Barry Glassner Quote

By the time George Bush’s re-election campaign got under way in 2004, there was little doubt he’d make terrorism the focal point of all of his speeches and press conferences. His surrogates went farther still, overtly portraying a vote for his Democratic rival, Senator John Kerry, as an invitation to annihilation. If we make the wrong choice, Vice President Dick Cheney warned a Des Moines audience, the danger is that we’ll get hit again—that we’ll be hit in a way that will be devastating from the standpoint of the United States. In May, just prior to the Democratic Convention, Attorney General John Ashcroft announced that al Qaeda’s preparations for an attack were 90 percent complete; immediately after the convention, the Department of Homeland Security issued yet another terrorist alert, which diverted America’s attention away from Kerry and back to the wartime president, George Bush. The strategy worked.

Barry Glassner

By the time George Bush’s re-election campaign got under way in 2004, there was little doubt he’d make terrorism the focal point of all of his speeches and press conferences. His surrogates went farther still, overtly portraying a vote for his Democratic rival, Senator John Kerry, as an invitation to annihilation. If we make the wrong choice, Vice President Dick Cheney warned a Des Moines audience, the danger is that we’ll get hit again—that we’ll be hit in a way that will be devastating from the standpoint of the United States. In May, just prior to the Democratic Convention, Attorney General John Ashcroft announced that al Qaeda’s preparations for an attack were 90 percent complete; immediately after the convention, the Department of Homeland Security issued yet another terrorist alert, which diverted America’s attention away from Kerry and back to the wartime president, George Bush. The strategy worked.

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About Barry Glassner

Barry Glassner (born 1952) is an American professor of sociology and author or co-author of nine books, including The Culture of Fear, which discussed the culture of fear phenomenon. He is a former president at Lewis & Clark College.