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1 posted on 01/08/2003 10:24:48 AM PST by Jean S
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To: JeanS
And he offered them concession after concession.

---------------------

Dear hearts, that is not the way a strong and competent president works. You do the same thing Reagan did. You make your argument in such a way that it is overwhelming and then take it to the people. Bush hasn't the prerequisite study, the intellect, or the spine to do it. Since the day he began running for the office I have never heard anything forceful or incisive from him.

2 posted on 01/08/2003 10:33:50 AM PST by RLK
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To: JeanS
This sounds like a very good book -- honest, perceptive and well-written. That puts it ahead of 95% of all the books that are published in any given year. I'm looking forward to reading the whole thing.

Congressman Billybob

Click for latest column on UPI, "Three Anti-Endorsements" (Not yet on UPI wire, or FR.)

As the politician formerly known as Al Gore has said, Buy my book, "to Restore Trust in America"

3 posted on 01/08/2003 10:34:28 AM PST by Congressman Billybob
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To: JeanS
Bush had hoped that Daschle would grow into the Arthur Vandenberg of his administration, Vandenberg being the formerly isolationist Republican senator from Michigan who put aside his differences with President Truman on domestic policy to help pass the Marshall Plan and military aid to Greece and Turkey in 1947

By Daschle's ham-handed operation as a partisan sniper, he has lost whatever opportunity he had to go down in history as a great leader of the Senate. To join hands with the President to jointly do what was necessary to protect this country in the middle of a war on terror was his great calling and opportunity, and he frittered it away. Daschle appears to be a petty, disagreeable, and visionless man, and his short tenure as Majority Leader revealed his inherent nature. I suppose the reason he remains leader of the Senate Democrats is that the Democratic Party itself is petty, visionless, and disagreeable. History has bypassed Tom Daschle. It's a good thing, too.

BTW, I bought Frums' book yesterday. He'a a good writer, and so far the book provides as good a peek into the workings of the White House, and into the soul of Geo. W. Bush, as any so far written.

4 posted on 01/08/2003 10:43:15 AM PST by My2Cents
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To: JeanS
Win the war bttt.
5 posted on 01/08/2003 10:43:21 AM PST by headsonpikes
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To: JeanS
Dick Morris was right: Republicans are not so nimble.

Not so "shameless" would be a more appropriate word choice.

9 posted on 01/08/2003 10:59:13 AM PST by Cincinatus
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To: JeanS
Win the war, then we’ll see.

I'm struck by the echoes of this statement when compared with that of our last President, who also once said "we'll just have to win then." The stark difference of the context and meaning between these two statements - both made in semi-private to advisors - points out better than anything I can imagine the difference in the two men's characters.

I wonder if we'll hear on this thread from all those who yesterday were calling Frum a hack who was betraying Bush by writing his book?

11 posted on 01/08/2003 11:00:25 AM PST by Wordsmith
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To: JeanS
Product Details

86 posted on 01/11/2003 1:55:33 PM PST by Stultis
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To: JeanS; All
The President got exactly what he wanted ...

EXPOSURE OF THE DEM/LIBERAL PARTISAN HACKS IN THE CONGRESS!!

I do believe he did it on purpose - just to expose them for their partisanship garbage, while they screamed about the partianship of repubs. We must always remember that to a dem/lib, non-partian really means: do it the dem way.

I think Bush has done a masterful job - and once again the dems/libs underestimated his ability to run circles around them.
87 posted on 01/11/2003 1:58:35 PM PST by CyberAnt
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To: JeanS; Howlin; Poohbah; hchutch; Miss Marple; Grampa Dave; Dog Gone
From David Frum's "Diary" today on NRO, commenting on whether his book does a hack-job on the Bush White House:

"I'm posting a selection of the reviews of the book, negative as well as positive, at www.davidfrum.com. My favorite so far is an outburst of sputtering fury from Michiko Kakutani: who managed in just 750 words to describe the book as "hectoring," "bellicose," "kneejerk," and guilty of "revel[ing] in ... American power." Guilty on the last point anyway. And the next time somebody asks me about the White House's displeasure with me, I'll be able to tell them that it is nothing compared to the dose of chili powder I seem to have shaken into the soup of those who hate this president."

166 posted on 01/13/2003 2:33:30 PM PST by My2Cents
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To: JeanS
This is an example of the culture war being waged. Contrary to the author's comments (who writes for THE MIRROR in the UK) which I'm sure he thinks most of his readers will find appauling, I frankly find the author's perspective to be weird and dangerous. With enemies like this, I'm pleased to be a supporter of Geo. W. Bush.

