1
   

Bush - Worst president in history

 
 
FedUpAmerican
 
  1  
Reply Wed 17 Oct, 2007 01:15 pm
@Silverchild79,
Silverchild79;42098 wrote:
you understand what I meant, if he was able to be re elected again he wouldn't get my vote


What you supposedly meant and what you said are two different things. Please, I'm not a psychic, mean what you say and say what you mean in the future. Then there will not be ANY misunderstandings.
0 Replies
 
mlurp
 
  1  
Reply Wed 17 Oct, 2007 05:08 pm
@mlurp,
mlurp;42048 wrote:
Wrong that is your opinion. many others count every trooper killed, wounded and disabled with mental problems his fault. And his white house lawn speads to Iraq.

And again i say the same thing Silverchild79. Not out of disrespect of you but because your opinion and others whom seem to agree differently with you out weigh your opinion. Please address my opinion!

And I add the Iraq wounded and killed by his policy with Blackwater and other policy like that clown he sent to micro manage in the beginning
which made this another Viet-Nam early before the fact was brought up.
0 Replies
 
rugonnacry
 
  1  
Reply Thu 18 Oct, 2007 12:22 pm
@briansol,
The next president will be called the worst ever, and the one following that and the one following that. this ragtag group of 20 and 30 something is just the next generation to hate their ELECTED leader.
92b16vx
 
  1  
Reply Thu 18 Oct, 2007 02:51 pm
@rugonnacry,
NEW YORK (CNN) -- Diehard GOP faithful, the dwindling number of Bush loyalists and political pundits of every stripe and medium seem obsessed these days with defining or discerning the "legacy of George W. Bush."

Lou Dobbs says President Bush has diminished a great nation and may diminish it further.

Frankly, I spend more time worrying about whether or not the United States can survive the remaining 15 months of his ebbing presidency.

There is little mystery about what future historians will consider to be the legacy of the 43rd president of the United States. Those historians are certain to describe the first presidential administration of the 21st century with terms such as dissipation and perversion.

Bush campaigned for the Republican Party's nomination eight years ago, styling himself as a compassionate conservative. He's amply demonstrated that he is neither.

Although many conservatives refuse to accept the reality, George W. Bush is a one-world neo-liberal who drove budget and trade deficits to record heights while embracing faith-based economic policies that perversely require only blind allegiance to free markets and free trade, without regard for consequence.

This president pursues a war without demanding of his generals either success or victory and accepts the sacrifice of our brave young men and women in uniform while asking nothing of our people or the nation at a time of war.

Sadly, this president has diminished a great nation and may diminish it further.

President Bush has pressed hard for the Security and Prosperity Partnership, the first step toward a North American Union that will threaten our sovereignty. This administration has permitted American businesses to hire illegal aliens, encouraged the invasion of 12 million to 20 million illegal aliens and has given Mexico and corporate America dominion over our borders and our immigration policy.

Were it not for an outraged public, the Bush administration would have been happy to cede control of our ports to a Dubai government-owned company.

The assault on our national sovereignty continues: At a time when public approval of the White House and Congress is near historic lows, the president is urging the Senate to act favorably on our accession to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.

One hundred fifty-five nations have ratified the Law of the Sea Treaty, which essentially codifies into law detailed rules about freedom of the seas and the extent of territorial waters. The treaty also establishes an international bureaucracy to regulate deep-sea mining.

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee recently heard arguments on the 1982 Law of the Sea Treaty, which President Ronald Reagan rejected but President Bill Clinton submitted to the Senate in 1994. A vote is likely in the weeks ahead, and this Democratic-controlled Senate is the same institution whose leadership sought passage of the disastrous comprehensive immigration overhaul legislation.

And just as this administration trotted out an Army general to support the Dubai Ports World fiasco and a Marine Corps general to support the administration's immigration proposal, it's now pressured the U.S. Navy to support this treaty.

Bush says the treaty "will secure U.S. sovereign rights over extensive marine areas, including the valuable natural resources they contain." The president could not be more wrong.

