Friday, October 22, 2004

Wolves at the Door: More Kerry Ads I'd Like to See

The Wolves ad provides John Kerry with an excellent opportunity to respond to George Bush's last remaning bastion of support -- the security issue. Here is a response ad I would like to see hit the airwaves as soon as possible:

Fade in on a snarling pack of wolves.
Wolves

V.O.: On September 11, 2001, George Bush, his eye completely off the ball, let the wolves in the door.

Zoom in on one snarling wolf.

V.O.: The nastiest wolf of them all, Osama bin Laden, slipped away from George Bush in Tora Bora because he took his eye off the ball and outsourced our defense to Afghan war lords.

Pan to a close up of another snarling wolf.

V.O.: al-Zarqawi, the newest wolf, was handed his hunting field when George Bush took his eye off the ball and invaded Iraq.

Pan to a close up of two more snarling wolves.

V.O.: The wolves building weapons of mass destruction in Iran and North Korea? George Bush never even had those wolves in his sights.

Zoom out to show the entire pack. A shot rings out. The wolves scatter back into woods.

Cut to John Kerry, wearing a camouflage suit and hat, lowering a rifle from shooting position and turning toward the camera.

Kerry: Don't let George Bush scare you. I hunted these wolves down in Vietnam, and I'll hunt them down now.

Fade out

Here's another one I think the Kerry camp has yet to even try to exploit.

Fade in: George Bush rally.

Bush: The terrorists are not coming here to attack us because they're too busy attacking our boys over there in Iraq. [or whatever it was he exactly said to this effect]

Cut to headlines of American casualties in Iraq.

V.O.: We've lost about one-third as many Americans in Iraq as we did on September 11, 2001.

Cut to headlines of number of American wounded in Iraq.

V.O.: Many thousands more have been wounded there.

Cut to image of weeping mother.

V.O.: George Bush thinks we should protect ourselves by sending our children to die in Iraq. Is that a choice a mother would ever make?

Cut to John Kerry.

Kerry: Not in my America. We don't just talk about family values -- we value families. Now more than ever.

Fade out

Here's another one that plays on the wolves ad and appeals to women:

Fade in on a the pack of wolves in the Bush ad.

V.O.: George Bush knows only one way to appeal to women. Fear!

Cut to John Kerry speaking at a rally on women's issues.

Kerry: [insert appropriate excerpt of Kerry speaking about relevant issues]

V.O.: George Bush has no message for women except fear. John Kerry wants nothing less for women than to help in every way he can.

Fade out.

Finally, since I'm a big hockey fan and have always found that hockey is an excellent metaphor for life:

Fade in: Video of a hockey player throwing a huge body check.

V.O.: Are there any tougher competitors in the world than hockey players?

Cut to video of a hockey player scoring a goal.

V.O.: They have their sights set on goals and will stop at nothing until they achieve them.

Cut to still photo of John Kerry's Yale hockey team with a circle around Kerry.

V.O.: Only one candidate for president will bring the dedication and toughness of the hockey player to the White House.
Unh_kerry_3

Cut to still photo or video of Kerry playing at UNH last January.

V.O.: John Kerry.

Fade out.

OK, maybe that last one is a bit fanicful. Maybe a more experienced advertising professional can come up with something that works. Either way, don't you think showing John Kerry the hockey player would show a tough side of him that might appeal to people who are too lazy to actually research the issues?

Sunday, September 26, 2004

Kerry Ads I'd Like to See

Lies_smears_1
Republican campaign Strategist Ed Rollins admitted this week that his party is trying to scare voters into voting for his party by falsely accusing liberals of wanting to ban the Bible.

Dick Cheney and others have resorted to branding John Kerry as al-Qaeda's candidate, a tactic the New York Times has called "un-American" and "despicable" -- even though Bush has proven to be al-Qaeda's most effective recruiter.

Republican operatives opposed to everything that Ralph Nader stands for have worked hard in key battleground states to get Nader on the ballot solely to siphon votes away from Kerry.

Outright lies have attempted, with partial success, to discredit John Kerry's service in Vietnam. White House spokesman Scott McClellan blatantly lied in saying the Bush campaign wasn't involved in those ads "in any way, shape, or form", a lie exposed almost instantly when Bush campaign staffers had to resign because of their involvement.

