Posted on 11/02/2008 11:46:44 PM PST by DakotaRed
I know it’s not fashionable but I think George Bush is one of the greatest presidents we’ve ever had.
No, I didn’t like the Medicare prescription thing, and yes, he’s weak on the border.
But he has been astounding as commander in chief and I shudder to think of the consequences had anyone else been in charge after 9/11.
And I love the look of that Supreme Court. Had he not won, I doubt we’d have the our 2nd Amendment any more. On paper, sure, but not in fact.
God bless you Mr. President.
But Bush is a Dictator who won’t leave office. 8 years of fear that he will do x, was for naught. Things they accuse Bush will do didnt happen
I can recall people saying truly rotten things about Ronald Reagan: both Democrats and Republicans (who should know better!). This began shortly after he took office, and lasted until just before his death.
Now, it is difficult to find ANYBODY who will say anything bad about Reagan. History has judged him to be one of America’s greatest Presidents: and rightly so. He did the right thing irrespective of what his nay-sayers thought.
In my view, History will judge George W Bush in a very similar manner to Reagan. GWB was a great war-time President who did not take his eye off the ball: nothing short of Victory in the War on Terror would suffice, even if that Victory were to be consummated in the next Administration.
To be sure, GWB was not a perfect President: there are things that he did that in retrospect he probably wishes he hadn’t, and things that he didn’t do that in retrospect he probably wishes he did. In eight years one can only accomplish so much.
Mr President: thankyou for what you did for the United States of America, and for the rest of the Free World. You served faithfully and well. Hail to the Chief!
God Bless America
*DieHard*
A recession, an attack directly on the US, the economy almost destroyed by the attack by Bin laden, stock market crash from the attack the destruction of NYC, the almost destruction of the airline industry, a war in Iraq.
It has been pretty bad for Bush and I am sick and tired of his admin being compared to Clinton’s. Clinton is way too big of a sissy to handle all of this, in fact, I blame hims of bin laden for attacking the US.
That loser Clinton, had a very short recession to start with but he also had the PEACE DIVIDEND (from the end of the cold war) and the massive technology expansion of the internet. After two years in office, the republicans took over and forced Clinton to reform welfare and cut cap gains which dramatically enhanced the economic boom during the 90s. Clinton was dragged kicking and screaming to do the right thing.
Al Gore and the Democratic Party did lasting and permanent damage to the electoral process in 2000, and it is one of the main reasons I will never vote Democratic again, even for dog catcher.
I think history will see President Bush in a good light.
I’ve had some massive disagreements with President Bush, but I know in his heart he is a decent man, unlike Clinton or Obama. I wish him well and hope history is kind to him.
A national defense analyst says President Bush should be commended for keeping quiet about a discovery that could have blown his critics out of the water.
Retired Major General Jerry Curry is a decorated combat veteran who served as an Army aviator, paratrooper, and Ranger during a military career that began during the Korean conflict. He recently wrote on his blog about a very under reported story by the Associated Press.
According to the report, a large stockpile of concentrated natural Uranium, known as “yellowcake,” reached a Canadian port to complete a top secret U.S. Operation that included a two-week airlift from Baghdad, and a ship voyage crossing two oceans. The Uranium material had been housed at a former Iraqi nuclear complex 12 miles from Baghdad.
Curry says the president kept mum about the discovery in order to keep terrorists in the dark. “He made a very brave stand, a resolute stand..., in which he decided that he wasn’t going to blab everything to the press,” Curry commends. “...And in the meantime while he kept it quiet, he was buying time from the terrorists to get all that stuff out of the country. So that’s what was done — he just very quietly kept his mouth shut.”
“The press beat him to death for the last several years,” he continues, “and now it turns out that, yes, there were weapons of mass destruction....” Curry also maintains that Saddam Hussein had an active nuclear program and the material could have been made into a nuclear weapon.
President Bush’s actions took courage, he notes, and all Americans should be thankful to have such a brave president who puts the welfare of the American people above personal considerations.
GWB is a good man and a good president. I wish him all the best.
Do you have a link for this?
God bless President Bush.
The whole time we were finding so little in Iraq we conveniently had our facilities here in the US incinerating our chemical weapons, for example:
APRIL 1, 2004 : (VX : REPORT : ARMY SAYS IT WILL BEGIN TO DESTROY VX NERVE AGENT AT THE NEWPORT INDIANA CHEMICAL DEPOT IN TWO MONTHS) The Army said Wednesday that it plans to begin destroying VX nerve agent at the Newport Chemical Depot in about two months. Destruction will begin even if ... --- "Army Plans to Begin Destroying VX in Ind." 1 Apr 2004 06:41 GMT
APRIL 3, 2004 : (VX : REPORT : )... Final destination of VX byproduct draws opposition By Journal and Courier ... The Army hopes to begin destroying VX nerve agent at the Newport Chemical Depot here ... to eliminate neutralized waste from a mustard gas stockpile in Aberdeen, Md. "The treatability studies ... --- "Final destination of VX byproduct draws opposition," 3 Apr 2004 07:13 GMT
APRIL 3, 2004 : (US IS "FALLING BEHIND" SCHEDULE IN DESTROYING US GOVERNMENT CHEMICAL WEAPONS STOCKPILE) ... Pine Bluff Arsenal houses 12 percent of the government's chemical stockpile, which includes mustard gas, a blister agent, and the nerve agents VX and sarin. ...------ Weapon Incineration Falling Behind 3 Apr 2004 07:19 GMT
APRIL 3, 2004 : (DESTRUCTION OF US GOVERNMENT STOCKPILES OF NERVE GAS TO BEGIN) ... fall through, the Army could store hydrolysate - the caustic byproduct from the neutralized VX - in tanks at the western Indiana site, he said. Barber fielded questions during ... ------- Nerve gas destruction to start in two months 3 Apr 2004 07:15 GMT
This wasn't the only case.
I suppose eventually the press will get around to taking a serious look at A Q Khan ...
The first duty of President is to protect and defend the US and the US Constitution. Bush did the former flawlessly and the latter well enough. In four years time we will look back to his time in office with great nostalgia.
The NY Times wrote an article on 10/29/08 on how President Bush “has transformed the nations federal appeals courts, advancing a conservative legal revolution that began nearly three decades ago under President Ronald Reagan.” These are changes that will be with us for a very long time and the President has not received a lot of credit for this from us conservatives. Link to the article:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/29/us/29judges.html?scp=1&sq=appeals%20courts&st=cse
Bush’s shortcoming were fiscal. In his first six years, he vetoed nothing coming from a Congress that was mortgaging our future. He has spent our tax dollars like a drunk sailor on 9/11 victims, Katrina victims, and California earthquake victims. His Wall Street bailout is a horrendous wasteful disaster that will last for decades.
Bush’s cooperation with deficit spending was too much for me.
Did you miss where I said that even I had issues with him?
Still, he did not waiver in the wind and pass the buck or point fingers at every one else, he took it all on him.
I have the same disagreements with him, but overall, how can we deny what he did accomplish?
A major reason we continue to lose elections is how fast we are to eat our own, while the Dems circle the wagons around theirs.
I still thank Bush for holding to his principles and keeping us safe. I wish he had done more, though, but I still thank him.
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