John Kerry

What are the best sites about John Kerry? We’ve started with these. What else should be here?

1. JohnKerry.com - John Kerry’s official Web site is a holdover from the Massachusetts senator’s 2004 presidential campaign. Today it offers Kerry’s stands on certain issues and is used to promote Democratic candidates and issues. (www.johnkerry.com)

2. Kerry Offers No Apologies for Iraq Comments - Video of John Kerry’s controversial remarks on Iraq (”Education, if you make the most of it, you study hard, you do your homework and you make an effort to be smart, you can do well. And if you don’t, you get stuck in Iraq.”) as well as his later press conference in which he says the statement was a botched joke that really meant the uneducated end up launching a war in Iraq like George W. Bush did. In the video, Kerry is adamant that he won’t apologize, that his remarks were intended as a condemnation of Bush’s poicies in Iraq and not a slam of U.S. troops. (www.washingtonpost.com)

3. Kerry - Democratic blogger expresses his displeasure with John Kerry but says his words have nothing to do with any other Democratic candidate and that “the righteous indignation from the right this afternoon is tedious.” (www.theagitator.com)

4. John Kerry Made It Crystal Clear Alright - “John Kerry is no more than the heart and soul of the Democrat Party writ large. He embodies liberal Democrat antagonism against the United States Military.” (www.thewideawakecafe.com)

5. John Kerry: A Candidate In The Making - First in a multi-part series by The Boston Globe tracing John Kerry’s life from childhood to his run for president in 2004. (www.boston.com)

6. SwiftVets.com - Web site of the “Swift Vets and POWs for Truth” which waged a campaign against John Kerry during the 2004 presidential election. (www.swiftvets.com)

7. Statement of John Kerry - 1971 statement by John Kerry before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, in which Kerry, a Vietnam veteran, spoke out against the war and made some controversial allegations concerning actions by U.S. troops in Vietnam. (www.richmond.edu)

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