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Did you ever stop to think what a great country we live in that we have the
freedom to poke fun at Gore, Bush and Clinton, etc.    .... and I finally
saw that Snickers commercial and and the website with Bush dancing..it's
priceless.  Here's another one on Gore .....Joan Hartman



Hello....  I'm Al Gore, and I'd like to tell you about myself.

I know a lot about hardship because I came into this world

as a poor black child in a tiny town in the backwoods of Tennessee.

I was born in a log cabin that I built with my own hands.  I taught

myself to read by candlelight and helped support my 16 brothers

and sisters by working summers as a deck hand on a Mississippi

River steamboat.

My mother taught me the value of education, so every day,

I would walk 5 miles to a one-room schoolhouse.  I was a mischievous,

fun loving scamp, though I never dreamed that one day, my youthful

escapades would serve as the inspiration for Huckleberry Finn.

Back then, black folks in the south were second-class citizens.

One day, a traveling minister came through town, and I asked him if

anyone was ever going to do something to guarantee civil rights for

all Americans.  Well, I guess I made an impression.  You see, the

ministers name was Martin Luther King, Jr.

My father was a United States Senator.  He once perched me

on his knee and said, Son, if you work hard and listen to your mama,

someday you can live in a hotel in Washington, D.C., and go to an

exclusive prep school.  But life of privilege was not for me.  After

getting my high school diploma, I took a job in a hot, dirty textile

mill.  I was so appalled at the treatment of the workers there that I

organized a union.  Later, that experience inspired a movie --  which

is why, to this day, my close friends at the AFL-CIO call me Norma Rae.

When word got out what an 18 year old factory worker had

done, Harvard called and offered me a scholarship.  I captained the

hockey team to four consecutive national championships, but I also

played football and was good enough to win the Heisman Trophy.

During my college years, I lived in a housing project and

moonlighted playing lead guitar for a little rock band. You may have

heard of it: the Rolling Stones.  But there was a war going on, and I

felt I had to serve my country.  So I enlisted in the U.S. Army and

went to Vietnam.  I was deeply opposed to the war, but I did my duty

as a soldier and came back home with the Medal of Honor and the

Croix de Guerre.

When I got back, I took a long journey across this great land

of ours.  Ive crossed the deserts bare, man, Ive breathed the mountain

air, man, Ive traveled, Ive done my share, man, Ive been everywhere.

And the people I met at truckstops and campgrounds and homeless

shelters on that journey all said the same thing:  Al, we need you in

Washington.

I knew they were right, but first I had to take care of some

other business---building the World Trade Center, founding the

Audubon Society,doing the clinical research that proved smoking

caused cancer, and coming up with the recipe for Mrs. Fields

chocolate chip cookies.  Finally, I deferred to the demands of the

people of Tennessee and allowed them to elect me to the House of

Representatives and the Senate.  And then one winter day nearly

nine years ago, for no particular reason, I answered the call of the

people once again and took the oath of office as Vice President of

the Untied States.

Since then, Ive been part of the most successful administration

in American history.  Many times Bill Clinton has been pondering some

grave decision and has asked me what to do.  And when I would give

him my thoughts, he would invariably say, Of course!  Thats brilliant!

Why didnt I think of that? During the darkest days of the impeachment

battle, the president told me he only wished he had listened when I

told him to stay away from that dark-haired intern.

So after I decided to run for president, I sat down with him and

asked him if he had any suggestions about how to conduct my campaign.

And Bill Clinton gave me a few simple words of advice --  words Ill never

forget.  He looked me square in the eye and he said, Al, just tell the

truth.  Its always worked for me.

Albert Gore Jr.