Kerry has gotten tougher in his response to these classic Bush tactics, but he still has not hit back in a way that resonates with voters, in the way he is being attacked. That Bush still has even a hope in hell of winning re-election demonstrates how ineffective Democrats have been in exposing his true character and true intentions to an American public that doesn't necessarily understand the issues and accepts baseless innuendo and manipulative lies without question.

Here are a few ads of that type I'd like to see the Kerry campaign use in response to Bush's tactics. The first four are on the overriding issue of combatting terrorism. Despite all the evidence to the contrary, a wide majority of Americans polled believe Bush can protect them against terrorism, a belief that must be disabused.

The first ad emphasizes that Bush has historically had ties to terrorists while Kerry was effective in shutting them down:

Fade in: Dramatic typing, one letter at a time, filling up the screen: B - C - C - I

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "BCCI. Its Pakistani founder used it 'to fight the evil influence of the West' and to finance terrorists and nuclear proliferation."

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "Manuel Noriega and the Medellin cartel used it to launder drug money. Also among its clients were Saddam Hussein and Palestinian terrorist Abu Nidal."

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "In 1987, a BCCI subsidiary loaned George W. Bush's Harken Energy Corporation $25 million. According to the Wall Street Journal, there was a 'mosaic of BCCI connections surrounding Harken since George W. Bush came on board.'"

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "In 1991, John Kerry led the fight against BCCI, 'one of the biggest criminal enterprises in world history.'"

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "One candidate profited from bin Laden's bank of choice. The other candidate shut it down. Who do you want fighting the war on terrorism for you?"

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "George W. Bush says John Kerry doesn't know the enemy. John Kerry not only knows the enemy, he knows how to bust them. Yet another thing George Bush is wrong about."

The next ad was conceived in response to the Bush ad showing John Kerry windsurfing, an ad that Kerry did not do nearly enough to counter. The simple message of that ad that resonates with the electorate even though it is false in claiming that Kerry will go whichever way the wind blows:

Fade in: Smoke billowing from World Trade Center.

Narrator: "Mr. President, do you know which way the wind blows?"

Dissolve to: Bush reading My Pet Goat.

Bush sound bite: "On my watch"

Smoke rising from bombed US army vehicle in Iraq, dissolving back into video of Bush sitting in the My Pet Goat classroom, jump/zoom one step in.

Bush sound bite: "On my watch"

Mushroom cloud with headline superimposed about fear of a North Korea nuclear test, dissolving back into video of Bush sitting in the My Pet Goat classroom, jump/zoom another step in.

Bush sound bite: "On my watch"

Steam rising from cooling towers of nuclear power play with headline superimposed about lax homeland security, dissolving back into video of Bush sitting in the My Pet Goat classroom, jump/zoom another step in and freeze.

Narrator: "Can we afford to trust our watch to someone who does not even know which way the wind blows?"

The third ad on the subject of terrorism paints Bush as ineffective to the point of confusion on capturing Osama bin Laden, and shows how the number of Most-Wanted Terrorists has grown rather than shrunk on his watch:

Fade in: Wild West-style poster of "Osama bin Laden, Wanted Dead or Alive".

Dissolve to George Bush saying at 9/17/2001 press conference: "There's an old poster out West that says, 'Wanted: Dead or Alive.'"

Dissolve back to bin Laden poster, with Bush V.O. from 9/17/2001 press conference: "I don't know whether we're going to get him tomorrow or a month from now or a year from now."

Dissolve back to Bush at 9/17/2001 press conference: "I don't really know."

Dissolve to video of bin Laden, with Bush V.O. from 9/17/2001 press conference: "Gosh, if he's not gotten by this certain moment, then I'll be disappointed."

Cut to Colin Powell saying on 9/10/2004: "I don't know where he is. I believe he is still alive."

Cut back to Bush saying at 9/17/2001 press conference: "You know, Osama bin Laden is just one person.''

Dissolve to FBI wanted poster of al-Zarqawi, with news V.O. about his voice on execution video.

Dissolve to FBI wanted poster of al-Zawahiri, with news V.O. about his voice on al-Qaeda video.

Cut back to Bush at 9/17/2001 press conference, repeating: "I don't know whether we're going to get him. I don't really know."

The fourth ad on the subject of terrorism is not as laced with irony as the rest -- at least not with humorous irony. Instead, it addresses the dead serious irony of how many people directly involved with terrorism and first-response have abandoned Bush in favor of Kerry:

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "Will the homeland really be safer in the hands of President Bush?"

