Ignores a great deal of what a president must do.
Deans earliest statements about Iraq support complete unilateral invasion of Iraq, simply based on Deans statement that was made in Septemeber of 2002 on Face the Nation:
FTN - 09/29/02
WASHINGTON
Dean:
Look, it's very simple. Here's what we ought to have done. We should have gone to the U.N. Security Council. We should have asked for a resolution to allow the inspectors back in with no pre-conditions. And then we should have given them a deadline saying "If you don't do this, say, within 60 days, we will reserve our right as Americans to defend ourselves and we will go into Iraq."
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/09/30/ftn/printable523726.shtmlAnd a number of other flip flops on unilateral attacks on a number of occasions:
nilateralism
While Dean has repeatedly emphasized his belief that war efforts should be pursued through the U.N., Dean has also appeared willing, at times, to accept unilateral war in Iraq.
As recently as February 2003, just a month before the war began, Dean appeared to accept a unilateral approach in Iraq as a necessary evil.
According to an interview with Salon's Jake Tapper, when Dean was asked to clarify his Iraq position, Dean said that Saddam must be disarmed, but with a multilateral force under the auspices of the United Nations. If the U.N. in the end chooses not to enforce its own resolutions, then the U.S. should give Saddam 30 to 60 days to disarm, Dean said, and if he doesn't, unilateral action is a regrettable, but unavoidable, choice.
Five months before this statement, according to a Des Moines Register report on October 6, 2002, Dean said, "It's conceivable we would have to act unilaterally
, but that should not be our first option."
http://www.thecarpetbaggerreport.com/archives/000940.html
He has also flip flopped on issues regarding his belief that Saddam constituted a threat to the U.S., FIrst stating Saddam did, and then stating he did not.
He has made numerous flip flope on domestic issues such as cutting Social Security, and Medicare, reducing growth of those programs and thne stating that they would be totally off the table for cuts.
He praised Newt Gingrich and the Neo-COn programs for reducing spending on these programs in the mid 90's, repeated the same statements on Meet the Press with Tim Russert, and then when Kucinich nailed him on it, he denied having made the statements, only to have
the media reprint his past statements, and then apologizing for having made them.
How many time does Dean have to flip flop on issues, whether domestic or foreign before it becomes apparent that Dean will simply say anything that the public opinion polls demand that he say in order to get people to support him.
This tendency of Dean to say anything to get what he wants has been ponted out by a number of Vermonters who dealt with him and his administation in Vermont as Governor:
Perspective on Dean from a Vermont Sierra Club Activist
His record is one of opposing just about everything the environmental
lobby supported. He was always there with the lip service as long as there was actually
nothing on the table. He has developed a reputation for saying what his audience wants to
hear, then doing whatever suits him later.
http://www.thomasleavitt.org/personal/blog/index.php?p=311&c=1
Howard Dean: the Progressive Anti-War Candidate?
Some Vermonters Give Their Views
I know that a lot of you are going to vote for Dean -- he talks a good game; he can be charismatic and charming. But I'm warning you. This man will tell you what you want to hear, or at least tell you something that has some little kernel of something that you can interpret as support for the things that are important to you. But when the time comes to stand up and lead on the issue, to take on the money interests and backsliders in his own party, that stiff little spine will turn into a slinky.
http://www.counterpunch.org/jacobs08292003.html
All that is necessary is to go back and look at Deans record and statements on Virtually every issue, from domestic to foreign policy to find a record of complete inconsistancy, and playing to whatever he beleives that an audience wants to hear in order to get him what he wants. Power.
The Bin Laden Statements are simply the latest in a series of inconsitancies that have been the hallmark of Deans camapaign since the day he decided to run.
The fact is, that he has openly contradicted every stance he has taken except the one that has been his guiding star since he first took his first public office in Vermont. That is Fiscal Conservatism based on cutting social programs. That is the only thing that Dean has been consistant in during his entire political career.
He is sure to be as inconsistant in his statements about domestic policy as he has been about foreign policy.
He is certain to revert to the extreme conservative, pro-big-business platform that he followed like a compass as governor.
But that seems to be what we have been trying to get out of the White House since 2000.