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JOINING THE RUSH-LED CHORUS ON DUB (Normal People Prefer Bush. He has gravitas)
rushlimbaugh ^ | 3/26/2002 | Rush Limbaugh

Posted on 03/26/2002 3:28:09 PM PST by TLBSHOW

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To: TLBSHOW
bump for FreeRepublic, bump for Rush.
181 posted on 03/27/2002 12:10:33 PM PST by Soaring Feather
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To: solzhenitsyn
You are under the assumption that a certain number of vote 'belong' to a candidate and that votes not cast for that canddidate are 'take' by another candidate.

There were undoubtedly votes cast for Nader and Buchanan that would not have ever have gone to either algore or Bush.

Algore was such a weak candidate that Nader was more appealing to a large segment of the traditional Democratic voting block.

Algore was such a weak candidate that he lost to a Republican candidate who's main appeal was that he was not algore.

Bush was such a weak candidate that he nearly lost to algore. Pitiful, actually.

182 posted on 03/27/2002 2:20:32 PM PST by Eagle Eye
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To: TLBSHOW
Democrats will not take the American People's Free Speech

Not by themselves can they do it. But with the help of the RINO's in congress and a compliant President, they just might pull it off. It wouldn't surprise me if the Court knuckles under to the media just as Bush has. Then who will you blame?

Regards.

183 posted on 03/27/2002 3:29:55 PM PST by The Irishman
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To: Eagle Eye; Miss Marple
Eagle Eye, you said: "Bush was such a weak candidate that he nearly lost to algore. Pitiful, actually."

George W. Bush wrested the presidency from the party that had held the White House during a major and protracted economic boom, even though the incumbent party benefited from pervasive bias in the press and massive voter fraud. President Bush achieved that through strength of character, leadership, political instincts, organizing skills, and what I think may be his greatest asset -- even most folks who disagree with him tend to like him and trust him. He's not an outstanding intellectual or orator, but he's real, he's one of us, and he's a genuinely nice, decent guy. He connects easily with the American people, and they want to believe in him.

Well, Eagle Eye, so much for the fellow I voted for. If you are a Buchanan supporter, exactly how well did your guy poll against Al Gore and the other candidates, and what in your opinion are the compelling qualities that caused him to do so much better than my "weak" and "pitiful" candidate?

184 posted on 03/27/2002 3:38:10 PM PST by solzhenitsyn
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To: solzhenitsyn
George W. Bush wrested the presidency from the party that had held the White House during a major and protracted economic boom, even though the incumbent party benefited from pervasive bias in the press and massive voter fraud.

I don't where you were or what you were reading during the campaign, but there were very few actual GW supporters then. Very few. For the longest time he never said where he stood on anything and rode that wave of popularity right into the debates.

Most of the supporters on FR were party loyalists who insisted that any vote other than for whomever the Party selected was a vote for the Dems or the Anybody But Gore types. People were so frightened of algore winning that the 'hold my nose one more time' types abounded. Republicans rank and file were not thrilled with the way that GW was 'selected' without anyone really knowing where he stood on what issues. The Party liked him because he is personable, attractive and almost an anti-clinton with few skeletons in the closet.

When he finally came out on issues, he came across as a Moderate who promised to increase the federal government and ease up on immigration.

I was wrong on one thing; I predicted that he would toss 2A supporters to the Dems as a bone, but he decided to shaft everyone an sign CFR to trash the 1st.

Rush kept saying that he wish Bush would be more Conservative than compassionate and Bob Dornan knew that Bush would need to be pressured heavily to stay in touch with the conservative base. Domestically, we've seen more of hte Democratic agenda in Bush's first year than all of clinton's eight!

Bush was so inspiring that he barely beat the dolt algore who never got his makeup right. The Republicans were more successful at scaring people into voting against algore than the dems were at scaring people into voting aginst Bush. But just barely.

185 posted on 03/27/2002 5:33:56 PM PST by Eagle Eye
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To: McGavin999
Ah, I see, so you don't buy that whole "seperation of powers" thing that our forefathers meticulously wrote into the Constitution to make sure the legislative branch legislates, the executive branch executes, and the judicial branch determines the constitutionality of the laws?

I was unaware that the Constitutional prescription of the separation of powers denies the mandate - which is implied in the very oath of office by which they are bound to support the Supreme Law of The Land - of Congress which writes the laws and the President who signs or vetoes the laws to know good and goddam well whether what they are writing or signing passes Constitutional muster before they legislate. The courts, to borrow a locution from National Review editor Rich Lowry, do not own the Constitution.

