Posted on 04/11/2009 8:45:03 AM PDT by myaccount2009
OK, replace the baseball bat with a scalpel. ;^)
He betrayed his base. He cut taxes, but not spending, and "gave" us expansion of socialized medicine and bank bailouts. He set the table for this Marxist. The Hell with him.
I think Scooter Libby might disagree with that assessment. So might Compean and Ramos, although they are too low to have "standing" in the ruling elite.
“I don’t care how articulate he was in person. W failed miserably communicating to his conservative base - in words and deeds.”
I agree.
He was too busy kissing up to the left.
Bush was a leftist. Conservatives did not fit into his plans of turning the U.S. into a socialist state.
He and Rove were a disaster.
The only one I trust and have trusted is our Dick Cheney. He was the only intelligent adult.
P.S.
In the year 2000, a lot of folks voted for Bush because of Cheney. It was a McRoach-Palin ticket. It was the future VP that was liked and not the possible future president Bush.
Many of us knew Bush was a loser.
Your post is well written but you really miss the mark on several points.
First of all, all Presidents have a duty to be above party politics, Presidents represent all Americans, not just their particular party. President Bush upheld that discipline in an exemplary manner and it was good for the country.
Perhaps Rove felt President Bush should have lowered the office of Presidency to more aggressively fight his detractors, but I think President Bush did the right thing, he did his best to keep America together. It was not his failure that the country grew so divided you see, it was ours. He stood up for all of us and many of us rejected him. He had no control over that.
You know, I got to hear him speak at the Presidential Gala in Washington DC one year. He spoke from his heart and without teleprompter, in fact, I had the opportunity to look him directly in his eyes. That speech on the right of all people to be free which is derived not from man but from God was the most eloquent, enlightening and motivating speech I have ever heard, bar none. That was the Bush doctrine and it was brilliant and more importantly it was right. President Bush had a firm commitment to the dignity and right of each individual to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. I wish every American could have heard that speech, it was wonderful.
Notice, that the Tea Party’s, up to this point, have received really very little publicity from the news media and much of what is coming out now is belittling us. Don’t you think that that is exactly what President Bush went through as well? Don’t you understand that he was a good communicator, indeed except for one debate his entire Presidential history he won hands down against those who were supposed to be finely honed orators.
Not sure why anyone would complain about the wonderful humanity President Bush showed in Africa, I remember one of the leaders of Africa declaring President Bush the first American African President. He is responsible for saving over 1 million lives there. This is not a bad thing, it is true conservatism.
The reason we loss congress is because the Republicans in congress became the same as liberals. They deserved to lose office, we spanked congress. Indeed, historically Republicans exceeded the average for keeping congressional seats and the loss in 2006 was mediocre win for Democrats at best in historical terms.
Your assertion that Bush did not provide leadership is incredible to me, maybe you should consider rethinking your assertion and consider what the President did stand for. He stood, sometimes almost alone for you...for your safety from terror, for your right to a dignified existence that respects life, for your right to own your own productivity (including some of your own retirement, tax cuts, etc.) President Bush was the nations moral standard and if you cannot see how important that was and what forces he was fighting in light of what is going on today, then you need to wake up sir. His protection is gone now and the forces that have been actively attacking us are loosed and they are overwhelming us presently. That is not President Bush’s fault, that is our fault.
I am not even going to remark on the elitist remark about this great and humble man, it is simply a repugnant statement to make that has no basis in reality.
I will close with this thought though...we are not impotent, indeed America is waking up and for the first time in my lifetime us conservatives are demanding justice and decency in protests that dwarf anything in the past 50 years. You wait and see what happens over the next year sir, join us and be an active participant in restoring America to the US. Get out and protest, be proud of our heritage and of our decency. We are the greatest nation that has ever existed and President Bush is one of the greatest leaders we have ever had.
THE CHARACTER OF GEORGE BUSH
Let me make it quite clear from the very beginning that I do not assail the virtuous character of George Bush. To the contrary, I admire it. In September 2006, I posted this:
I believe the author missunderestimates George Bush. If he acts, he will not act to protect his legacy, he will act to protect his country.
