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As election predictors go, the Dow Jones has been remarkably
accurate. If the Dow goes up from the end of July to the end of
October, the incumbent president or vice president wins; if it
goes down, the incumbent loses. It has been wrong only four times
since the Dow was created in 1896.
Thus, on Nov. 1, 2000, an article in The New York Times began:
"The verdict of the Dow Jones industrial average is in, and it
says Al Gore is headed for the White House."
And yet Gore lost. It was only the third time in more than a
century that the Dow went up in the three months before the
election and the incumbent lost. The two other times were: (1)
Herbert Hoover in the middle of the Great Depression, and (2)
Hubert Humphrey in the middle of the Vietnam War. (The only time
the Dow went down and the incumbent won anyway was for popular
Dwight Eisenhower.)
So we have documented proof: Americans rank Bill Clinton with
national misfortunes on the order of the Great Depression and the
Vietnam War. (This, of course, is an overreaction: The Great
Depression wasn't that bad.)
And now Bill Clinton has wrecked Hillary's campaign, too. He's
like the creepy guy who graduated last year but still hangs
around the high school cafeteria chatting up sophomores.
In a Time magazine poll taken earlier this year, more than
twice as many voters said Bill Clinton's involvement in Hillary's
campaign made them less likely to vote for her as said they were
more likely to vote for her. (Some even said that "having Bill
Clinton around makes me less likely to vote for What's-Her-Name."
One-third of the respondents were upset Bill didn't call the next
day, like he promised.)
So before remembering that we are now left with two dangerous
choices for president -- a young liberal who is friendly with
terrorists or an old liberal who is friendly with Teddy Kennedy
-- take a moment to revel in the fact that our long national
nightmare is over. It turns out getting rid of the Clintons was
the change we've been waiting for.
COPYRIGHT 2008 ANN COULTER
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