What a shame you weren't around when the document was drafted, I'm sure the founding fathers would have welcomed your rather unique thoughts on where they went wrong.

You don't really believe the Founding Fathers would deny that a Congress charged to write laws and a President charged to either sign or veto said laws as he deems fit have a mandate against writing and/or signing unconstitutional legislation, do you?

Read the Constitution!

I have read the Constitution. I have this nasty habit of reading it at least once a week, a habit I have maintained since childhood. Among other things, said Constitution - the Supreme Law of the Land - says quite explicitly, Congress shall make no law...abridging freedom of speech. What part of that language escapes the comprehension of either Congress or the President? (And if it does escape their comprehension, should this not cause us alarm as to the elementary competence of the men and women we were thus fool enough to elect in the first place?)

But I have noticed as well that nowhere in Article III - which conjugates and enunciates the makeup and the mission of the Federal judiciary - is it granted that the Supreme Court is either the first or the sole court of determining the Constitutionality of laws. That grant of the Supreme Court being the final authority on the Constitutionality of the law arrived, if I recall correctly, by way of Mr. Chief Justice Marshall, writing for the Court in Marbury v. Madison.
186 posted on 03/27/2002 5:56:12 PM PST by BluesDuke
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To: BluesDuke
I see. So you would rather he voted the bill and it went back to congress and continued to be an issue until there was a democrat in the oval office who will sign it. Of course, at that time it would STILL go to SCOTUS to determine whether or not it was constitutional.

Oh yeah, I forgot, you don't really care about reality, you'd prefer that have McCain's face on all the Sunday morning shows for the next umpteen years, and you'd prefer to have congress tied in knots while trying to muster 67 votes, and you'd MUCH rather have the media claiming Bush is tainted by "BIG MONEY" like Enron and that's why he voted the bill.

Sorry, I'd rather SCOTUS drove the stake through the heart of CFR and had it declared dead once and for all.

BTW, the duties of the president are much more then either signing or vetoing bills. Regardless of how you interpret the constitution, this is NOT a monarchy.

187 posted on 03/27/2002 6:09:24 PM PST by McGavin999
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To: McGavin999
I see. So you would rather he voted the bill and it went back to congress and continued to be an issue until there was a democrat in the oval office who will sign it.

I would rather he vetoed the bill, stated in plain enough language the reasoning as to why this bill deserved to be vetoed (and it did deserve a veto), and gone from there to make it plain and true that the burden of justifying to the American people why they saw fit to write and at long last pass a plainly unconstitutional abridgement of freedom of speech belonged to Congress. With Mr. Bush's political capital (reality check: he has, at this writing anyway, the sort of public approval ratings even Ronald Reagan couldn't have claimed), it should have been all but a no-brainer. (On the assumption that Congress might not have had the votes to override a veto in this case, I shall keep to myself for now any supposition as to why there might be the assumption that the next President, God help us if so, would be a Damnocrat.)

Of course, at that time it would STILL go to SCOTUS to determine whether or not it was constitutional.

Assuming, of course, that Mr. Bush had shown some kidney and vetoed the bill, and that Congress from there had the votes to override the veto. My previous commentary stands: the Supreme Court is not and ought never to be seen as the first authority on the Constitutionality of a given law.

Oh yeah, I forgot, you don't really care about reality, you'd prefer that have McCain's face on all the Sunday morning shows for the next umpteen years...

And you think McVain hasn't won a huge victory now? Reality check: Mr. Bush's signing this bill means John McVain gets to play Roger Enrico to Mr. Bush's Coca-Cola and crow, accordingly, the other guy just blinked!, when the occasion arises, and you know as well as I that he will seize those occasions when they do arise, as surely they will on the coming campaign trails. Had Mr. Bush vetoed the bill, the proper enough way to have dealt with McVain would be to let him rant his goddamned head off, because a) he would, indeed, do it anyway, but b) make it clear that it then becomes his burden, and not Mr. Bush's, to justify his stance and actions.

...and you'd prefer to have congress tied in knots while trying to muster 67 votes, and you'd MUCH rather have the media claiming Bush is tainted by "BIG MONEY" like Enron and that's why he voted the bill.

Gee, whiz.

I had not realised it would be such an unconscionable burden upon us to have Congress tied up in knots trying to muster an override. (Considering the mischief government makes when it is making law - I am to the point where I will vote for no candidate who does not stand for repealing more than making law - I should think we and the Constitution are safer if and when Congress is tied up in knots like this.)