This treaty will submit the United States to international tribunals largely adverse to our interests, and the dispute resolution mechanisms are stacked against the United States. Sen. Jim DeMint, R-South Carolina, astutely argues that nearly all the signatories "have voted against the United States over half the time [at the United Nations]."

This administration can do nothing straightforwardly and perverts language at every turn. Take, for example, the words of Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte arguing in support of the treaty. "As a non-party," he argues, "We are not currently in a position to maximize U.S. sovereign rights over the shelf in the Arctic or elsewhere."

Negroponte's tortured reasoning is entirely consistent with this administration's intellectual performance over almost two terms in office, but it serves neither the truth nor the national interest.

The Law of the Sea Treaty would undermine our national sovereignty and act as a back door for global environmental activists to direct U.S. policy.

It would hold the United States to yet another unaccountable international bureaucracy and constrain our national prerogatives. Aside from that, the treaty is wholly unnecessary. The U.S. Navy already enjoys international navigation rights by customary practice.

Our elected officials in both political parties and the national media should worry less about the legacy of this lame-duck president and far more about the future of a great nation and people debilitated by his ruinous leadership.
aaronssongs
 
  1  
Reply Thu 18 Oct, 2007 03:34 pm
@92b16vx,
92b16vx;42243 wrote:
NEW YORK (CNN) -- Diehard GOP faithful, the dwindling number of Bush loyalists and political pundits of every stripe and medium seem obsessed these days with defining or discerning the "legacy of George W. Bush."

Lou Dobbs says President Bush has diminished a great nation and may diminish it further.

Frankly, I spend more time worrying about whether or not the United States can survive the remaining 15 months of his ebbing presidency.

There is little mystery about what future historians will consider to be the legacy of the 43rd president of the United States. Those historians are certain to describe the first presidential administration of the 21st century with terms such as dissipation and perversion.

Bush campaigned for the Republican Party's nomination eight years ago, styling himself as a compassionate conservative. He's amply demonstrated that he is neither.

Although many conservatives refuse to accept the reality, George W. Bush is a one-world neo-liberal who drove budget and trade deficits to record heights while embracing faith-based economic policies that perversely require only blind allegiance to free markets and free trade, without regard for consequence.

This president pursues a war without demanding of his generals either success or victory and accepts the sacrifice of our brave young men and women in uniform while asking nothing of our people or the nation at a time of war.

Sadly, this president has diminished a great nation and may diminish it further.

President Bush has pressed hard for the Security and Prosperity Partnership, the first step toward a North American Union that will threaten our sovereignty. This administration has permitted American businesses to hire illegal aliens, encouraged the invasion of 12 million to 20 million illegal aliens and has given Mexico and corporate America dominion over our borders and our immigration policy.

Were it not for an outraged public, the Bush administration would have been happy to cede control of our ports to a Dubai government-owned company.

The assault on our national sovereignty continues: At a time when public approval of the White House and Congress is near historic lows, the president is urging the Senate to act favorably on our accession to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.

One hundred fifty-five nations have ratified the Law of the Sea Treaty, which essentially codifies into law detailed rules about freedom of the seas and the extent of territorial waters. The treaty also establishes an international bureaucracy to regulate deep-sea mining.

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee recently heard arguments on the 1982 Law of the Sea Treaty, which President Ronald Reagan rejected but President Bill Clinton submitted to the Senate in 1994. A vote is likely in the weeks ahead, and this Democratic-controlled Senate is the same institution whose leadership sought passage of the disastrous comprehensive immigration overhaul legislation.

And just as this administration trotted out an Army general to support the Dubai Ports World fiasco and a Marine Corps general to support the administration's immigration proposal, it's now pressured the U.S. Navy to support this treaty.

Bush says the treaty "will secure U.S. sovereign rights over extensive marine areas, including the valuable natural resources they contain." The president could not be more wrong.

