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A day in the life of President Bush (photos): 5/15/03
yahoo.com, whitehouse.gov

Posted on 05/15/2003 6:41:08 PM PDT by rintense

President Bush began the day early with remarks at the Hispanic Prayer Breakfast in Washington DC. Later in the day, Bush spoke at the annual Peace Officers Memorial Service, where he praised and thanked law enforcement officers for their dedication and sacrifices. Enjoy your daily dose of Dubya!


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bush; dayinthelife
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To: ohioWfan
"In contrast to a certain predecessor, George W. has the sexiness of a faithful husband. He appreciates women without the leer. New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd, for a typical media example, grows apoplectic over the allure of the man. He's a winner and the Democrats are merely whiners: "They don't know how to combat the Bushies' visceral belief in action over explanation, juice over justification."

What a GREAT paragraph! This author GETS it!"


I just knew you'd focus on this paragraph -- it was the same graph that REALLY caught my eye.

And you're right, this author GETS it!!!!!!

61 posted on 05/15/2003 7:34:35 PM PDT by DrDeb
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To: rintense
Thanks (-:
62 posted on 05/15/2003 7:34:51 PM PDT by firewalk
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To: DrDeb
The following is yet another excellent article concerning our presidential "Hottie"

They all suddenly are seeing what we have known all along! Great article, thanks for the link!

63 posted on 05/15/2003 7:38:08 PM PDT by ImaRebelSpy
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To: DrDeb
Winner/Whiner
Action/Explanation
Juice/Justification

Pretty much sums up the difference between our 'man of action' President and the whining Dims, doesn't it?

64 posted on 05/15/2003 7:38:27 PM PDT by ohioWfan (BUSH 2004!! Leadership, Morality, Integrity)
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To: ohioWfan
Thanks! You're right, it is tragic. Those folks are too focused on ME and not WE.
65 posted on 05/15/2003 7:38:33 PM PDT by SuziQ
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To: MJY1288
Thanks for the ping to a great article, which captures the essens of the President completely.

Here is my favorite passage:

For the last year, almost the entire press has slung the arrows at George, has mocked, has ridiculed, has trashed him mercilessly and has done it on an hourly basis while they pretty much ignored the real hypocrites, to attack the Christian president. They called him stupid, they called him "shrub", they challenged every decision as though they really cared, as though they really understood the full import of the situation and last night George showed them all he has been paying attention and has not forgotten that their actions have caused people to suffer and die more than was absolutely necessary.

66 posted on 05/15/2003 7:40:26 PM PDT by Miss Marple
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To: rintense
I love that quote of the day. Police officers risk their lives daily for our protection, and yet are getting such a bad rap from the media these days. God Bless our men and women of the police forces across the nation. We are thankful for you one and all!

Thanks Rintense for this dose every night!
67 posted on 05/15/2003 7:40:55 PM PDT by ladyinred
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To: SuziQ
Exactly. The 'god of money' has robbed them of the joy of life (I don't mean just sex....there's a lot more than that missing in their lives. It's just a symptom of the real disease).

Like I said.......tragic.

68 posted on 05/15/2003 7:41:28 PM PDT by ohioWfan (BUSH 2004!! Leadership, Morality, Integrity)
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To: rintense

President George W. Bush comforts a woman during the Annual Peace Officers Memorial Service at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., Thursday, May 15, 2003. "I want to thank all the law enforcement officers who have come here today to honor the fallen," said the President in his remarks. "I particularly want to say to the families, there is a lot of love and compassion in this nation of ours. A lot of people pray for you," (comma, sic)

Jeeeez...

69 posted on 05/15/2003 7:42:19 PM PDT by facedown (Armed in the Heartland)
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To: hoosiermama
Is there a live thread?

To be honest i have no idea .. I didn't know they were still on the floor until Gretta mentioned it on TV

70 posted on 05/15/2003 7:44:12 PM PDT by Mo1 (I'm a monthly Donor .. You can be one too!)
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To: Miss Marple
HEY I got question for Eric Draper

