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To: Nick Danger
"We'll have Marxists elected by landslides before the Invisible Hand has time to clean up the mess."

Do pray we err in reading the writing on the wall.

I see fewer and fewer distinctions between our leaders as the days go by.

George Bush Jr. finds himself historically almost identically in the same shoes as his father did a dozen years earlier.

The leader of the most powerful military machine in the history of the world having triumphed in a major war.

Only to be painted by a cunning and derelict media bent on removing him from power.

I fear Dubya's support base is waning, sleeping, or just don't give a damn - just like his father.

Sleep the sleep of defeat?

It's spooky.

Will the real George Bush please stand UP!?

120 posted on 07/16/2003 7:54:12 PM PDT by Happy2BMe (LIBERTY has arrived in Iraq - Now we can concentrate on HOLLYWEED!)
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To: Happy2BMe
George Bush Jr. finds himself historically almost identically in the same shoes as his father did a dozen years earlier.

Sons tend to be similar to their fathers. Machiavelli wrote in his Discourses on Livius (book 3, chapter XLVI):

WHENCE IT HAPPENS THAT A FAMILY IN A CITY FOR A TIME, HAVE THE SAME CUSTOMS

It appears that one City not only has certain ways and institutions different from another, and produces men who are either more harsh or effeminate, but within one City such differences are seen between one family and another. This is proved in every City, and many examples are seen in the City of Rome; for there are seen that the Manlii were hard and obstinate, the Publicoli benign and lovers of the people, the Appii ambitious and enemies of the plebs, and thusly many other families, each having its own qualities apart from the others. This cannot only result from blood ((for it must be that it changes from the diversity of marriages)) but must result from the different education that one family has from another. For it is very important that a young man of tender years begins to hear the good and bad of a thing, as it must of necessity make an impression on him, and from that afterwards regulate the method of proceeding all the rest of his life. And if this were not so it would be impossible that all the Appii should have had the same desires, and should have been stirred by the same passions, as Titus Livius has observed in many of them, and (especially) in that last one who was made Censor; and when his colleague at the end of eighteen months ((as the law called for)) laid down the magistracy, Appius did not want to lay down his, saying he could hold it five years according to the original laws ordained by the Censors. And although many public meetings were held on this question, and many tumults were generated, yet no remedy was ever found to depose him (from the office which he held) against the wishes of the people and the greater part of the Senate. And whoever reads the oration he made against P. Sempronius, the Tribune of the plebs, wfll note all the insolence of Appius, and all the good will and humanity shown by infinite Citizens in obeying the laws and auspices of their country.

121 posted on 07/16/2003 8:01:46 PM PDT by A. Pole
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