And I had not realised previously that it was that far beyond Mr. Bush's powers of communication and enunciation to state plain and simple that - having vetoed this bill on very solid Constitutional grounds (please, have we forgotten that the media gets a huge break with this bill?), if he had vetoed it - anyone who even thinks of trying to claim he vetoed the bill out of any "big money" taint (have we forgotten that, when Enron came schnorring around the White House for favour when the proverbial sh@t hit the proverbial fan, the Bush people told them to take a proverbial hike, post haste?) or beholdenness, is talking through his or her chapeau.

Sorry, I'd rather SCOTUS drove the stake through the heart of CFR and had it declared dead once and for all.

I assure you, I do not seek to deny the Supreme Court its right to earn its keep when I say that the Congress which writes the law and the President who signs or vetoes a law have a mandate to know well enough whether what they are writing or signing is Constitutionally permissible. Once more, with feeling: The courts, Supreme or otherwise, do not own the Constitution of the United States.

BTW, the duties of the president are much more then either signing or vetoing bills. Regardless of how you interpret the constitution, this is NOT a monarchy.

Since the question at hand involves purely the President's power to sign or veto prospective law, it is the height of condescension to presume I know nothing of the President's other duties. Rest assured, I need lectures on the range of duties of the President about as profoundly as the Incredible Hulk needs anabolic steroids. Since when is it unacceptable, when considering a piece of legislation arriving at the President's desk, to concentrate on his power to sign or veto said legislation?

I have interpreted the Constitution in no such fashion as to suggest I believe the United States of America to be a monarchy. Nor do I believe in Presidential fiat. (If nothing else, we surely had an unconscionable ton of it during the Clintonista era.) To hold that the Congress should not have composed and the President should not have signed a piece of legislation that is profoundly unconstitutional - indeed, to hold that neither branch has any legitimate business in composing and/or signing a plainly unconstitutional piece of legislation - is not to say anything that can be construed as a predilection toward monarchy which I simply do not hold.

And none of the foregoing is to say that I wish now for anything other than the Supreme Court to shoot this abomination down as it deserves. But it should not have had to come to that point. Which raises a point I made elsewhere on this matter: if indeed this entire farce is being played out in order that various and sundry politicoes (including the President, perhaps) can claim to the "right" constituencies that they stood on the side of the alleged angels, while leaving the real dirty work of burying this monster to the Supreme Court, it would be - as the Orange County Register, for one, pointed forth a few days ago - the most grotesque of political cynicism.
188 posted on 03/27/2002 7:55:39 PM PST by BluesDuke
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To: BluesDuke
You guys just keep saying the same thing over and over. It's getting boring. Good night.
189 posted on 03/27/2002 8:15:20 PM PST by McGavin999
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To: McGavin999
Sleep tight.
190 posted on 03/27/2002 8:19:29 PM PST by BluesDuke
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To: Eagle Eye
Eagle Eye, you said: "I don't where you were or what you were reading during the campaign, but there were very few actual GW supporters then. Very few. For the longest time he never said where he stood on anything and rode that wave of popularity right into the debates."

So "there were very few actual GW supporters then. Very few.", but (in the very next sentence) "he rode that wave of popularity right into the debates."

Thanks, I needed that!

191 posted on 03/28/2002 1:06:36 AM PST by solzhenitsyn
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To: TLBSHOW

George W. Bush: Political Virtuoso, or Sell-out?
by JohnHuang2
March 28, 2002

Political observers often muse over the apparent incongruence of Bush's sustained popularity even in the face of setbacks -- real or perceived -- in the political arena.

Sure his handling of the War on Terror has been commendable, they admit, but what about the sinking of the Pickering nomination? What about the defeat of his stimulus package, of ANWR oil exploration and other key elements of his agenda?

'How, Oh how, on earth could Bush remain so popular despite such a string of "defeats"?', his sourpuss enemies mope in frustration.

Back in January, when Enron burst onto the scene, foes of the President were dancing and doing cartwheels. The belligerents, punch-drunk with 'triumph', were confident Enron would torpedo the Bush administration, as surely as Watergate did Nixon's. A hailstorm of grand jury subpoenas, indictments and 'smoking guns' would bury the Bush legacy; heck, the sleaze from Houston might even make Clinton look ethical by comparison -- or so they fervently believed.

In the media, all hell broke loose. Like a pack of hungry Jackals, the presstitutes seized the Enron debacle with demented zeal, sinking their fangs into every delicious jot and tittle of what, they hoped, was Watergate redux.