INSIDE THE WEIRD WORLD OF GEORGE W. BUSH
From Richard Wallace, US Editor In New York

GEORGE Bush is bad-tempered, ignorant and desperate for approval from his mother, according to an extraordinary new book.

His former speechwriter David Frum, a Canadian right-winger who coined the infamous phrase "axis of evil", paints a disturbing picture of a president and his White House.

And in curious parallels with his arch enemy Saddam Hussein, the world's most powerful man comes across as confused, tightly wound, prone to mood swings and obsessed with petty detail.

"He is often uncurious and as a result ill-informed," says Frum, whose description of Iraq, Iran and North Korea set the administration agenda after September 11.

And he discloses: "Bush had a poor memory for facts and figures."

The book - The Right Man: The Surprise Presidency of George W. Bush - is the first insider account of the Bush regime and reveals how the White House is run on strict, almost military lines, a so-called "culture of evangelism".

When Frum joined the president's staff he discovered "this was a White House where attendance at Bible study was, if not compulsory, not quite uncompulsory".

He reveals that Bush, "an intense Christian", credits God with keeping him off the booze and that cabinet meetings routinely begin with a prayer.

Shortly after the September 11 attacks, the president summoned five religious leaders - three Christian, one Muslim and one Jewish - to the Oval Office and asked them to pray for him.

Then he offered this confession: "You know, I had a drinking problem. Right now I should be in a bar in Texas, not the Oval Office.

"There is only one reason that I am in the Oval Office and not in a bar. I found faith. I found God. I am here because of the power of prayer."

Frum, 42, repeatedly mentions how Bush and various aides are constantly thanking God, beseeching God's help and urging others to pray on their behalf.

It mirrors Saddam's habit of regularly referencing Allah in his every action and speech.

Bush aides may not drink, swear or smoke, and late-night fast food is forbidden. Even a mild 'damn it' is frowned upon.

In a series of Saddam-style dictats, men must wear blue or grey suits and women must try to avoid brightly coloured clothes.

The president, who likes to be in bed by 10.30pm, is also obsessed about saving electricity, often walking around the White House turning off lights.

Frum jokes: "The television show The West Wing might as well have been set aboard a Klingon starship for all it resembled life inside the Bush White House." [Note: Having read Frum's book, this comment was intended to be a slam at the "The West Wing" in pointing out the utter normalcy of the REAL White House of GWB. Mr. Wallace clearly doesn't get it...He probably finds normalcy to be disturbing.]

He goes on: "In private, Bush was not the easy, genial man he was in public. Close up, one saw a man keeping a tight grip on himself. Bush was a sharp exception to the White House code of niceness. He was tart, not sweet." The speechwriter reveals the president's private views are extreme and boorish.

Bush describes al-Qaeda as "a bunch of nuts" and environmentalists are "green-green- lima-beans." Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat is "thuggish". And he would often say sarcastically of Europeans: "They just lurve Arafat." Frum also reveals: "Bush had a much more strained relationship with his mother than is often acknowledged. Barbara can be a difficult-to-please woman.

"Bush married a woman as unlike his mother as possible. His wife was his mother antidote."

Frum says that before the terrorist attacks, Bush was preparing to launch a series of bizarre social engineering measures called Communities of Character.

The issues to be tackled included: "Obscene music lyrics, children not eating dinner with their parents...and so on."

Frum says only Bush's chief political adviser Karl Rove and Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld have above average intelligence within Bush's inner circle.

But he pays tribute to Secretary of State Colin Powell's political skills. Powell is "the deadliest bureaucratic knife-fighter in the whole administration".

But it's Bush, the man, who surprises - and Frum's final verdict after all the barbs.

He says: "George W Bush is a very unusual person: a good man who is not a weak man. He has many faults. He is impatient and quick to anger; sometimes glib, even dogmatic, more conventional in his thinking than a leader probably should be. But outweighing the faults are his virtues: decency, honesty, rectitude, courage and tenacity."

He adds: "He was a rather unfamiliar type of heavyweight. Words often failed him, his memory sometimes betrayed him but his vision was large and clear.

"And when he perceived new possibilities, he had the courage to act on them - a much less common virtue in politics than one might suppose. Bush's vision is not occluded by guilt or self-doubt." Frum quit his £60,000-a-year job soon after last January's axis of evil speech. Insiders say the president was upset that he had taken credit for the address.

But Frum concludes that the president has performed well. "He was hardly the obvious man for the job. But by a very strange fate, he turned out to be, of all unlikely things, the right man."

And yesterday he claimed: "The more I got to know Bush the more I got to like him."

170 posted on 01/13/2003 2:50:48 PM PST by My2Cents
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