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Now that it’s clear that John Kerry will be the Democratic nominee for president, the question is how George W. Bush and Karl Rove, his chief political strategist, will attack him. Tom Toles, whose editorial cartoons appear regularly in the centrist Washington Post, has a hunch: as an advocate of massive social programs and big federal budgets to pay for them (translation: someone who raises taxed) who is also soft on terrorism.
Toles depicts Kerry and an advisor strolling past the White House, atop which workmen are busy covering a billboard with an anti-Kerry ad. The ad says:“Beware the Massalqaeda liborrist.”
Don’t look for the last two words in your dictionary. Toles has concocted them by blending first Massachusetts and al-Qaeda (Usamabin Laden’s terrorist organization), second “liberal" and “terrorist”. The second blend is reminiscent of the kind of word that President Bush actually does utter when he’s not mindful of his speech — which, it must be said, is a fair amount of the time.
A Chinese observer will understand the reference to al-Qaeda and terrorists. Kerry is linked with neither, but he was at best a lukewarm supporter of Bush’s invasion of Iraq to overthrow Saddam Hussein. But what is so politically significant about denouncing Kerry as a “Massachusetts liberal”?
Massachusetts, dominated by Boston, with its concentration of elite universities, acquired a reputation in the 20th century as a relatively left-wing US state. Lawmakers there support an extensive and often innovative welfare system — not on the European scale, but still bigger than in most US states and not cheap. Hence Massachusetts has high taxes; critics deride the state as “Taxachusetts”, and occasionally even as the “People’s Republic of Massachusetts” because of the warm reception allegedly given to socialist ideas.
In America (but not in Europe)“liberals” are people who believe that government regulatory and taxing authority should be used to protect ordinary citizens from the power of big business. They also seek to remedy social inequality through government programs. Having build America’s social welfare system, they want to maintain or even extend it. The problem is that many voters see the liberal programs that were put into place in the 1960s and 1970s as wasteful and ineffective, or as examples of wrong-headed social engineering — the sort of thing Harvard professors and similar overweening boobies would dream up to burden taxpayers with. For these critics, a 1iberal is bad enough. A “MASSACHUSETTS liberal” is the very worst of a bossy, free-spending, irresponsible tribe.
1. From the passage, we can infer that this passage was written _______.
2. What concerning John Kerry would NOT be assaulted on?
3. What word does Bush often say when he is not careful enough?
4. Which of the following is wrong about Massachusetts?
5. What do many voters think of the liberal programs?

问题1选项
A.before the American presidential election
B.after the American presidential election
C.before the launch of Iraq War
D.before the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks in September
问题2选项
A.Big social welfare system.
B.Increase of taxes.
C.Soft attitude towards terrorism.
D.Advocate of more freedom.
问题3选项
A.Massachusetts liberal
B.Taxachusetts
C.Massalqaeda
D.Liboirist
问题4选项
A.Socialist ideas are popular in that state.
B.A large number of famous universities are situated there.
C.It can also be called People’s Republic of Massachusetts.
D.The welfare system there keeps innovating.
问题5选项
A.Effective.
B.Helpful in remedying social inequality.
C.Misguiding in social projects.
D.Promising.
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