This treaty will submit the United States to international tribunals largely adverse to our interests, and the dispute resolution mechanisms are stacked against the United States. Sen. Jim DeMint, R-South Carolina, astutely argues that nearly all the signatories "have voted against the United States over half the time [at the United Nations]."

This administration can do nothing straightforwardly and perverts language at every turn. Take, for example, the words of Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte arguing in support of the treaty. "As a non-party," he argues, "We are not currently in a position to maximize U.S. sovereign rights over the shelf in the Arctic or elsewhere."

Negroponte's tortured reasoning is entirely consistent with this administration's intellectual performance over almost two terms in office, but it serves neither the truth nor the national interest.

The Law of the Sea Treaty would undermine our national sovereignty and act as a back door for global environmental activists to direct U.S. policy.

It would hold the United States to yet another unaccountable international bureaucracy and constrain our national prerogatives. Aside from that, the treaty is wholly unnecessary. The U.S. Navy already enjoys international navigation rights by customary practice.

Our elected officials in both political parties and the national media should worry less about the legacy of this lame-duck president and far more about the future of a great nation and people debilitated by his ruinous leadership.


Bush has, in effect, like slave masters of olde, sold America, "down the river"....the river of tears.
What is truly baffling is how he got away with it all, without much protest, with carte blanche, and occasional applause, instead of horror and outrage. Suffice it to say, I didn't vote for him....twice!
92b16vx
 
  1  
Reply Thu 18 Oct, 2007 04:33 pm
@aaronssongs,
aaronssongs;42253 wrote:
Bush has, in effect, like slave masters of olde, sold America, "down the river"....the river of tears.
What is truly baffling is how he got away with it all, without much protest, with carte blanche, and occasional applause, instead of horror and outrage. Suffice it to say, I didn't vote for him....twice!


Not baffling at all...

National Banana
aaronssongs
 
  1  
Reply Thu 18 Oct, 2007 05:35 pm
@92b16vx,
92b16vx;42260 wrote:
Not baffling at all...

National Banana


Why do you say that? How can bona fide Americans "willingly" give up their rights , without a fight...have the Supreme Court and Justice Dept, de facto wings of the executive branch, execute a war, with the mission changing year to year if not month to month...with no regard for human life, American or Iraqi....shooting down healthcare for children, wimping out on immigration, and a laundry list of other shameful milestones on the American plate, today?????
And nary a word from most Republicans...as long as it meant that power, clout and profits would benefit individual legislators and their pet projects...then full steam ahead....selling their souls in the process...
Anybody who voted for Bush and Co., ought to be ashamed , outraged or feel betrayed, at the lowest level...at the highest, they should be calling for his head, on a wooden platter....no, that would be too good...on cardboard.
0 Replies
 
Pinochet73
 
  1  
Reply Sat 20 Oct, 2007 08:48 pm
@briansol,
Bush's Iraq screw-up is actually a blessing in disguise. It wrecked the vintage 1960s American Left. The Jews are now Republicans, for the sake of Israel's security. Ha. Sorry, Commies. You lost your most powerful ally, with its media, Hollywood, publishing industry and government lobbies. :beerchug:
aaronssongs
 
  1  
Reply Sun 21 Oct, 2007 08:38 am
@Pinochet73,
Pinochet73;42531 wrote:
Bush's Iraq screw-up is actually a blessing in disguise. It wrecked the vintage 1960s American Left. The Jews are now Republicans, for the sake of Israel's security. Ha. Sorry, Commies. You lost your most powerful ally, with its media, Hollywood, publishing industry and government lobbies. :beerchug:


You really have stop believing your own hype....you know, just because you say it, doesn't make it true.....Hollywood is still Democrat and liberal. Everyone knows that libs are pro- art, pro- freedom (esp. in film)
If what you say is true...then Dems don't have a prayer in Nov 2008....and we both know that is not the case.
REDWHITEBLUE2
 