In recent weeks, no FReeper has been more harsh, even bitter in his criticism of President Bush. But I have never accused him of low or base motives. I have abandoned George Bush over Harriet Meir, spending, McCain Feingold, and the foolishness and ineptness over Valerie Plame, the ineptness over Katrina, validating Democrats by pandering to the likes of Teddy Kennedy, the need to change course in Iraq, and above all, over immigration, but I never thought that Bush was wrong because he would sell us out or because he was ambitious.
Bush will act, or not act, because he believes it is right and because he is a patriot. Unlike the author, Bush is not a neocon, his agenda is strictly America's future.
If one considers the list of failures for which I indict George Bush in the preceding quoted paragraphs, not one of those actions that so troubled me occurred because George Bush is a small man. To the contrary, they happened because George Bush chose options congruent with his faith. They were animated out of a fullness of heart, not a meanness of character.
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF HARRIET MEIR
Looking back, I think the nomination of Harriet Mier was a profound disillusionment for me as it was for George Will and other conservatives. I quote a reply in the context of that nomination to demonstrate that I am not personally opposed to George Bush, to the contrary I admire his character: P> [Quoting George Will:] "As for Republicans, any who vote for Meir will thereafter be ineligible to argue that it is important to elect Republicans because they are conscientious conservers of the judicial branch's invaluable dignity."
As a result of the policies of the Bush administration, Republicans have forfeited their formerly kryptonite hundred year claim to be the party of fiscal responsibility.
Thus we have wantonly kicked away one of the legs of our stool. Another leg of the stool was comprised of our ability to go to the electorate, as George Bush did successfully in the last two elections, and persuasively argue that we were the party of judicial integrity. That we were the party which manned the threshold to the Constitution like the Patriots at Thermopylae to check the ravening horde of liberals who would sack the Constitution.
The Harriet Meir nomination in a stroke has needlessly compromised our ability plausibly to appeal to the electorate as a the party which stands on constitutional principle and eschews judicial opportunism.
Why did we saw off two of our three legs? On the issue of spending some would say it is because Bush was never a conservative. Others would say that it was the war that did it but that would not be the whole truth, at least that would not be the whole explanation. Others would say that it is simply the nature of a politician to buy votes with other people's money and the temptation, even to Republicans, is irresistible.
WHAT THE NOMINATION OF HARRIET MEIR REVEALED OF GEORGE BUSH'S CHARACTER
My own view is that our present dilemma is the product of a little bit of each of the above. For years now I've been posting my view the George Bush is not essentially a movement conservative but a committed Christian. Here's what I've been saying recently:
"The truth is straightforward, as usual. Bush is first a committed Christian, then a devoted family man who values personal loyalty to an extreme, and third, a conservative when that philosophy does not conflict with the first two. In this appointment, Bush believes he has satisfied all three legs of the stool. "On the limited evidence available, I do positively believe Bush appointed her because she has been reborn. I mean that quite respectfully. I mean that he is counting on her being a new person. Most of the time it means she will vote conservative. But I honestly do not think Bush appointed her to vote conservative. I think he appointed he to vote in the SPIRIT."
The sad thing for us conservatives is to contemplate just how unnecessary the debacle over Harriet Meir really was. The whole nomination fiasco is almost uniquely unrelated to identifiable political or policy considerations. In the absence of such temporal explanations, I am left with the conclusion that Bush has selected her because she is Christian.
FAITH TRUMPS PARTY
If one accepts that Bush's Christian character is the key to understanding the man, it explains both your support of him and his virtues and my support of him and his virtues, but also my disillusionment with him-equally because of his virtues. If George Bush gives billions of our taxpayer dollars away to fight AIDS in Africa it is a noble gesture out of the impulse of a Christian heart. If he toasts Bill Clinton in the White House and by the gesture implicitly tells the world that the entire Republican effort to impeach Clinton was misplaced, he does so out of the Christian duty to love his enemy. If he panders to Teddy Kennedy in the White House, he sees himself not as sleeping with the enemy but as turning the other cheek. If he is "compassionate" in his conservatism, he sees it as the outworking of his Christian duty to give alms. Finally, if he consigns his whole administration to disintegration as he watches his approval numbers descend into the 20s because he declined Karl Rove's advice to defend the administration's Iraq policy and thus wrecks his administration along with his party's chances, he does so because as a Christian he knows he will be called to account for his actions in another venue.