How do you keep Barney STILL that what I want to know
71 posted on 05/15/2003 7:45:12 PM PDT by SevenofNine (Not everybody in it for truth, justice, and the American way=Det Lennie Briscoe)
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To: rintense
Thanks for posting these pictures. Bush is a good man.
72 posted on 05/15/2003 7:46:33 PM PDT by Reactionary
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To: Miss Marple
Thank you for the link to the photographs. They are all very good, but particularly touching are those from Sept 11th. Such a good man, with such a great group of advisors around him. Makes me feel so better to know these good people are there when we so desperately need them.
73 posted on 05/15/2003 7:50:14 PM PDT by ladyinred
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To: ohioWfan
Oh I completely agree. I think many folks just don't marry well. Or marry for all the wrong reasons. And I'm glad you said respect. Too often, couples just go through the motions- of what they expecte being married is supposed to be like, with no clue how to truly know each other. It is sad. And probably why I'm still single. I'm holding out for something special. Whether it exists is another matter altogether.
74 posted on 05/15/2003 7:50:42 PM PDT by rintense (Freedom is contagious. And everyone wants to catch it.)
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To: Miss Marple
I'm an old fart who rarely gets emotional, but there are times where I feel like I'm in that scene in the movie "Brian's Song" where Gayle Sayers is telling his team mates (Chicago Bears) that Brian Piccallo has cancer and says to all of them "I love Brian Piccallo"

when I see President Bush with his heart on his sleave, greiving with those who are suffering from the loss of a family member, I find myself saying "I love President George W. Bush" for the simple fact that this guy loves us

I have never seen a person in politics that is as genuine as this guy and I think this is what I like most about George W. Bush

75 posted on 05/15/2003 7:55:44 PM PDT by MJY1288 (Freedom is Ringing)
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To: reDublican
**I loved Draper's choice for his favorite picture of the president, to date**


Who is Draper? What is it all about?
76 posted on 05/15/2003 7:57:57 PM PDT by ReaganandDubyaForever
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To: Miss Marple; rintense; Mo1; olliemb; mtngrl@vrwc; lawgirl; ladyinred; SuziQ; MJY1288; admiralsn; ...
My son in Austria.....not Eric.....sent me this article via e-mail. I can't find the link to it online, but it's GREAT, and I thought lots of Dosers might really appreciate the kind of man Mel Gibson is.....(off topic.....I hope you don't mind!...it's from the WSJ Opinion Journal)........

TASTE COMMENTARY

The Greatest Story, Newly Told

Mel Gibson on "The Passion," and the passion behind it.

BY RAYMOND ARROYO

ROME--Bounding around Studio 5 on the Cinecittà lot, not far from the catacombs, Mel Gibson is giving the performance of his life. In the shadow of an olive tree, wrapped in blue fog, he is at first a trembling Judas yanking at his lip, now a torch-toting member of Herod's guard. After expelling a cough (the remnant of a flu bug) and running a hand though his mane, he is suddenly a placid Messiah.

Sadly, none of this is being captured on film. But the athletic directing style betrays a zeal--an almost spiritual possession--to tell a story still confined to Mr. Gibson's mind yet known to millions. "It's going longer than I'd like," he whispers, as the actors try to copy his performance. "They've got to get into my head to see what I see . . . and you should see what it looks like from the inside." With a roll of his eyes, he is back on set demonstrating for the Italian day players.

Today the actor-director is shooting the arrest of Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane for "The Passion," his first directorial effort since the Academy Award-winning "Braveheart" (1995). This arresting, graphic production explores the torture and death of Jesus Christ. Aside from a single press conference and a couple of interviews, Mr. Gibson has not spoken at length about his vision for the film or about the faith animating the production. But he recently granted me an interview and access to the set. I also received the first look at a rough cut of the film.

Already "The Passion" has stirred passions--journalists are trying to figure out what Mr. Gibson is about, whether he will bring some eccentric view to the Passion story, perhaps giving offense or pushing an agenda. Mr. Gibson is painfully aware of the digging around that is going on, as if, with this movie, he is suddenly striking out in a new direction that requires investigation.

But "The Passion" should come as no surprise. Since Mr. Gibson's directorial bow, "The Man Without a Face" (1993), his work has shown a Catholic sensibility. "Braveheart," "We Were Soldiers," "Signs": Each dealt with sacrificial heroes who rely on their faith for survival.

Mr. Gibson's current project was conceived during a reappraisal of his life 13 years ago. "I read the New and Old Testaments and tried to just focus on that to maintain myself," he says. Reflecting on Catholic theological works and the sacrifice of Christ, he found various images surfacing. "I began to imagine what that must have been like," Mr. Gibson says. "I mean really like. No mere man could have survived this torture."

Based on the Gospel accounts, the dramatic visions of Blessed Anne Catherine Emmerich (a 17th-century stigmatic) and "The Mystical City of God" by Venerable Mary of Agreda (a 17th-century nun), "The Passion" focuses almost exclusively on the sacrifice of Christ. "We are talking about the single event that influenced civilization as we know it: the law, the arts, our knowledge of good and evil," Mr. Gibson says. "It has touched every possible aspect of everyone's life whether they realize it or not."

