Where do Wesley Clark and nearly 50 million Americans part ways?By Michael Paranzino, October 4, 2003
Let’s see here. Until moments ago, Wesley Clark was a registered lobbyist. Not exactly what primary-voting Democrats profess to like. He was praising one President named Ronald Reagan and two named George Bush, and was raising money for the GOP. Strike two. And he is a soldier. Oops. That’s the ultimate crime on the Left.
Clark seems to think that being a dove now forgives him for wearing the uniform all those years. But why would Democrats vote for a newly-converted dove when Howard Dean offers them the real thing?
But Wesley Clark has a fourth problem, and given the headlines of the last two weeks, this could actually dwarf the other three.
Remember those 51 million phone numbers on the national do not call list? (I’m not sure how many Americans are represented by that number, since some will have registered multiple phone lines—that’s why I call it “nearly 50 million” Americans.) Those folks apparently value their privacy.
The political power of this group was made abundantly clear by the lightning quick speed with which Congress acted to back the federal do not call list.
While all this was going on, Wesley Clark was just getting around to ending his federal lobbying contract for a company called Acxiom. (He’s still on the Board of Directors, along with, among others, the former Postmaster General of the U.S. Postal Service and Clinton/Kissinger-pal Thomas F. “Mack” McLarty III.)
You may not have heard of Acxiom, but Acxiom has heard of you. If you are like 95% of Americans, Acxiom knows your name, Social Security number, income level, martial status, number of children, vehicles owned, and probably that furious bout you had with hemorrhoids a few years back (next time, pay in cash and don’t use your supermarket Bonus Card when you buy that Preparation H!). And they don’t just know it, they share it with anyone who will pay.
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http://www.rightpolicy.com/clark.htm