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "His top expert on terrorism, Richard Clarke, resigned his post because of Bush's lack of attention to al-Qaeda before 9/11 and his obsession with Iraq instead of al-Qaeda afterwards."

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "Kristen Breitweister, a registered Republican who voted for President Bush in 2000, and four other 9/11 widows have endorsed John Kerry for president because they say Bush and Cheney 'haven't done enough' to make our country safer."

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "The International Association of Firefighters withdrew its post-9/11 support for President Bush and endorses John Kerry for president because Bush 'opposes programs to hire new fire fighters to improve public safety', while Kerry successfully co-sponsored legislation to 'increase fire-fighting equipment for homeland security.'"

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "The International Brotherhood of Police Officers withdrew its support from President Bush and now endorses John Kerry for president, as does the National Association of Police Organizations, which represents 2,000 police associations across the nation."

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "Americans on the front lines of homeland security know that George Bush has failed to protect our country. You should too."

The fifth ad is a long overdue response to the ceaseless and baseless Bush attacks painting Kerry's stance on the $87 billion Iraq funding bill as anti-troops and flip-floppy, when the truth is that Bush was anti-troop in his zeal to provide pork for Halliburton:

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "John Kerry was in favor of appropriating $87 billion for our troops in Iraq."

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "President Bush threatened to veto the bill unless it awarded more than $20 billion in pork to his friends, cronies like Halliburton."

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "John Kerry voted to fund the bill with a temporary suspension of tax breaks for incomes over $400,000 and to make sure there was no conflict of interest funding companies that still to this day pay salary to certain administration officials."

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "President Bush through his Republican supporters struck these provisions down, along with others meant to protect middle class taxpayers from subsidizing his friends, cronies like Halliburton."

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "John Kerry voted for safety equipment for our troops, for extended medical care for our National Guardsmen, for funds to help troops under fire secure and destroy RPGs and shoulder-launched missiles."

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "President Bush was opposed to the medical care provision, and through his Republican supporters struck down other provisions intended to save lives."

Narrator (over relevant imagery): "Why? Because it would divert pork meant for his friends, cronies like Halliburton."

Narrator (over image of Bush smirking): "President Bush jokes about John Kerry's stance favoring our troops over the profiteers at Halliburton."

Narrator (over image of troops dodging RPGs): "They're not laughing in Iraq."

The final advertisement utilizes excerpts from the 2000 debates between Bush and Gore to demonstrate how Bush has misled the public:

Narrator: "In the 2000 debates, George W. Bush proved he would say anything to be elected."

Bush: "I want everybody who pays taxes to have their tax rates cut."

Narrator (over unflattering freeze frame of Bush): "But not equally -- the richest 1% of Americans got more tax relief than the 60% of Americans who make up the middle class -- combined!"

Bush: "A family in Allentown, Pennsylvania, I campaigned with them the other day. They make $51,000 combined income, they pay about $3500 in taxes. Under my plan, they get $1800 of tax relief."

Narrator (over unflattering freeze frame of Bush): "It will take four years for that middle class family to get that much tax relief from Bush while a family in the richest 1% will get $35,000. In ten years, that middle class family will get $8,000 in relief, a family in the richest 1% will get $340,000."

Bush: "Less dependency upon foreign sources of crude is good for consumers. It's an issue I know a lot about. I was a small oil person for a while in west Texas."

Narrator (over unflattering freeze frame of Bush): "US oil production has declined steadily since 2000 while imports have increased. Oil and gasoline prices have reached all-time highs under Bush."

Bush: "Peace in the Middle East is in our nation's interests. Strong relations in Europe is in our nation's interest."

Narrator (over unflattering freeze frame of Bush): "Four years later, we are at war in the Middle East, our relations in Europe in tatters, and our nation's interest held hostage by fugitive terrorists who have not been captured."

Bush: "That's not the role of a president to decide right and wrong."

Narrator (over unflattering freeze frame of Bush): "Not for a president who has been nothing but wrong."

Saturday, September 04, 2004

The Truth Behind the Lies

Enron_halliburton
Why does John Kerry stand by and allow Bush, Cheney, and their henchmen to continually mock him with his own words and never stand up and expose the truth of the matter? Mr. Kerry, I have taken out just a couple of hours of my free time this Labor Day weekend to research and write the following speech for you covering just one single issue that cries out for exposure -- why can't you get your own people to do this for you? Here it is:

My fellow Americans,

On November 2nd, you will be asked to make a choice for the next President of the United States of America. You will also be asked for something more than that. You will be asked to take a test. You will be asked to take a test on how much attention you pay to what your government, your leadership says and does.

