To: Excuse_My_Bellicosity
It feels very personal to me. And I have felt a connection to President Bush like none other I've had in the past, including Ronald Reagan.
5 posted on
11/09/2006 12:04:54 PM PST by
BonnieJ
To: BonnieJ
It feels very personal to me. And I have felt a connection to President Bush like none other I've had in the past, including Ronald Reagan.
I agre, I feel like crap and I hurt for my country and President. I am trying to not listen to news today and not listen to talk radio, trying to re-focus but it just is not working.... so I feel your pain BIG TIME, in Cheney's words.
8 posted on
11/09/2006 12:07:35 PM PST by
JFC
To: BonnieJ
It feels very personal to me. And I have felt a connection to President Bush like none other I've had in the past, including Ronald Reagan.
Will you still feel that same connection to President Bush when he signs a democratic amnesty/open borders bill? Or when the next supreme court justice he nominates is a pro-choicer?
11 posted on
11/09/2006 12:08:20 PM PST by
Old_Mil
(http://www.constitutionparty.com/)
To: BonnieJ
I voted a straight Republican ticket, and made sure everyone that I knew did too.
And when all the dust cleared, I felt EXACTLY like the guy who wrote this piece.
I like GW a lot as a man. My earliest memories include working on a parade float for his dad's campaign for Congress, 40 years ago.
But the "uniter, not a divider" strategy never had a quid-pro-quo with the opposition. Seeing judicial nominees twist for YEARS should have been a warning sign to us all.
GW just plain lacks the killer instinct that politics in 21st Century America demands. A decent man, whom I voted for twice. But I'm afraid he'll go down as a failed wartime leader, because he just can't get beyond the "nice" factor to deal with the "domestic" part of the "enemies foreign and domestic".
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