"Kerry is going to be commander in chief of what, spit balls!!?" -----Democratic Senator Zell Miller (regarding Kerry's long-standing voting record in Congress of failing to support basic military weapons).
Miller's attacks on Kerry were misleading and out-dated. He slammed Kerry for opposing bombers, fighters, and helicopters. That WAS true -- 20 years ago -- but not lately.
First of all, Miller didn't say that Kerry voted against the weapons on the list he rattled off, only that he OPPOSED them. And indeed Kerry did, in 1984, as a candidate for the Democratic nomination for Senate from Massachusetts.
All the weapons cited by Miller are listed in a memo from the 1984 Kerry campaign. Once elected, however, Kerry's voting record evolved. He did cast votes more than a decade ago against the B-2 Stealth Bomber in 1989, 1991 and 1992. But by 1992 even President Bush (the current incumbent's father) was calling for cancellation of the B-2 and promising to cut military spending by 30% in the wake of the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Republicans have also accused Kerry of voting against more mainstream weapons including the M-1 Abrams tank and the Bradley Fighting Vehicle, but have been unable to cite any specific votes against those weapons. The best they can do is point to occasional votes Kerry cast against the entire Pentagon budget, which hardly constitutes opposition to any specific weapon.
Kerry voted against the entire Pentagon appropriations bills in 1990 and 1995. Kerry also voted against the Pentagon authorization bills (which provide authority to spend but not the actual money) in those years and also in 1996 . However, he hasn't opposed an annual Pentagon appropriation since then, nor did he do so in 16 of his 19 years in office. So by the Republicans' own measuring stick, Kerry voted *for* the weapons they list far more often than he voted against them.
Kerry himself conceded that some of the positions he took 20 years ago were "ill-advised, and I think some of them are stupid in the context of the world we find ourselves in right now and the things that I've learned since then." That was in an interview published in June, 2003 in the Boston Globe. "I mean, you learn as you go in life," Kerry was quoted as saying. He added that his subsequent Senate voting record on defense has been "pretty responsible."
Bush too has had to "learn as he goes" in life, as we all have. Should we call turning away from a life of drugs and booze to find Jesus a "flip-flop"?
lingshu8