I trust you to delve into the issues and into the record, to be duly diligent in making sure I and my opponents are who we say are and will do what we say we will do. My opponents trust you to simply believe everything they say, without checking their facts. They trust you to simply trust them even though they have consistently lied to you, even about things as important as the war on terror and the war in Iraq, where the very lives of our soldiers and citizens are at stake.

Let's take just one example for starters. My opponent relishes with unabandoned glee to quote me time and again on how I voted on the Emergency Supplemental Appropriations for Iraq and Afghanistan Act, which provides $87 billion for the military and reconstruction efforts in those countries. He quotes me saying I voted for the act before I voted against it, that the issue was a complex matter. To him, it's a big joke, and he expects you to laugh so hard at my expense that you will not take the time to see if he is telling the whole truth on the matter.

To him, and in his mind hopefully to you, my vote was a vote against supporting our military in Iraq, against body armor and other vital military supplies. One of his ads against me even shows me voting "No" to one item after another on which there was in fact no specific vote. Here is the truth: this was a complex act that, in the Senate alone, included 34 individual line items for funding and 93 separate amendments.

By the way, no line item specified body armor -- you will not find the word "body armor" in the bill, just as you would have been loath to find armor on the bodies of nearly 100,000 of our troops when they were first sent into Iraq by our President.

In a "statement of administration policy" on the Emergency Appropriations act, the President clearly stated his position on this act. You can find his statement on one of his web sites. It has the unimaginative but easily remembered name, www.whitehouse.gov.

With respect to the amendments, I quote: "The Administration strongly opposes any such amendments, including an amendment that was accepted by the Senate to provide for expanded benefits under the TRICARE program." That's an amendment to improve health care insurance for reservists and guardsmen sent to Iraq. True to form, our President was opposed to improving health care coverage, even for troops he sent into harm's way in Iraq.

But even though he singled out his opposition to improving health care coverage for reservists and guardsmen sent to Iraq, his position was in opposition to ALL amendments to the emergency appropriations bills. In this case, cooler heads prevailed and the proposed TRICARE coverage was accepted by the Senate. The President did not have to single out many other amendments he was opposed to, because they had already been successfully tabled -- that is, defeated -- by his partisan Republican majority in the Senate.

He did not want to provide, and I quote, "an additional $322,000,000 for safety equipment for United States forces in Iraq and to reduce the amount provided for reconstruction in Iraq by $322,000,000." The President crows in public every chance he gets that I voted against this or against that, but he was the one opposed to an additional $322,000,000 for safety equipment for our troops in Iraq, and he got his way thanks to a partisan Republican vote to table this amendment. And toward what end? So as not to reduce the amount earmarked for Halliburton and others in reconstruction funds.

He also opposed an amendment that would, and again I quote, "prohibit the use of Iraq Relief and Reconstruction Funds for low priority activities that should not be the responsibility of U.S. taxpayers." No, he would rather the U.S. taxpayer fund low priority activities that would profit Halliburton and other companies.

The amendment further attempted to, I quote, "shift $600 million from the Iraq Relief and Reconstruction Fund to Defense Operations and Maintenance, Army, for significantly improving efforts to secure and destroy conventional weapons, such as bombs, bomb materials, small arms, rocket propelled grenades, and shoulder-launched missiles, in Iraq."

Did you get that? Perhaps I should repeat it -- the President was opposed to shifting $600 million, a mere 3% of the $20 billion earmarked for Halliburton and other companies, to help the Army secure and destroy the bombs, small arms, RPGs, and shoulder-launched missiles that were killing our young men and women on the ground on an almost daily basis. And his Republican majority in the Senate successfully defeated this amendment.

And he has the unmitigated gall to stand up in front of you, the nation, and smirk and joke and laugh that I voted against the body armor that he forgot to provide in the first place!

This is why I changed my mind on this bill. I was all for supporting our military in Iraq and Afghanistan. But I was opposed to the roughly one quarter of the $87 billion emergency appropriation going to directly to Halliburton and other such corporations for non-military purposes, even at the expense of our troops on the ground, their health, and their health care.

And I was opposed to how this was to be funded. Senator Byrd attempted to remove most of the Halliburton pork package from the bill right up front, in the second amendment to the bill. The President opposed that, and his Republican majority killed it.