The Democrats, like sharks, smelled blood in the water. The airwaves were bursting with torrents of innuendo and rumor. From the unabated sludge of ugly media gossip, dirt and hearsay, you'd get the impression Bush was Enron's CEO himself, directing the destruction of documents at Arthur Andersen from the Oval Office.

Democrats went on a rampage. "White House cover-up! White House cover-up!", they howled. Rep. Henry Waxman was handing out hourly press releases like cotton candy at a carnival, larded with every conceivable allegation -- hinting darkly that Bush's days were numbered.

Any day now, any day now -- you just wait and see. The presstitutes swallowed it hook, line and sinker.

Yet, after wasting millions of tax dollars pursuing the President; after thousands of hours collecting testimony, rummaging through documents, combing minutes of meetings, looking for dirt, what did Bush-haters finally come up with?

A big, fat Nada, that's what.

Rather than embarrassing the President, they only made fools of themselves -- on live television, to boot. Rather than knocking Bush down a notch or two, Democrats plunged headlong into a free-fall. Bush's enemies, bursting with bitterness and rage, went for the jugular, but ended up blindly shooting themselves, instead.

Democrats were incensed even further as poll after poll showed a President still riding a wave of undiminished popularity, even as his spit-angry enemies suffered a backlash.

Nothing else seemed to work, either. Daschle's second-guessing of the war boomeranged; the "Shadow government" grousing and grumbling bombed; the Democrat garment rending and teeth gnashing over looming deficits came-a-cropper; the Time Magazine libel alleging Bush kept New Yorkers in the dark in the face of a brewing nuclear terrorist threat was exposed as a sham and a lie -- a damnable lie.

But Democrats, even after their myriad of blunders, aren't yet hoisting the white flag. No, not quite. Their animosity and spite towards the President is just as searing today as it's ever been. Their flubs and stumbles only fuel it.

Indeed, with the economy fading as an issue and elections looming, a veritable siege mentality now grips the Democrat ranks. The sans souci giggling and twitter of January's Enron euphoria has now given way to trepidation and panic.

Fearing they're headed for a shellacking in the fall, Daschle et al have escalated their dirty war on the White House, bottlenecking, thwarting, choking, shackling the Bush agenda at every turn.

Stoking Democrat ire even further, President Bush has effectively neutralized a slew of hot-button issues Democrats traditionally use to inflame their base and frighten them to the voting booth. Even Social Security, once called the Third Rail of politics, lacks the walloping punch of yesteryear. It's no longer the bugaboo it used to be.

In short, the Democrat strategy (per the Carville memo) of carving out a niche on domestic issues, leaving War and foreign affairs to Bush has turned into a miserable failure. The war's smashing success has essentially back-burnered their issues. The new upsurge in confidence on the economy has, for Democrats, only made matters worse -- infinitely worse, in fact.

Against this backdrop, with Enron having fallen off the radar screen, enter Campaign finance "reform", a glaring euphemism if there ever was one.

Basically, Democrats thought they were calling the President's 'bluff.' Surely, surely, Bush would never sign it, they reasoned. A veto would send shock waves across America, spark a withering backlash in the press and hogtie Bush to Enron for the rest of his days. Bush would be beaten to within an inch of his political life. Democrats would reap the windfall.

Nope, no way would he sign it.

Democrats believed this issue was a win-win. 'We've boxed him in this time, haven't we'?, they probably chortled among themselves.

Stick a fork in him, he's done.

Democrats could smell victory, at long last.

Instead, Machiavelli was spinning in his grave.

The White House announcement of Bush's intentions sent shock waves, alright -- across Democrat cloakrooms and their media outlets.

For Democrats savoring the chance of running on Enron, Bush had just gummed up the works -- big time. They thought they were playing Bush for a fool, he checkmated them instead. Bush's signature scrambles their plans -- and their brains, too. Democrats are now left with nothing to run on in the fall.

That's the politics -- but is this the right thing to do? Bush has qualms over certain aspects of Shays-Meehan on constitutional grounds -- he's said so publicly. But isn't he, therefore, by signing this document, plainly violating his oath to "preserve, protect and defend the constitution of the United States"?

If that's the standard, then every president in our history was guilty of High Crimes and Misdemeanors -- and, therefore, worthy of impeachment. Presidents, from time in memorial, have knowingly put their John Hancock on bills of dubious constitutionality.

