Joho the Blog
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July 07, 2004
From the NY Times:
I understand the argument that Edwards isn't experienced enough to be president - although he's got more experience than W had in 2000 - but does the Bush campaign really want us to dwell on the testicle-shriveling possibility of President Cheney? Posted
by D. Weinberger at July 7, 2004 03:09 PM
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Comments
For Kerry's sake, I hope so.
Posted by: Zach | July 7, 2004 03:20 PM
David, I don't think you're suggesting testicular atrophy (sometimes due to elevated levels of estrogen secondary to alcoholism) when you say "shriveling." You're probably thinking of (and God knows why), the cremasteric reflex.
"Cremasteric reflex. This reflex is elicited in males by stroking the upper inside of the thigh. In response, the testis on the same side is elevated by contracting [cremaster] muscles."
I think this is most commonly encountered during the innocent-sounding "inseam measurement."
But, you're probably thinking of an autonomic sympathetic response as in flight or fight as it relates to fear. In either case you don't want to be flapping in the breeze.
Would one be considered a knee-jerk (patellar reflex) liberal by using this metaphor?
Posted by: Bill K. | July 7, 2004 07:52 PM
I'm sure Dubya'd rather we thought of Cheney as POTUS versus encouraging us to think of his own lack of credentials for POTUS. Multiple failed businesses under his belt, bailed out and employed in some cases because of his daddy's standing rather than any singular talents of his own, remembered for his ability to tell raunchy jokes...yes, I'm sure Dubya'd rather we thought about Cheney as a potential POTUS.
Even if it makes us want to dry heave.
Posted by: Rayne | July 8, 2004 12:36 AM
How does a twice elected Gov. rank as less experience than a Senator who has yet to run for reelection. I understand you don't like Bush but at least get your facts correct.
Posted by: Thomas Vincent | July 8, 2004 03:08 AM
Governor vs. Senator.
E.g., remember how Candidate Bush couldn't get the names of any of them furren leaders right, until someone studied him up real good? Edwards is on the Senate Intelligence Committee and comes in far better prepared to lead America in the world of nations.
Posted by: David Weinberger | July 8, 2004 07:53 AM
gonad shrivelling would be more correct....
Posted by: Elaine | July 8, 2004 08:18 AM
Elaine, totally. I'm not sure if it makes it worse or better, but I thought about the gender assumption I was making with my comment before I made it. "Gonad shriveling" just doesn't have the comedic punch, though.
Posted by: David Weinberger | July 8, 2004 10:57 AM
I took the comment to mean, simply, that - since Cheney is a VP and Edwards is not (yet...perhaps never will be) - Cheney can theoretically become a president. Edwards, as of this writing, and as of the interview, cannot.
Although there's not "there there" in the answer, it was rather succinctly put. Almost funny, even...
Posted by: Ed Murray | July 8, 2004 12:51 PM
It's good that Bush used that line, though. Because apparently the pick of Edwards has given Kerry some balls, as evidenced by his response to Bush's remark, which went something like the paraphrase: "Cheney can be President. He has been since Day One."
Posted by: The One True b!X | July 8, 2004 07:21 PM
Edwards age does not bother me, but Kerry's declaring of problems with NO solutions does. Bush needs to speak and do more regarding this economy, healthcare, frivolous lawsuits, etc.
I can't stand all the politics...
Posted by: Jim | July 14, 2004 07:17 AM
From 1957 when the first Special Forces teams in Vietnam began training the nucleus of the Vietnamese Special Forces and Airborne Ranger units, the Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV) had strongly resisted any proposal that the SF be used in their basic mission of operating in the enemy's rear areas. This was due to a number of reasons; principally the caveat imposed that US Forces not engage in combat and they not go into Laos, Cambodia or North Vietnam. Secondly, President Nixon's blessing on Special Forces at Fort Bragg infuriated the higher commands who had been trying to squash Special Forces for years.
Investigative reporter, Simon Marshall in Cheney: The Story He Cannot Tell (Doubleday) to be released next month, reveals Dick Cheney was recruited into a secret black-ops team called Alpha Major within the Special Forces. Although he "took to the training like a salami to a pizza" it quickly became apparent that Cheney was one of the anti-gods who would not play the game according to the rules of war. Additionally, in defiance to Army regulations, when Cheney went into the field, he defied orders that the officially-damned beret of the Green Beret would not be worn.
As soon as he jumped into an operational area during maneuvers, he violated the official regulations against "the wearing of the green" and gleefully turned many maneuvers into chaos. In an early 501s maneuver Louisiana, Cheney and some of his buddies turned road signs around, sending convoys of equipment, rations and fuel heading off into completely different directions than intended. Units preparing for an assault were visited at night, preceding their assault, and received a briefing by a "Lt. Col Cheney" who brought XVIII Airborne Corps' revision to their original attack plan, sending their regiment in another direction, in which they attacked one of their own units.
The confusion caused the Commanding General of XVIII Airborne Corps to stop the operations. All Alpha Major personnel were sent back to Fort Bragg and the maneuvers resumed. However, upon return to Fort Bragg, the Commanding General wrote a new regulation which made the wearing of the beret a Courts Martial offense.
The North Vietnamese Army (NVA) and their southern cousins the Viet Cong (VC) operated with impunity in the sparsely-settled countryside. One reason was the excellent camouflage discipline of the NVA and the fact that most of their movement was at night. While bombing raids on the trail caused some delays, the absence of ground action against their main supply route permitted the NVA to move staggering amounts of men and material into South Vietnam to prepare for an extended war.
The NVA established power bases in South Vietnam from the rugged mountains of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) a strip of land extending from the Yellow Sea to the borders of Laos, established to divide North and South Vietnam and Central Highlands in the north to the jungles, rice paddies and flat expanses of the Mekong Delta in the South. In the South, in addition to using the natural camouflage of the jungles, the VC dug and lived in miles of sophisticated caves and tunnels. MACV intelligence analysts were certain that these bases existed, but the enemy's strict camouflage and security discipline made the bases almost impossible to locate by air reconnaissance.
The only American troops which might be in position to challenge them were Cheney's men aligned along these borders. They also suffered the most from the enemy' utilization of the zone to Marshall their troops to attack the SF camps. Small wonder the battered teams began to feel the buffer zone was MACV's revenge and that a courts martial for violating the zone was preferable to filling the insides of body bags. Instead of stopping at the zone, they began to follow enemy troops across and attacking them in their bivouac areas.
Cheney was careful to insure that the map coordinates given higher headquarters for any troop movements or operations were well out of the zone. A little judicious lying, perhaps, but the A-Teams in the field had little or no support in the event they were attacked. Cheney and his team were responsible for dramatically shortening the war, wrote Military brass began court marshal proceedings against Cheney when it was discovered that his team violated border restrictions on a regular basis. But with Nixon's intercession they agreed to give Cheney an honorable discharge and swore Cheney to silence. An oath that he has kept to this day despite the fact that he's been derided constantly for the seeming lack of military service.
Dick Cheney is truly an American Hero.
Stacy
Posted by: Dr. Stacy Ingersol | September 6, 2004 10:01 AM