In another amendment, introduced by Senator Biden and co-sponsored by myself and six other senators, we proposed these emergency appropriations be funded by a temporary suspension of a portion of the tax cuts targeted at those who earn $400,000 per year or more. Again, our President opposed, and successfully defeated, our attempt to save the middle class taxpayer from subsidizing Halliburton.

The list goes on. The president was opposed to and defeated, in a partisan vote, amendments to, I quote, "provide emergency relief for veterans healthcare, school construction, healthcare and transportation needs in the United States, and to create 95,000 new jobs. To require that Iraqi oil revenues be used to pay for reconstruction in Iraq. To amend the Internal Revenue Code to improve tax equity for military personnel. To achieve the most effective means of reconstructing Iraq and to reduce the future costs to the American taxpayer."

I did not vote "No" against body armor and other funds intended to protect our troops. I voted "No" time and again against the tabling, the defeat of these amendments -- an amendment for emergency health care for veterans, an amendment to require that American taxpayers be paid back out of Iraqi oil revenues, another to make the tax code more equitable for military personnel, and one to reduce the cost burden of reconstructing Iraq on the American taxpayer.

In each case, the President killed this support for veterans, for military personnel, for U.S. taxpayers -- except of course for those who earn $400,000 a year or more.

Finally, to add insult to injury, the President opposed and killed an amendment that would, and once again I quote directly from the text of the amendment, "prohibit the use of funds for any contract or other financial agreement or arrangement with any entity that pays compensation in the form of deferred salary to certain United States Government officials." I think you know which certain goverment official is still on the payroll of a certain entity granted generous contracts, without competitive bids, in Iraq. That would be our Vice President, Dick Cheney, and the company he once headed as CEO, Halliburton.

And as if that wasn't enough, he opposed and killed an amendment "to eliminate the flexibility given to the President to reallocate all of the $20.3 billion Iraq Relief and Reconstruction Funds, without approval by Congress." I suppose he didn't want to have to go through the motions of killing off our attempts to control his wild spending on behalf of his corporate friends, since his lock-step Republican majority in the Senate gave him what he wanted anyway.

Or maybe he just didn't want to leave a highly public paper trail, like the votes on these amendments, that you, the voter, could later use to hold him accountable for consistently favoring Halliburton, despite its conflict of interst with respect to Vice President Cheney, and the wealthiest of American taxpayers, at the expense of military personnel under fire on the ground in Iraq, veterans in need of health care back home, and the middle class taxpayers who have to fund his Iraqi miscalculation.

This is the truth of the matter. These are the complexities that I ended up voting against after initially supporting the simple matter of funding our troops in the manner most cost-effective for our taxpayers. My opponent calls this a flip-flop -- I stand by my convictions that this was a deceitful fleecing of middle-class America that put our troops in further danger so that special interests directly tied to the administration could benefit financially.

This is what you will be voting on in November. Will you look into the truth of these matters and understand what this is really about? Or will you simply laugh at the cynical jokes of a President who has lied to you every step of the way? That's what they want you to do -- to laugh all the way to November 2nd. My fellow Americans, this is no laughing matter.

Wednesday, August 04, 2004

Results Matter Indeed

This_land
On July 30, in a speech in Springfield, Missouri, shortly after the conclusion of the Democratic National Convention, in which nominee John Kerry said repeatedly, "We can do better," George W. Bush, aka King George II, picked up the challenge and, oblivious to the possibility that people would go back and check, said repeatedly, "Results matter." Results matter indeed.

Well, people did go back and check. The Kerry campaign responded quickly with some quick hits on the issues Bush mentioned in the same sentence as "Results matter" -- education, health care, employment, and security. I'm sure many others took him to task as well. I want my turn too, so here it is -- the results, at least those that matter...

Number of US and allied troops dead and wounded in Iraq:
139 US troops dead, 542 wounded during major fighting (March and April 2003)
775 US troops dead, 5434 wounded since war was “won” (Since 5/1/03 -- Bush having declared "Mission accomplished" after landing on an aircraft carrier on 5/2/03)
914 total US troops dead, 5976 total wounded
122 non-US coalition troops and at least 120 contractors also killed in Iraq

[US casualties are as reported by US Department of Defense as of 7/24/04 and summarized with links to DoD by icasualties.org. All others are as reported by icasualties.org with links to sources. Updates can be found here.]