With President Reagan, it was the so-called Boland Amendment, which hamstrung his policy of aiding the Freedom Fighters then battling the Communist Sandistas in Nicaragua. It was a flagrant breach of a President's constitutional powers to conduct foreign affairs.

He signed it reluctantly, but never vetted its constitutionality in court, a decision which drew fire from many conservatives. Democrats later used the Boland Amendment to hammer Reagan in the Iran-Contra affair.

But was the Gipper, by signing the Boland Amendment, openly violating his oath to "preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States" -- and, therefore, worthy of impeachment? Of course not.

The federal budget is another illustration of this principle. Arguably, most of what's in there is unconstitutional -- on its face. You don't need to be a lawyer to know this. Yet budgets get signed year in and year out.

So what's the basic rationale for signing CFR, you ask? More than likely, Bush is convinced the best way to kill it is sign it. The myriad of lawsuits and challenges will test its constitutionality in the courtroom, before a mostly conservative judiciary. Bush wants the matter settled, once and for all. As he sees it, a veto settles nothing, and may only invite trouble down the road; a future (more liberal) Congress could send up an even more brazen version a future (more liberal) President might be willing to sign. And if, in the interim, the courts' ideological balance tilts leftward, CFR might enjoy better odds for survival.

On the other hand, the popular notion that Bush opted to sign for fear of sparking a backlash is pure hokum. Outside the Beltway, CFR isn't even a blimp on the radar screen. In polls, less than 2% even care about this issue.

With the public's attention riveted firmly on the war, the President could veto CFR with little, if any, downside risk. In short, the theory that Bush is a coward, frankly, doesn't square with the facts.

Sure, McCainiacs will scream bloody murder, the presstitutes will have a field day, but so what? Bush got pounded over Enron day after day, week after week, yet his polls didn't budge.

This issue, notwithstanding the gobs of ink and airtime, doesn't resonate -- not with real people.

Let's face it, folks. Bush is a good man, a decent man. No, he's not perfect. But who is? There isn't a politician on this earth with whom I will agree 100% of time. Sooner or later, there are bound to be letdowns and disappointments. It goes with the turf.

Bear in mind that George W. Bush isn't merely head of some think tank on policy wonk avenue in Washington D.C. He isn't President of the American Conservative Union or the Heritage Foundation, much as I admire both institutions profoundly. And he isn't just President of American conservatives -- he is President of all the people.

As U.S. President, his constituency is infinitely broader, encompassing all of the citizens of this great and wonderful free republic of ours. Writing a position paper is one thing, but Bush will be judged by results from his actions -- by policy, not words.

Bush is a serious man, as well as a shrewd politician who plays the hand he's been dealt -- a squeaker election, a razor-thin House majority and a Senate in the clutches of leftist militant hardliners.

But is Bush conservative? I'll let you be the judge.

On foreign affairs, Bush is arguably one of the most conservative Presidents in American history. In his first year, alone, he unceremoniously dumped the Kyoto protocol, catching flack from every conceivable direction. Day after day after day, he was pummeled, lambasted and thrashed in the press as an enemy of the environment -- public enemy number 1, in fact.

But Bush never relented, he never backed down. He made no apologies, he stood firmly by his decision.

Also in his first year, he jettisoned the Cold-War era Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty. Again he was hammered mercilessly, here and abroad.

As President, one of his first acts was to scrap, by executive order, all taxpayer-funded overseas "family planning" promoting abortion. The screams and howls of protests bellowing from radical feminists and surrogates in the media were deafening.

Again, Bush made no apologies.

On Taiwan, there is no question where Bush stands, and mainland China knows it. On North Korea, Bush rightly condemns it as a rogue state, as part of an 'axis of evil', in which he includes Iran and Iraq.

After a midair collision involving an American EP-3 surveillance plane and a Chinese jet fighter, Bush in short order secured the release of our crewmen and brought them home safely -- all without an apology and all without igniting WWWIII.

Bush has pushed hard for a National Missile Defense, even against protestations and caterwauling over "unilateralism" from NATO "allies."

Bush's record in Afghanistan and the War on Terror speaks for itself.

Regarding a U.N. global tax, Bush said 'forgeddaboutit'!

On the home front, President Bush told the ABA 'hasta la vista, baby'. No pack of left-wing lawyers will vet Bush appointments to the bench, not if he has any say in the matter. Speaking of which, his judicial nominations have, with few exceptions, been solidly conservative.

By the stroke of a pen, he repealed a host of last minute Clinton EOs, including egregious OHSA regulations.

