Or maybe Warren G Harding's domestic policy.
6/10/2008 2:38:47 PM
Does anyone else recognize the subtle notion from McCain that Bush is a Republican Jimmy Carter?Obama: "McCain is running for Bush's third term."McCain: "Well, Obama is running for Carter's second term."
6/10/2008 3:32:55 PM
6/10/2008 4:52:15 PM
I find it damned peculiar that no one even bothered to address the specific refutations of the "Bush lied" bullshit continually spewed by the far-left. I realize that taking the time to examine the facts takes away from promulgating the delusional narratives of some here. 'Bush Lied'? If Only It Were That Simplehttp://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/06/08/AR2008060801687.html?hpid=opinionsbox1
6/10/2008 6:25:51 PM
6/10/2008 8:23:16 PM
This will be his legacy to me.
6/10/2008 9:00:02 PM
helluva nice summary.where did you compile that from?
6/10/2008 11:34:16 PM
http://kucinich.house.gov/News/DocumentSingle.aspx?DocumentID=93581
6/10/2008 11:36:18 PM
From the Democrat who represents Faerie.
6/10/2008 11:43:22 PM
who's this Kucinich guy?he should run for president or something.
6/11/2008 12:19:28 AM
He did you just couldn't see him behind the podium
6/11/2008 12:26:16 AM
#6 Invading Iraq in Violation of the Requirements of HJRes114How about in violation of the Constitution.#7: Invading Iraq without a declaration of war.Impeach the majority of Congress for this fuck up.#8: Invading Iraq in violation of the U.N. charter and international law.International law is a farce and the U.S. has no business being subjected to it.#9: Failing to provide troops with body armor and vehicle armor.Better get every other single person who had their hand in this.#15: Providing immunity from prosecution for criminal conduct for contractors in IraqFuck Iraq.#20 Imprisoning Children Bush is guilty of impeachable offence arcticle 20, imprisoning children. Has personal and acting through agents has held at least 2,500 children in violation of Geneva convention and the rights of children in armed conflict signed by the US in 2002.How many of these children were holding AK-47s? Fuck them.
6/11/2008 12:34:35 AM
UN SECURITY COUNCIL UPDATE ON INSPECTION HANS BLIXEXECUTIVE CHAIRMAN OF UNMOVICUNITED NATIONS MONITORING AND VERIFICATION COMMISSION (UNMOVIC)January 27, 2003
6/11/2008 1:47:42 AM
Where were those weapons of mass destruction? Remember Scott Ritter? He was dragged through the coals for correctly saying Iraq did not have WMDs. this is what happens when you take selective evidence and never even ponder the countering evidence.
6/11/2008 10:27:06 AM
Congress is culpable to some extent, but not nearly as much as the Administration who fed Congress -- and the public at large -- the selective intelligence in the first place. most Congressmen didn't have special access to the raw data... only the manipulated results, and the correpsonding cartoon illustrations of Saddam's supposed armaments.
6/11/2008 12:34:08 PM
WMDs are sitting in a warehouse with global warming
6/11/2008 12:36:23 PM
The previous administration bombed Iraqi WMD factories repeatedly based on the same intelligence. Shall we prosecute them as well?
6/11/2008 1:25:34 PM
The only people to whom it isn't obvious that the U.S. invasion was an imperial adventure designed to steal resources (oil) are right-wing ideologues.There is really no way Iraqis can be expected to hold anything but enmity against the invading and now occupying power. If the situation was reversed and it was, say, China, rolling up and down the streets of Anytown U.S.A., telling you what you could and could not do (and this after shelling the shit out of you and killing your family) and running your government according to its own needs, you would feel exactly as the Iraqis do. Please stop kidding yourself.
6/11/2008 1:34:08 PM
I'm sure pleny of Americans would welcome China into our streets, if our own government had a history of gassing thousands of citizens and executing anyone who dared to speak out against the President...but that wouldnt make your cute little analogy work as well, would it
6/11/2008 1:36:55 PM
Actually it would. Nice try.
6/11/2008 1:50:22 PM
I'm currently torn on whether he'll be looked at as a Woodrow Wilson, person caught in a time of turmoil that let his idealism cause significant problems later, or if he will be looked at as a Republican version of Jimmy Carter.Presidential highlights that I think he will be known for in 100 years:-controversial election in 2000 (a la Rutherford B. Hayes in 1876)-9/11-aftermath of 9/11 and the hunt for Osama bin Ladin-the initial fight in Congress and the U.N. to go to war with Iraq -aftermath and occupation of the Iraq War-domestically, a new brand of the Republican Party that embraced big government-the very politically charged 2004 election-his presidency marked the first notion of a challenger to unquestioned American power on a global scale since the end of the Cold War (China's increase in power, the EU has become more solidified in the last 8 years as a single entity, India's increase in power, Russia gained back some of its former power under Putin; these would've probably happened anyway, Bush was just president when they occurred)-decisions in foreign policy and events not of American doing that led to a decrease in American power and influence in the Middle East (whether you agree or disagree with the war, we got bogged down in Iraq and left us unable to carry out other objectives; a distancing in relations between traditional allies the U.S. and the Saudis, a mild increase in Iranian power and influence due to the Iraqi power vacuum, the return of civil strife in Lebanon, Hamas came to power in Palestine in an American-endorsed election, Hezbollah in Lebanon fought Israel to a tactical stalemate in a month-long war)
6/11/2008 3:15:47 PM
Bush can in no way be remotely compared to Jimmy Carter. He doesn't have a fraction of that man's intelligence, wisdom, or integrity.You want someone to compare him to? Try Warren G. Harding, or maybe Andrew Johnson.
