people hate Bush, no one even gives him a chance |
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people hate Bush, no one even gives him a chance |
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i <3 me ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Member Posts: 315 Joined: Jul 2004 Member No: 30,888 ![]() |
Sometimes a political figure becomes so hated that he can't do anything right in the eyes of his enemies. President Bush has achieved this rare and exalted status. His critics are so blinded by animus that the internal consistency of their attacks on him no longer matters. For them, Bush is the double-bind president.
If he stumbles over his words, he is an embarrassing idiot. If he manages to cut taxes or wage a war against Saddam Hussein with bipartisan support, he is a manipulative genius. If he hasn't been able to capture Osama bin Laden, he is endangering U.S. security. If he catches bin Laden, it is only a ploy to influence the elections. If he ignores U.N. resolutions, he is a dangerous unilateralist. If he takes U.N. resolutions on Iraq seriously, he is a dangerous unilateralist. If he doesn't get France to agree to his Iraq policy, he is ignoring important international actors. If he supports multiparty talks on North Korea, he is not doing enough to ignore important international actors. If he bombed Iraq, he should have bombed Saudi Arabia instead, and if he had bombed Saudi Arabia, he should have bombed Iran, and if he had bombed all three, he shouldn't have bombed anyone at all. If he imposes a U.S. occupation on Iraq, he is fomenting Iraqi resistance by making the United States seem an imperial power. If he ends the U.S. occupation, he is cutting and running. If he warns of a terror attack, he is playing alarmist politics. If he doesn't warn of a terror attack, he is dangerously asleep at the switch. If he says we're safer, he's lying, and if he doesn't say we're safer, he's implicitly admitting that he has failed in his core duty as commander in chief. If he adopts a doctrine of preemption, he is unacceptably remaking American national-security policy. If the United States suffers a terror attack on his watch, he should have preempted it. If he signs a far-reaching antiterror law, he is abridging civil liberties. If the United States suffers another terror attack on his watch, he should have had a more vigorous anti-terror law. |
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![]() Dark Lord of McCandless ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Member Posts: 2,226 Joined: May 2004 Member No: 16,761 ![]() |
QUOTE which means that it was the people's decision to put them all into office...which would make the people just as guilty (based on ur argument) Sure. I can blame the special interest groups that causep eople to vote based on hteir special interest as well. QUOTE Bush isn't that dumb...he would never try to expand the power of the government to kill the Constitution and individual rights, especially in his first term, because he would lose voters. and i highly doubt Bush is even trying to get rid of our individual rights. why would he want to? and getting rid of the Constitution? its hard enough to make 1 amendment...how can he get rid of the entire thing?? People today don't care about individual rights. We started the American Revolution over a 1.5% sales tax. Today, we have a 45% income tax. If the ideals of the Founding Fathers were still alive, Dubya would be hanging from a tree. QUOTE and by the way, Lyndon B. Johnson was a pretty good president All he did was cause gang warfare in inner cities, end what little hope blacks had of achieving truly equal rights, and sending 60,000 Americans to die in an Asian civil war -- most of whom were drafted against their will. Being the fascist you are, I can see why you like him so much. |
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