On energy, he's campaigned to reduce America's dependency on foreign -- particularly Mideast -- oil, pushing for more nuclear plant production, off-shore oil drilling, and ANWR oil exploration.

On Social Security, Bush is for partial privatization -- a gutsy stance critics said would cost him the elections.

On public assistance, he's offered faith-based alternatives to traditional welfare, in line with his 'Compassionate Conservative' philosophy.

On taxes, his campaign-style, crisscrossing the heartland moved Congress to pass a $1.35 trillion, across-the-board tax cut for working families. Getting a tax cut -- any tax cut -- through this Congress wasn't exactly a piece of cake. Democrats weren't quite beating a path to the White House door to hand Bush tax relief legislation he could sign. Daschle et al pulled every conceivable, cynical parliamentary maneuver to delay -- and ultimately kill -- its chances in the Senate.

His decision on stem-cell research earned him plaudits from pro-lifers, and rightly so.

On national defense, Bush proposes the largest boost in military spending since the Gipper. For the men and women who serve, he's delivered a promised -- and much-needed -- pay raise, lifting morale.

I could go on, but suffice it is to say that's not the record of a shilly-shally, dithering "moderate." Not by any stretch.

At the same time, this is a President who knows compromise isn't always a dirty word. Better to get half a loaf than no loaf at all. Progress often comes in bite sizes.

It's called politics, the art of the possible. He is a master tactician, but he never loses sight of the big picture -- his ultimate vision.

Some contend we should look at the glass as only half-empty -- weigh only the wrong decisions he makes in the balance, and ignore the right ones. Right decisions -- decisions we agree with -- don't count. In evaluating his record, only decisions and policy choices we disagree with count.

In Bush's case, however, this standard means ignoring an overwhelmingly conservative record. Shrugging off his list of impressive achievements is cutting off our nose to spite our face.

But, most important of all, George W. Bush has restored honor, dignity and trust to the office he holds, a solemn promise he made repeatedly in the campaign.

One of the most astonishing things about this President -- one that borders on enigma -- is the maturity he displayed so far beyond his modest years in politics. It's what drives his opponents up the wall, and leads them to underestimate the man, again and again.

Conventional wisdom says George W. Bush is impossible: No one with so little political experience could ever rise to such stunning heights of success so quickly in so demanding a job. Yet, where many Presidents before him stumbled, George W. Bush excels in ways transcending all explanation.

In this sense, Bush restored our faith and confidence, not just in the office of President, but in ourselves as Americans. From the depths of national trauma and anguish on September 11, Bush helped rekindle our 'can-do' spirit; we were soon back on our feet again.

He made us feel prouder than ever to be Americans.

Indeed, Bush is uniquely suited for these times. George W. Bush is our War President.

Ultimately, history will judge him not by campaign finance "reform" or the Dow Jones Industrial average nor the size of the deficit.

He will be judged by success in the War on Terror. Period.

And judging from his stellar performance thus far, this President is headed for greatness.

My two cents...
"JohnHuang2"


192 posted on 03/28/2002 2:41:19 AM PST by JohnHuang2
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To: Lazamataz
you are a naughty, naughty boy !


193 posted on 03/28/2002 3:21:17 AM PST by tomkat
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To: solzhenitsyn
Thanks, I needed that!

I suspect that you only see what you want to see. and that you have a need to see the candidate Bush as one who clearly articulated a Conservative position with compassion, as one who's ideas and commitiment to the Constitution overshadowed the lesser candidates, and as one who's support in the campaign came from those who the vast majority of Republicans.

It wasn't so.

Bush was selected because of his charm and eye appeal and after very careful background checks showed that the dirt on him, if any, couldn't surface. People liked him, but he didn't have much at all in the way of issue-based support.

Today he has dissappointed those who hoped he'd be Conservative.

194 posted on 03/28/2002 4:37:04 AM PST by Eagle Eye
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To: JohnHuang2
Great speech! Insight, perspective, and clarity of expression -- what a fine offering!

If you haven't already done so, please re-post this as a separate article. If it's stuck at the end of this thread, no one will see it. Don't hide your light under a bushel, JH2!

195 posted on 03/28/2002 3:19:53 PM PST by solzhenitsyn
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To: Eagle Eye
I guess we have different opinions about President Bush, but your spirit is admirable. Thanks for the discussion, Eagle Eye.
196 posted on 03/29/2002 3:15:11 PM PST by solzhenitsyn
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To: solzhenitsyn
My pleasure. Have your people call my people...
197 posted on 03/29/2002 3:34:06 PM PST by Eagle Eye
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