  1  
Reply Sun 21 Oct, 2007 01:47 pm
@aaronssongs,
Your all wrong Jimmy [Peanut brain] Carter is and always will be the worst president ever unless Hillary becomes president THEN all bets are off
scooby-doo cv
 
  1  
Reply Sun 21 Oct, 2007 02:09 pm
@REDWHITEBLUE2,
REDWHITEBLUE2;42624 wrote:
Your all wrong Jimmy [Peanut brain] Carter is and always will be the worst president ever unless Hillary becomes president THEN all bets are off


Bush makes dan quale looks intelligent :eek: the man is a clown,a worldwide joke figure !
92b16vx
 
  1  
Reply Sun 21 Oct, 2007 02:30 pm
@REDWHITEBLUE2,
REDWHITEBLUE2;42624 wrote:
Your all wrong Jimmy [Peanut brain] Carter is and always will be the worst president ever unless Hillary becomes president THEN all bets are off


LOL Duncan Hunter? Is that shrub even still running?!?!?!
0 Replies
 
aaronssongs
 
  1  
Reply Sun 21 Oct, 2007 03:52 pm
@REDWHITEBLUE2,
REDWHITEBLUE2;42624 wrote:
Your all wrong Jimmy [Peanut brain] Carter is and always will be the worst president ever unless Hillary becomes president THEN all bets are off


Jimmy Carter, today, is revered and respected more, than when he was president...he is perhaps, the most humanitarian president ever. A true statesman.
And Hillary with her smarts, and her husband's smarts and experience, could wind up being one the best presidents ever. I don't know why folks go out of their way to demonize Hillary, when there is no way on God's Green Earth, that she could ever do anything that would remotely approach the devastation on America that George Bush has wrought. The deeds he's done will live on after he is a bad memory.
0 Replies
 
Pinochet73
 
  1  
Reply Sun 21 Oct, 2007 06:43 pm
@scooby-doo cv,
scooby-doo;42625 wrote:
Bush makes dan quale looks intelligent :eek: the man is a clown,a worldwide joke figure !


Yeah, but he speaks highly of you, Scooby. Very Happy
FedUpAmerican
 
  1  
Reply Sun 21 Oct, 2007 08:20 pm
@briansol,
bush makes pinhead look like a genius.

WOW!
0 Replies
 
scooby-doo cv
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 Oct, 2007 08:44 am
@Pinochet73,
Pinochet73;42647 wrote:
Yeah, but he speaks highly of you, Scooby. Very Happy


does he still watch scooby-doo :cool:
0 Replies
 
Pinochet73
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 Oct, 2007 06:49 pm
@briansol,
Scooby, have you converted to Islam yet? I bet you're looking over your shoulder, a lot, over there in Scotistan. Carry a knife....preferably with a huge, curved blade.
scooby-doo cv
 
  1  
Reply Tue 23 Oct, 2007 08:13 am
@Pinochet73,
Pinochet73;42753 wrote:
Scooby, have you converted to Islam yet? I bet you're looking over your shoulder, a lot, over there in Scotistan. Carry a knife....preferably with a huge, curved blade.


Pino ! they're is more chance of me being the next Pope scooby,than converting to islam !

Have you just been watching Sinbad ?
Pinochet73
 
  1  
Reply Tue 23 Oct, 2007 07:28 pm
@scooby-doo cv,
scooby-doo;42789 wrote:
Pino ! they're is more chance of me being the next Pope scooby,than converting to islam !

Have you just been watching Sinbad ?


You better grow a beard and start praying five times a day. And put down those fatty British porkchops. From now on, the pig is Satan. Got it?:banghead:
scooby-doo cv
 
  1  
Reply Wed 24 Oct, 2007 09:12 am
@Pinochet73,
Pinochet73;42844 wrote:
You better grow a beard and start praying five times a day. And put down those fatty British porkchops. From now on, the pig is Satan. Got it?:banghead:


You have got a vivid imagination pino,or are you just paranoid,it aint goona happen,you better get out and practise your shooting,incase the jihadists and commies come lookin for you Very Happy
 

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