I thought, and think, he has been one of the great ones. If he had the legislature he campaigned for and deserved so much more would have been done.
I admire and respect him and am enraged that so few stood for fight for him, except for the troops,of course, who appreciate him almost as much as they appreciate him.
If he could run again I would vote for him as long as he had a good speech writer and had controlled interviews at all times. The man really failed by not being able to communicate why he justified certain decisions in running a global empire.
Other then that, thank you George Bush for keeping the nation running after 911 and preventing a nuclear 911 by keeping the fight in the ME where it belongs. Thank you for caring enough about the American people enough to kiss Islam’s collective behind even though I know you despise them as a group. Calling it a religion of peace was probably unecessary but this goes back to my previous sentence.
Thank you for yelling from the rooftops after 911 that we needed immediate energy independence although your own House shot your ideas down because of there greed. No, you deviated from them as a collective group and this created new Democratic enemies who shredded every ounce of your accomplishments.
Now please focus once again in your last few months of office screaming for energy independence once again from the rooftops and leave the Palestinian issue alone, it is very much a waste of time and every President seems to try this at the end of there term and fail. The globe now knows the Palestinian excuse for global Islamic terrorists to justify there murder is a joke.
You know, it’s funny. I have my misgivings about a lot of what W has said and done and not said and not done. But, as Yeats’ wrote (as I recall) “What we have thought and done and done and thought must ramble and thin out like milk spilt upon a stone.” After much rambling by W (he is, no doubt, a terrible communicator), we have to look at his conviction in the times in which we have all lived—spoken by deeds, not words. I firmly believe that Bush will not only be vindicated in his expressed beliefs, but that the seeds of what he has sown will eventually flower into a great, stout oak of liberty in the middle east and beyond. He will not merely be considered one of America’s great presidents, he will be hailed as a great patron of humanity itself.