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Bush is a crook.
Well, kinda.
Jam it back in, in the dark. |
This boy is off his head.
I mean for real. Is he related to Bub Rubb and Lil' Sis or something. There's nowhere I can't reach. |
What about drink driving? Can he do that?
This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |
That was an ugly run-on sentance. I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |
I just can't muster that much outrage. As I said in another thread, by doing this Bush is underminding people's faith in the system and pressing forth with a libertarian agenda. Can't say I think that's a bad thing.
But I'm not expecting Republicans or Democrats to like that. Plus, Bush hasn't been very good for business.
I know this one Republican president who suspended habeas corpus, and killed 400,000 or so Americans in a war. He also locked up anybody who said anything bad about him in the press. Think his name was Lincoln. Also, a democrat president I heard about locked people up in concentration camps... oops I mean 'internment camps' for just being of Japanese descent. Yet another democrat president lied about a certain incident and started a long war in some asian country called Vietnam. Really, is what Bush doing that shocking? Those were just a few examples. He hasn't rounded up Arab-Americans and thrown them in camps. He's only suspended habeas corpus in the case of foreign nationals. He started a war, and lied about it. But plenty of presidents who have started wars have done that. So he has some innocent Iraqi's blood on his hands. So does Clinton. In fact Clinton has even more Iraqi blood on his hands thanks to UN sanctions on medicine. So we tortured some people... yeah, like that hasn't happened before? I was speaking idiomatically. |
It's shocking now because when people make mistakes, you're supposed to learn from those mistakes so that you don't make them again. And Bush is showing a staggering lack of hindsight when it comes to the blunders of his prececessors. If this was the first time any of this were happening, it would be awful but it'd be a learning experience. There's no excuse for it now, when the country has screwed up like that before and should know better. What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now? |
FELIPE NO |
I don't believe in coincidences. While I don't believe what the Bush Administration is doing is entirely sane, I can't believe they don't have reasons for doing what they are. We just don't know about them.
The NSA domestic spying, the Valerie Plame affair and more. All of which could have come out before the last presidential election. This leads to me to believe that Bush is nothing more then a scapegoat. For what? Who knows.
What, you don't want my bikini-clad body? |
Jam it back in, in the dark. |
There's nowhere I can't reach. |
While it might be a very idealistic notion, I still believe that we generally deserve the kind of administration we're willing to accept and obey in the long run. The American people could have kicked Bush out of office in the 2004 election and since then there have been numerous scandals, some of which just screamed "impeache him!". Yet nothing significant happened so far and the only conclusion I can draw from this fact is that the general public just isn't off bad enough yet. Probably a lot more GIs have to die in foreign countries and more civil rights and laws have to be undermined at home, all for the abstract concept of protecting a country's interests.
The slogan, "at least we live in interesting times" just doesen't cover such pitiful developments anymore. This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |
While what Bush does can be considered illegal, y'all act like he's the incarnation of evil and the only president to do such things. We only have to go back to Bill Clinton for alot of the exact same issues
"The Rule of Law in the Wake of Clinton contains 15 essays by scholars, lawyers, lawmakers and cultural critics that chronicle Clinton's utter disregard for "a nation of laws, not of men." University of Virginia Law Professor Lillian R. BeVier opens the book with a scholarly essay defining the rule of law and explaining why it is so important as a constraint on "the conduct of both individual citizens and those who govern them." Senator Fred Thompson examines China's illegal contributions to the Clinton-Gore campaign and the abject refusal of Attorney General Janet Reno to investigate the matter, concluding that "there can be no clearer example of the undermining of the rule of law." ACLU President Nadine Strossen condemns, among other things, Clinton's actions to restrict habeas corpus, his attempts to censor the Internet, and his efforts to create databases on all Americans. Clinton has worked closely with the Republican Congress to undermine the rule of law, she says, but "the Clinton administration bears the brunt of the blame for all those devastating assaults on cherished constitutional rights." Roger Pilon looks at Clinton's disdain for constitutionally limited government. Repeatedly, Clinton acted "as if the Constitution were an empty vessel to be filled with his policies and programs." In a similar vein, former Assistant Attorney General Douglas W. Kmiec examines Clinton's efforts to promote his policies through executive orders, "often without any citation of statutory authority, thereby bypassing legislative procedure." Timothy Lynch, director of the Cato Project for Criminal Justice, notes that "Clinton has exhibited contempt for the very Constitution he took an oath to uphold," as evidenced by his support for warrantless searches of public housing units, warrantless drug testing in public schools, a weakening of the right to trial by jury, and expanded property forfeiture. Clinton's record on economic liberties is no better. James Wootton, president of the U.S. Chamber Institute for Legal Reform, examines the administration's resistance to compensation for "regulatory takings" of private property. But when the federal government does have power to override state tort law that frustrates interstate commerce, Wootton says, Clinton refuses to use it. Cato Senior Fellow in Constitutional Studies Robert A. Levy and Alabama Attorney General Bill Pryor focus their attention on the illegitimate wars on tobacco and guns, respectively. Both wars undermine centuries-old common law principles. Former White House Legal Counsel C. Boyden Gray looks at the administration's war on Microsoft, which "represents nothing more than a successful hijacking of the government's regulatory power by Microsoft's competitors -- an especially grievous abuse of the rule of law." Former Assistant Attorney General Theodore B. Olson chronicles how Clinton and Reno have thoroughly politicized the Justice Department. Berkeley Law Professor John C. Yoo discusses the imperial president abroad, showing how Clinton has abused constitutional restraints on his foreign power while ceding the authority of the federal government itself to international institutions. Finally, the book examines how and why the institutions one would normally expect to be defending the rule of law have failed. Former Justice Department attorney Daniel E. Troy, Illinois Law Professor and Cato Visiting Scholar in Constitutional Studies Ronald D. Rotunda, and author David Horowitz look, respectively, at the political parties, the bar and the legal academy, and the media and the cultural institutions, each of which not only failed but was often complicit in undermining the rule of law. " So don't get your panties all in a wad. Bush will be gone in due time and you can have a pure as the driven snow liberal to replace him. I'm sure the next guy won't even think to engage in such activities. I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |
He hasn't rounded up Arab-Americans and thrown them in camps. He's only suspended habeas corpus in the case of foreign nationals.