Number of Iraqi dead in Iraq:
3,572 Iraqi troops and civilians reported killed on 4/8/03 with major fighting ongoing
International Red Cross declared Iraqi casualties “too high to count” at around the same time
Iraqi Health Ministry halted attempts to count civilian casualties (12/03)
11,000 (perhaps more than 13,000) Iraqi deaths reported by Iraq Body Count based on published reports as of 8/1/04

Number of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) found in Iraq after the invasion: 0
Number of nations renouncing WMD since invasion of Iraq: 1 (Lybia)
Number of nations renouncing nuclear weapons for reasons other than military defeat before invasion of Iraq: 15, including at least three during the Clinton administration, one of which was Iraq -- (Sweden 1960s, Egypt 1967, Australia 1969, Switzerland 1969, Taiwan 1970s, South Korea 1975, Argentina 1983, Jugoslavia 1987, Rumania 1989, South Africa 1989, Belarus 1991, Ukraine 1991, Kazakhstan 1995, Iraq 1996, Brazil 1998)
Number of nations continuing to actively pursue WMD since invasion of Iraq: 14 (Nuclear, Chemical, and Biological: Iran and North Korea; Chemical and Biological: Taiwan; Chemical: India, Egypt, Syria; Biological: Cuba; and the 7 known (plus one highly suspected) nations with nuclear weapon stockpiles: US, UK, France, Russia, China, Israel, India, Pakistan)

Number of Iraqi-sponsored attacks vs. US before invasion of Iraq since Clinton bombed Iraq in response to attempted assassination of former president Bush: 0
Number of terrorist attacks in Iraq since the invasion: multiple daily occurrences
Number of Anti-American terrorist attacks after 9/11 and invasion of Afghanistan, and before invasion of Iraq (calendar year 2002): 77 attacks resulting in 27 deaths
Number of Anti-American terrorist attacks in the year of the invasion of Iraq (calendar year 2003): 82 attacks resulting in 35 deaths (not including attacks on US troops in Iraq, which are considered acts of war, not acts of terrorism, by the reporting agency, the State Department)
Iraqi ties to al-Qaeda before invasion of Iraq (including 9/11): none
Number of "foreigners" including Al-Qaeda terrorists operating against the U.S. in Iraq today: hundreds or more

Number of U.S. tax dollars committed to rebuilding Iraq: estimated $14.5-19.5 billion (the difference being contracts that are worth at least $500,000 but possibly as much as $500 or 600 million each)
Percentage of those U.S. tax dollars committed to Bechtel, Fluor, and Halliburton for work in Iraq: 60% of $14.5 billion estimate, 53% of $19.5 billion estimate -- at least $1.5 billion and perhaps over $3 billion for Flour, over $2.8 billion to Bechtel, and over $4.3 billion in what is really an open-ended contract to Halliburton subsidiary Kellogg, Brown and Root (KBR).
Number of former Secretaries of State serving on the boards of Bechtel and Halliburton: 2 (Nixon Secretary of State George Schultz for Bechtel and George I's Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger for Halliburton)
Number of former Halliburton CEO's currently serving as Vice President of the U.S.A: 1 (Dick Cheney)
Number of former Fluor CEO's overseeing the restructuring of Iraq's oil industry: 1 (Phillip J. Carroll Jr., still a major personal shareholder in Fluor, currently serving as Chairman of the board advising Iraq's Oil Minister)
Number of other companies with Iraq reconstruction contracts potentially worth more than $1 billion each with direct ties to Bechtel, Flour, or Halliburton: 2 out of 4, not including Bechtel, Fluor, or Halliburton (Parsons Corp., founded by Bechtel co-founder Ralph Parsons, with over $2.3 billion in contracts, one third of which was intended for Halliburton before public criticism caused reconsideration, and Washington Group, awarded contracts worth as much as $1.6 billion, with four top executives formerly employed by Halliburton or Fluor).
Number of companies from among Bechtel, Fluor, and Halliburton penalized since 2000 by the US government for fraud, bid rigging, and other irregularities: all 3 (plus Fluor joint venture partner AMEC)

Status of Mullah Omar: at large
Status of Osama bin Laden: at large
Number of bin Laden family members allowed to begin their flight out the US to Saudi Arabia on 9/13/01: 24
Number of stranded American civilians allowed to fly home between 9/11 and 9/13: 0