6/11/2008 4:13:13 PM
they both sound like dumb southernersbut bush doesnt have a fraction of carter's intelligence!except when he's pulling a fast one over the entire country
6/11/2008 4:15:06 PM
http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/06/11/kucinich.impeach.vote/index.html
6/11/2008 5:11:59 PM
6/11/2008 6:25:37 PM
6/11/2008 7:46:22 PM
Landmark Ruling Enshrines Right to Own Gunshttp://tinyurl.com/5ej3d6Whether you agree with this holding or not, it will be part of Bush's legacy. If nothing else, his Supreme Court appointments helped to decide--for the first time in our nation's history--that individuals do in fact have the right to keep and bear arms.
6/27/2008 11:24:19 AM
Except that the Bush administration did an amicus brief that sided with the District of Columbia in this case: Washington Post article: http://tinyurl.com/5sgt95The DOJ brief iteself: http://tinyurl.com/5nwbh4and the Goldwater Institute critique of the brief: http://tinyurl.com/5npyqcYes this was because of Bush's appointments, appointments that wouldn't have been made under Gore or Kerry, but you can't argue that this is what the administration wanted to happen. God you suck, don't you ever get tired of losing?]
6/27/2008 11:42:35 AM
^ I didn't lose; the point I made is valid. You even confirmed it--GG.
6/27/2008 11:50:05 AM
So, because the administration appointed people . . . whom it later disagreed with . . . and who made a constitutional decision the administration was opposed to . . . they won?What fucking alternate universe do you live in?
6/27/2008 11:51:33 AM
^ The one where he's still 20-something years old and has his life ahead of him
6/27/2008 11:52:39 AM
I think the only thing good Bush will be remembered for will be the recent advancement with North Korea. Although, this bothers me in and of itself. Someone help me to understand the logic in this:North Korea builds nuclear weapons program, Bush places them on list of states that support terrorism.North Korea destroys nuclear weapons program, Bush removes them from list. How does researching nuclear technology (peace or war) = sponsor terrorism???
6/27/2008 1:23:54 PM
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9401E2DC123FF937A25753C1A9679C8B63
7/2/2008 4:33:35 PM
Bush signs bill to triple AIDS funding
7/31/2008 12:25:55 PM
god...why
7/31/2008 12:41:08 PM
Yeah Bush has done a lot of good stuff for AfricaHe hasn't done a whole lot else right so maybe that will be his legacy
7/31/2008 12:42:31 PM
well, africa does need some help. the place is a mess.so I think it's nice that we're going to send the entire continent of Africa $50 billion over a five (5) year period.it kind of takes a little bit of the edge off the fact that we send $10 billion in tax dollars every fucking month to Iraq , doesn't it.[Edited on July 31, 2008 at 2:55 PM. Reason : ]
7/31/2008 2:52:51 PM
^ But Iraq has oil, am I right? High five! *crickets*
7/31/2008 4:01:36 PM
I'm surprised none of you Bush haters have picked up on this. I'll help you out.Bush's serious misjudgment concerning Russia's Vladimir Putin will be a blemish on his legacy.
8/13/2008 4:12:51 PM
bush has gone from ridiculous to irrelevant.i dont think anyone cares what he does any more.certainly Putin doesnt.
8/13/2008 7:39:08 PM
"Serious misjudgment" pretty much sums up my opinion of the Bush legacy, all things considered. Good intentions littered with serious misjudgments.
8/13/2008 8:45:47 PM
8/13/2008 11:43:50 PM
8/13/2008 11:45:13 PM
^ perhaps, but not if the entire Congress is controlled by the other par-o wait.never mind.
8/14/2008 2:05:30 AM
By Fareed Zakaria:http://www.newsweek.com/id/151731/page/1Zakaria is a guy I respect a great deal. Currently working on his book The Rise of Illiberal Democracy, a great read FTR. IMO he's a straight shooter that really gets to the root of each issue he tackles. This one is no different.This article summarizes the evolution of Bush's policies since 2000. You can argue he's paying Bush backhanded insults instead of applauding the appropriate changes in policy his administration has made in recent years. I agree to an extent. I think Zakaria is at least trying to show that Bush deserves some credit for making the changes that were needed, even if he doesn't admit it publicly. As some pundits have said over and over again - we can't got back into the past and reverse course. We can however change what we're doing now. It's fair to say that was Bush has done RECENTLY has been far more effective than what has been done in the PAST.And yes, he does deserve some credit for that...
8/20/2008 11:52:31 PM
^
8/20/2008 11:54:04 PM
^ First off, ew. Second off, I'll happily give Bush credit where credit is due. Same goes for any in politics, or in general for that matter. Bush is not stupid, evil, or any of the other asinine adjectives used to describe him and his presidency. He doesn't deserve 1/10 of the crap he gets on a regular basis, and time will tell whether he truly should be considered "bad" or his 8 years in office a "failure."However, I was not surprised at all to see this in Zakaria's article:
8/22/2008 5:45:32 PM
8/22/2008 5:46:40 PM
sorry. i disagree. bush is just another biblethumper of middling intellect, poor communication skills, and atrocious historical understanding .... who is clever enough to hold political power by surrounding himself with evil war-profiteering bastards who have no loyalty other than as counsel for the multinational energy and aerospace conglomerates.
8/22/2008 5:50:27 PM
so not only can you not give him credit for doing anything good, you can't even accept the fact (F A C T) that you can't truly judge a president's legacy until they've been out of office for awhile?
8/22/2008 5:53:11 PM