they're nuts.
(0 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | Joe23665 (0) 07/19/2004 | IS big business. As that veritable fount of educated thought Dick Cheney would say, go ...
Well never mind. I think you know what he would say.
(0 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | Opie Onion (0) 07/11/2004 | What do you expect? He's Republican. To hell with the environment, the working man, education, health care and all that other stuff rich people don't need to or care to think about. One thing about Bush is that he took a party steeped in the ideals of the 1950's and in 3-short years brought this country back to the 1750's. I guess you could say that on some level he's effective!?!
(3 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | jgls (12) 05/08/2004 | populist issues generally don't resonate with the american people, and it can be said that this argument could be made against every republican nominee for the last 100 years.
(1 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | Enkidu (37) 05/03/2004 | The really big issue right now is the extreme result of the right-wing mania to privatize everything: we are now privatizing the MILITARY. Look at the abuses that are just now coming out: we farm out military duties such as security, and interrogation, to private companies: who is accountable? An employee is accountable ultimately to STOCKHOLDERS. Quarterly PROFIT. Don't you see a problem with this?? Torture an Iraqi, lose your job. What's next: the Shell Division, the Mobil Recon Battalion, the Chevron-Texaco Armored Brigade?
(4 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | mgirl5758 (0) 04/27/2004 | He is most certainly for big business. That is evident in everything he does!
(0 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | StanUzbeck (15) 04/19/2004 | So will John Kerry. He may attack Bush for doing this, but Bush will only attack him right back for the exact same thing, making Kerry look like the hypocrite he is. Bush and Kerry are practically the same person, so the entire system needs and overhaul.
(1 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
 | magellan (164) 04/08/2004 | This is an interesting one. Bush would do well to drop Cheney and pick up someone as VP who is beyond reproach.
(2 voted this helpful, 0 funny and 0 agree) |
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