Price of a gallon of regular gas on 2/22/99: $0.89
Price of a gallon of regular gas on 1/1/01: $1.38
Price of a gallon of regular gas on 5/24/04: $2.02
Increase in gas prices during Bush adminstration: 34% (compared to 12.8% increase during prior four-year presidential term)
Increase in crude oil prices during Bush adminstration: 66% (up from 4.6% increase during prior four-year term)
Change in gas prices between now and Election Day: Don't know -- spike in crude oil prices suggests gasoline will go up, but politics suggests a continued decline right on through October (unless you believe former oil exec Dick Cheney when he says it's the Democrats' fault)

Decline in the S&P 500 from November 2000 until today: over 20% (up from 45% decline by Summer, 2002)
Decline in the NASDAQ from November 2000 until today: over 50% (up from nearly 75% decline by Summer, 2002)

Increase in federal budget deficit during Bush adminstration: from $33.3 billion in 2001 to $536.1 billion in 2003 (compared to prior administration reducing deficit from over $300 billion in 1993 to a surplus of over $85 billion in 2000)
Increase in national debt during Bush adminstration through 2003: 18% (compared to 12% decrease during prior four-year term)
Increase in government spending during Bush adminstration through 2003: 20.6% (compared to 14.6% increase during prior four-year term)

Increase in trade deficit in 2003: over $530 billion, an all-time record high deficit
Projected trade deficit in first quarter of 2004: very nearly $145 billion, higher than any quarter in record deficit year of 2003
Increase in real GDP during Bush adminstration: 9% (down from over 15% growth during prior four-year term)

Growth in civilian labor force during Bush adminstration: 2.4% (down from 6.1% growth during prior four-year term)
Growth in non-farm payroll employment during Bush adminstration: just about none (down nearly 1%, after 9.2% growth during prior four-year term)
Growth in number of unemployed during Bush adminstration: 37.5% (number of unemployed declined by over 16% during prior four-year term)
Growth in unemployment rate during Bush adminstration: 33.3% (rate declined by over 20% during prior four-year term)
Growth in average hourly earnings during Bush adminstration: 9.7% (down from 16.3% growth during prior four-year term)
Growth in disposable income per capita during Bush adminstration: 6% (down from over 12% growth during prior four-year term despite tax cuts of over 20% during Bush administration)

Annual growth in poverty rate during Bush administration through 2002: 4.75% (compared to 2.5% annual decline 1993-2000)

King George II loves to talk about farmers and small businessmen. Even to them, results should matter:

Growth in net value added to US economy by agricultural sector (annual average) during Bush administration: 3%
Growth in payments to stakeholders (annual average) during Bush administration: 11.3% -- stakeholders are those who own stakes in farms but do not operate them themselves
Decline in net farm income (annual average) during Bush administration: 3.75%
Annual growth in farm household income during Bush adminstration through 2003: 2.6% (down from 7.4% annual growth from 1995 to 2001)
Annual growth in farm equity during Bush adminstration through 2003: 4.2% (down from 5.2% annual growth from 1995 to 2001)

[In case you need help interpreting these numbers, they mean that all of the modest growth in agriculture under Bush, and then some (actually, a lot more than "some"), did not go to farmers themselves, but to their non-farmer investors.]

Annual growth in direct government payments to farms during Bush adminstration through 2003: 8% annual decline (down from over 30% annual growth from 1995 to 2001)

Increase in small business bankruptcies during Bush adminstration through 2002: 8.3% (compared to decline of nearly 35% during prior four-year term)
Increase in small business terminations during Bush adminstration through 2002: 7.7% (compared to 2.4% during prior four-year term)
Decrease in small business start-ups during Bush adminstration through 2002: 4.2% (compared to increase of 2.8% during prior four-year term)

I'm sure there are some positive accomplishments one could cite for King George II, some results that reflect well upon him. But consdering what is on this list, do any of those results really matter?

One positive result achieved over the past three years may indeed matter greatly to Bush -- there has been a shift of six electoral college votes from states that went to Gore to states that went to Bush (from states like New York, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, and Illinois to states like Texas, Florida, Arizona, Georgia, and Colorado).

The changes took place in 2002 based on the 2000 census, and including some changes in the other direction (from Bush state Mississippi to Gore state California) is clearly the result of population shifts from north to south, east to west, and to states with newly created jobs (e.g. Georgia, Texas, Colorado). So no one is going to make a case that the results were rigged in any way. Still, it means Bush has at least four more electoral college votes in the bag (we won't count Florida just yet) than he had in 2000.