If George Bush and his family think that politics is "smarmy" and that party politics are even more smarmy, it comes from his epiphany with Billy Graham which made him a new man, a man which sees another world, a larger vision. The world of party politics is grimy and transitory and not a worthy place to store up one's treasure. It is as nothing against the overwhelming contemplation of eternity.
THE PROPER ROLE OF PARTY IN GOVERNANCE
The founders designed a government which they hoped would function entirely without parties, indeed, it is the job of parties to bridge over the obstacles to power which the founders installed as checks and balances in our Constitution. The founders called partisanship "factionalism" but whatever the label they feared parties because they saw them as another name for the mob. Parties are in business to overcome the checks and balances which frustrate their ambitions.
It is hardly politic for an essayist today to openly declare that the founder's got something wrong but that is undeniably so when it comes to the issues of parties.
Today, no administration can effectively govern if it permits itself to be frustrated by the checks and balances in the Constitution. The degree to which the Congress will do the president's will largely depends upon the degree to which he can exercise party discipline. George Bush was a profound failure in this respect and Republicans paid terrible forfeits in 2006 and 2008. Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton were able to enforce enough party cohesion to escape impeachment. George Bush simply could not, or would not, control the Rinos in his own party except perhaps on the issues of maintaining the fight in Iraq and tax cuts.
So there is always a tension, thank God, between the politics of effective government on the one hand and the constitutional rights of our citizens on the other. If we drift too far toward one party government we risk our liberty. If we drift too far from party discipline, we risk the failure of government.
All this brings us to an examination of your assertion:
First of all, all Presidents have a duty to be above party politics, Presidents represent all Americans, not just their particular party. President Bush upheld that discipline in an exemplary manner and it was good for the country.
For all the reasons I've expressed above, I am bound to say that I find your sentiment noble in conception but very, very naïve when it comes to application. What George Bush did was not good for the country because he put us in the mess we are in. When political scientists write the history of the election of Barak Obama they are going to write that it was lost not by John McCain's haplessness but by George Bush. It was lost because Bush abandoned party, not the other way around as you assert, and without party the president becomes so confounded by the checks and balances put in place by our founders that he simply cannot govern effectively. If he cannot govern effectively, he cannot "represent all Americans." No party means no president, no president means no governing for America.
Nobility of character explains George Bush but it does not excuse him or relieve us of the consequences.
THE VERDICT OF HISTORY
I truly fear that George Bush will be seen as the last president of Constitutional America. The Last president of the America you and I were born in. The last president of the superpower. The last president of the nation in an age of nation states. The last president of Old America before it was swept into transnationalism..
He will be seen as a last president of virtue. The last president to believe he was obligated to tell his people the truth as he knew it. The last to have unalloyed loyalty to the nation of his birth. The last patriotic American president.
George Bush will be known as the last president to remain faithful to the Old Constitution. The last to put country before ideology, class, tribe, party, and race.
George Bush will be seen as the last Christian president. The last keeper of the light of the shining city on the hill.
I have to hit the road today, so won’t have time to reply to your once again impressive, well thought out post...but, will probably later (if I bring my laptop) or Tuesday or so (if I don’t bring my laptop). I will give you a little food for thought in the meantime, you seem to put a lot of blame on President Bush for what is happening now. Consider that the same forces we are seeing today working to destroy America have been there for some time, they worked very hard to undermine President Bush. To be blunt, with many people they succeeded in their propaganda...
I think that was James Buchanan...
It is not just for partisan politics that a president must be the titular head of his party and must actually rule it, it is ultimately for the good of the nation.
Looks like right now under Obama we're getting too much of a good thing.
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