You might ask why it concerns me, if you glance at my flag. The reason is that these same issues are affecting the country in which I live. I can't help but feel that if the American people manage to win any kind of a victory in these matters, then that's something to give me hope too. I was speaking idiomatically.
Last edited by Soluzar; May 1, 2006 at 02:17 PM.
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http://www.br-online.de/wissen-bildu...sch/roosevelt/ Just a few examples. In reality, they are not absolved of their faults... but no one devotes all of their time on them, like people have been doing with Bush. Nor do people call them crooks, thieves, swindlers, war criminals, etc. What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now? |
I'm not quite sure what your point is here. Of course they had reasons for all the dumb stunts they've pulled. I was saying that, had Rumsfeld, Bush, and company taken more than a cursory look at Korea and Vietnam, they would have realized that an invasion probably wasn't such a good idea. Hell, if Bush had listened to his dad, he would have realized that.
As for the NSA and security leaks, my theory? The Democrats are incompetent fuck-ups. Yes, they could have raked Bush over the coals for this back in 2004, but they didn't. Kerry didn't even put up a defense against the Swift Boat Veterans. They're just now getting around to it because elections are coming, and they need something to fight back with.
Also, excerpt was terribly vague about what precisely Clinton actually DID. FELIPE NO |
I'm genuinely curious. What exactly is the legacy of the Bush adminstration which will serve to counterbalance all of his wrongs? What would you put out there and say that it's the good he did in his time as president? What, you don't want my bikini-clad body? |
We won't know that until after the fact, now, won't we?
I am sure there was a large quantity of the population who were totally against the emancipation proclamation. There were also a great deal of people who despised the way in which FDR dealt with many problems, and actually, that hasn't changed much. People still criticize him. But the overall view is that he did well. Kennedy... well... I'm not sure exactly what he did aside from being known for pushing civil rights a bit. I'm not prepared to have an extensive debate on the topic. I just think that calling Bush a crook right now is premature legacy fabrication and pointless mudslinging. Jam it back in, in the dark. |
Hate to break it to you, but the Democrats are just as committed to Iraq and our current foreign policy as the Republicans are. Especially when it comes to issues like Iraq. Kerry didn't sound all that different from Bush during the 2004 presidential election. He just said that Bush did Iraq all wrong and he would have done it differently. Only now has he started to call for withdrawls. Guess he has to throw the anti-war crowd and world another carrot eh?
How ya doing, buddy? |
About the planning issue:
What do you reckon is more probable, that efforts like the Iraq war are the result of a large, more or less coordinated scheme or of about as many different agendas as people involved? I'm not trying to imply anything, I'd just like to hear your opinion on it. This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |
Regarding other president's being as bad or worse than Bush, I think that this condemnation of the man is more of being fed up with the President doing this kind of thing attitude than aggression towards Bush himself. It's the forefront of decades of this kind of thing.
How ya doing, buddy? |
The likelyhood is that Bush believes he is doing what needs to be done, but that will not stop his presidency from being judged on the basis of his results. That's really the most valid basis, in my mind, on which to judge a US President, and on that basis, I'd suggest that his results are going to prove to be substantially worse than any of the four former presidents we have discussed in this thread. I think you'll find that this is less contradictory, even if you don't agree with me.
I trust you understand my position better as a result of this post. I don't believe there's anything inherently contradictory about what I've said here, although I'm certain that you'll do me the honour of correcting me if I am mistaken.
I was speaking idiomatically.
Last edited by Soluzar; May 1, 2006 at 05:29 PM.
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One interpretation of an intentional botched invasion of Iraq is that the military is used as a destabilizing force in an oil-heavy region. Driving up the price of oil, as a result, and increasing the value of oil futures. This makes oil interests very happy, but as a result, it also encourages market shifts towards alternative methods of fuel.
What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now? |
Whether I'm right or not, I think we can all agree that the Iraq War was started and carried on without as much scrutiny as it deserved. Certainly more then just OIL. The resource, or what was once called Operation Iraqi Liberation. But that'll be up to the historians.
Was it not Dick Cheney said that the "American way of life is not negotiable."? I don't think he was kidding. FELIPE NO |
What, you don't want my bikini-clad body? |
I'm more concerned about Bush's being a bigot than his being a crook. As a bi-sexual woman in a serious relationship with another woman, I am offended and disgusted by Bush's ignorance (as well as the ignorance of all the bigots who agree with him).
Marriage is a matter of law, a contract. It hasn't been a matter of religion or tradition in a very long time. Banning gay marriage like he wants to goes against everything the Constitution stands for. The United States is the laughing stock of the world partly because of these antiquated social stances; it doesn't help that there are so many stupid people out there who actually agree with that nonsense. Sorry about the tangent, folks, this is just a really sore subject for me (obviously). I'm sick of being persecuted by the country for my sexual orientation. It's morally wrong and makes me have a disliking for this country (despite being employed by it). As for the topic, I'm sure he is a crook. The guy is the worst President of all time. Jam it back in, in the dark. |