Following are some responses to former Vice President Al Gore's May 26 speech (sponsored by MoveOn.org and delivered at New York University), in which Gore called for the resignation of six top Bush administration officials.
Charles Krauthammer, on FOX News Channel's Special Report with Brit Hume, on May 26:
It looks as if Al Gore has gone off his lithium again.
(Charles Krauthammer is a syndicated Washington Post columnist, Time magazine columnist, and FOX News contributor. He holds a medical degree from Harvard and worked as a resident in psychiatry in the late 1970s before moving to Washington.)
Dennis Miller, host of CNBC's Dennis Miller, on May 26:
At one point I respected Al Gore, but I think he's lost his mind. ... I think he's gone daft because he's a sad little man now.
Mark R. Levin, conservative radio talk show host, as a guest on FOX News Channel's Hannity & Colmes on May 26:
He sounded like and looked like [televangelist] Jimmy Swaggart. He really did.
[...]
And half the country thinks he's [Al Gore is] a mental patient. ... They think he should go back to the dayroom he came out of.
(Mark R. Levin is the president of the Landmark Legal Foundation, a conservative legal advocacy group that has received millions of dollars in funding from right-wing financier Richard Mellon Scaife, according to a dossier by Media Transparency: The Money Behind the Media, a website that tracks grants made to conservative organizations. Levin is also a contributing editor for National Review Online. His nightly radio show is aired on 77 WABC Newstalk Radio, which also airs conservative commentators Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, and Laura Ingraham. He has also been a frequent guest on Hannity's radio show, The Sean Hannity Show.)
Joe Scarborough, host of MSNBC's Scarborough Country, on May 26:
Well, Al Gore is at it again. He just can't help himself, breathlessly attacking the president in a speech today. But will hate speech like this backfire on the Democrats? [text on screen: “Gore's Hate Speech”]
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You know, Al Gore adds to the global warming threat today with his very own thermonuclear meltdown.
Michael Savage, on his nationally syndicated radio show, Savage Nation, on May 26:
We are all sitting here asking ourselves, was there lead in Al Gore's silver spoon, because of the obvious tilt across the river of sanity. He has definitely pulled his raft across the river of sanity, or he has taken the side of the enemy, there's no other explanation for what he has been doing.
(Michael Savage's radio program, Savage Nation, is syndicated by Talk Radio Network and is the third-largest syndicated radio talk show in the nation, reaching 6 million listeners per week. He is the author of two New York Times best-sellers, The Savage Nation: Saving America from the Liberal Assault on Our Borders, Language and Culture and The Enemy Within: Saving America from the Liberal Assault on Our Schools, Faith, and Military -- both published by the conservative WorldNetDaily press WND Books. Savage hosted a short-lived televised version of his show for MSNBC, also called The Savage Nation, before being fired by the cable channel for referring on the air to a caller as a “sodomite” and saying that the caller should “get AIDS and die.”)
John Podhoretz, in a column in the New York Post, on May 27:
[I]t is now clear that Al Gore is insane. I don't mean that his policy ideas are insane, though many of them are. I mean that based on his behavior, conduct, mien and tone over the past two days, there is every reason to believe that Albert Gore Jr., desperately needs help. I think he needs medication, and I think that if he is already on medication, his doctors need to adjust it or change it entirely.
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Gore's speech is the single craziest political performance of my lifetime, and I use the word “craziest” advisedly. The speech, at 6,600 words, was twice as long as Bush's address to the nation on Monday night. The indiscipline shown by the sheer endlessness of Gore's address is a reflection of the psychic morass in which he has become mired.
(John Podhoretz is a New York Post columnist, FOX News Channel contributor, author of Bush Country: How Dubya Became a Great President While Driving Liberals Insane, and former speechwriter for President George H.W. Bush.)
David Frum, in "David Frum's Diary" on National Review Online, on May 27:
Maybe a National Psychological Council would be a good idea after all -- and maybe it could start by advising this former senator, vice president, and two-time presidential candidate that he [Al Gore] ought to seek out for his own good a cool and quiet darkened room.
(David Frum is a contributing editor to National Review, a resident fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, and a regular contributor to National Public Radio and to Great Britain's Daily Telegraph. He is also the author of the 2003 Random House release The Right Man: The Surprise Presidency of George W. Bush.)
Barbara Comstock, in a column published on National Review Online on May 27:
Columnist Charles Krauthammer observed, “Looks as if Al Gore has gone off his lithium again.”
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Outside of MoveOn.org, the biggest cheers for Gore must have been coming from caves in Afghanistan and diehards in Fallujah.
(Barbara Comstock was director of the Office of Public Affairs at the Department of Justice under Attorney General John Ashcroft from December 2001 until September 2003 and is currently a principal at Blank Rome Government Relations, where she serves “as a lobbyist and strategic communications specialist.” She was director of research and strategic planning at the Republican National Committee during the 2000 election. According to the May 13, 1998, issue of The Hill, Comstock was a “close ally” of David Bossie while both served as aides to Representative Dan Burton (R-IL) on the House Government Reform and Oversight Committee. Comstock “also played a key role in [selectively] editing and releasing” controversial transcripts of former Clinton administration official Webster Hubbell's prison conversations -- the incident for which Bossie was fired from the committee.)
James Taranto, on The Wall Street Journal's editorial page website, OpinionJournal.com, in his “Best of the Web Today” column, on May 27:
An Associated Press account of yesterday's speech notes that “Gore, who served in Vietnam, predicted greater problems for America's involvement in Iraq.” The AP apparently means to suggest that Gore suffers from posttraumatic stress disorder, since the Vietnam reference is otherwise a complete non sequitur. But according to WebMD, “symptoms of PTSD usually occur within three months of the traumatic event.” True, “they can occur months or years later” -- but three decades later?
We've got a better theory: Gore, in our view, has cracked under a crushing burden of guilt.
Linda Vester, host of FOX News Channel's DaySide with Linda Vester, on May 27:
Some pundits have said they thought he went off his meds.
Oliver North, as a guest on FOX News Channel's DaySide with Linda Vester on May 27 and on FOX News Channel's Hannity & Colmes that evening:
They should check Gore's medications. [from DaySide with Linda Vester]
Somebody needs to check this guy's medication. This guy has got a problem. [from Hannity & Colmes]
(Oliver North is a nationally syndicated columnist and the host of the weekly FOX News Channel series War Stories with Oliver North. North is also the author of a book -- based on his tour in Iraq embedded with Marine and Army units during Operation Iraqi Freedom -- titled War Stories: Operation Iraqi Freedom (Regnery Publishing, November 2003). The book includes a free DVD featuring an hour-long FOX News Channel episode of War Stories: Operation Iraqi Freedom. According to a Publishers Weekly review, FOX shares copyright on the book.)
Sean Hannity, co-host of FOX News Channel's Hannity & Colmes -- in response to guest Oliver North's comment “Somebody needs to check this guy's medication. This guy has got a problem.” -- on May 27:
He's [Al Gore's] really nuts.
Rush Limbaugh, host of the nationally syndicated radio show The Rush Limbaugh Show, on May 26:
I guess we can't -- get those -- those naked pyramids just not in the national interest to Al Gore. [laughter]
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I mean, it says -- it says a lot about Gore. It says he's perverse, that he would be argue to go confer greater rights on those who seek to murder millions of Americans and calling for even tougher actions to seek them out and destroy them before they destroy us.
What really troubles me about these photos, above and beyond what's in them, is how they're being used to undermine our war effort.