Bob Dole refuses to go away.

 June 16, 2008            

What did Bob Dole want from Tim Russert. If the intellectually bankrupt Republican thinks he has something to offer, he is wrong. Tim Russert is the competent journalist who is irreplaceable, Bob Dole's hateful rhetoric is not welcome, anywhere -and the sooner he goes away, the better.


  He found his niche when he marketed viagra what does he think he can offer, through his crass effort to control the media?
 
  DOLE: Well, I am a little surprised because I remember in ‘96, of course, Clinton didn’t have a record and the liberal media didn’t want to say much about my record. So it never really became—you know… I guess “The New York Times” may have said I was a veteran, that’s about as far as they went.

So this time you’ve got a candidate named John Kerry who had a good record in Vietnam, came back from the service, denounced the war, in effect, trashed the Americans who were still fighting there. Went before a Senate committee in April of 1971, threw away his ribbons or his medals or whatever and now is standing before the American people and saying you’ve got to elect me because I’m this Vietnam hero.

And it’s kind of hard to reconcile all of these things. So it does sort of bring up focus that I don’t think we’ve had in the past.

Bob Dole made 63 appearances on Tim Russert's 'Meet the Press', John McCain is second on the list of frequent attendees, he had made 52 appearances, and I don't think anybody is going to miss them for anything they have to say.

Clearly, it's time for both of them, to go away.


Rhetoric like the above proves that Dole is a senile imbecille who does not appreciate the fact that there is no such thing as a "Liberal" media. The media is fair or it is biased, and his moronic effort to "conservatize" the so called Liberal media is a total waste of public time.

On June 8, 2008, Tim Russert said the following, and it will be the final word, unless another election is stollen.

MR. RUSSERT: Which, which leads me to Robert F. Kennedy. We're going to talk about him in our "Meet the Press Minute." But look at this. He gave a speech to the Voice of America all around the world 40 years ago. And despite what was going on in the country, particularly in Alabama, Bobby Kennedy said this: Things are "moving so fast in race relations a Negro could be president in 40 years." This is in 1968, we're now in 2008. "`There's no question about it,' the attorney general said. `In the next 40 years a Negro can achieve the same position that my brother has.' ... Kennedy said that prejudice exists and probably will continue to ... `But we have tried to make progress and we are making progress. We are not going to accept the status quo.'" Extraordinarily prescient, which leads us to our "Meet the Press Minute." Just after midnight on June 5, 1968, Robert F. Kennedy proclaimed victory in the California primary.


Next: Meet the Prosecutor: Vincent Bugliosi wants George Bush to be prosecuted for murder.  
 

 
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