To underscore Christ's physical sacrifice, Mr. Gibson and special-effects artists have created some of the most graphic scenes ever committed to celluloid. To become the brutalized Jesus, actor Jim Caviezel ("The Count of Monte Cristo") often spent up to eight hours a day in the makeup truck. Buried under a wig and prosthesis, he may be the most Semitic-looking Jesus ever on screen. He endured 15 days on a cross in freezing weather, a separated shoulder, the flu and literal scourging for the role. "One day they missed the board on my back and hit me full on. It hurt so badly I couldn't find my voice to scream," Mr. Caviezel says. "I see people pulling Jesus off the cross these days. They just don't want to see how he suffered, but this is what happened."

Dissatisfied with "cheesy" portrayals that miss the political situation and "prettify" the torture and death of Christ, Mr. Gibson is struggling to recapture the historical reality, right down to the clothing and eating customs of the Jews under the old law--to "make it truly about a man born to the House of David."

"The Passion" is being shot in Aramaic, Latin and Hebrew with no subtitles--a point of honor for Mr. Gibson. "There is power and mystery in these dead languages, and this is what was spoken at the time," he says. The movie will rely on its visuals to tell the tale.

Does it all work? Can the images convey the story? Will audiences endure dead languages they don't understand? And is the violence too much? Having seen a half-hour of the 90-minute film, I must say that it is as disturbing as it is comforting. It's like watching a documentary by Caravaggio. The images are so vivid, and the story so familiar, that language becomes almost incidental. At moments Mr. Caviezel looks like a bloodied skeleton. Wearied and stumbling, with one eye swollen shut, he keeps a knowing dignity and strength. The violence, though intense, is never gratuitous, at least in the rough cut I saw. It rescues Christ from myth and grounds him in a reality that makes his actions more heroic.

Mercifully, Mr. Gibson has chosen to interrupt the brutality with artistic breathers: flashbacks to the Last Supper and to Christ's early life. At one point we see Christ fall under the weight of the cross through the eyes of his mother. For a moment we flash back to the child Jesus falling near his home as a concerned Mary rushes to console him. Now on the harsh streets of Jerusalem, she can do nothing but watch her boy suffer.

Focusing on the trial and death of Christ will inevitably cause some controversy. "This is dangerous territory we're in here," Mr. Gibson admits. As for the question of blame for Christ's crucifixion--a vexed subject that has fueled anti-Semitism over the centuries--Mr. Gibson says that "this is not a Christian vs. Jewish thing--'He came into the world and it knew Him not.' Looking at Christ's crucifixion, I look first at my own culpability in that."

Potential controversy aside, the whole project has been a challenge. "There have been a lot of obstacles thrown in the way of this picture; it's full of discomfort," Mr. Gibson confides. "And I understand it's the other realm warring. So I have taken steps to put on armor." A priest says Mass on the set each day. I also notice that Mr. Gibson wears a crucifix and brown scapular around his neck; Mr. Caviezel carries relics of the saints in his costume during shooting. "And I try to stay squeaky clean," Mr. Gibson adds.

"For Mel and Jim, their belief is their whole lives, and they are committed to telling this story," Steve McEveety, Mr. Gibson's producer and partner, observes.

Back in Studio 5, Mr. Gibson is like a giddy child. The actors have finally gotten the arrest scene right. "It's happening, it's happening. Ha. This is so cool," he sputters. Then: "OK. Take your places, one more time." Without the support of a studio or a distribution deal, Mr. Gibson and his Icon Productions are reportedly financing the $25 million project themselves, believing "The Passion" will find its audience.

"I look at myself as a conduit here--a tool, using what God gave me," Mr. Gibson says. For those who still doubt the power of faith and the merits of sacrifice, one has only to peek into Studio 5 to see them in bold, passionate flower.

Mr. Arroyo is news director of EWTN, the world's largest religious TV network.

Copyright © 2000 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

77 posted on 05/15/2003 8:00:18 PM PDT by ohioWfan (BUSH 2004!! Leadership, Morality, Integrity)
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To: rintense
Whether it exists is another matter altogether.

Oh, it does......it does.

You see it every day you post pictures of our own real life Jonathan and Jennifer! :o)

78 posted on 05/15/2003 8:02:03 PM PDT by ohioWfan (BUSH 2004!! Leadership, Morality, Integrity)
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To: MJY1288
Mike --

I don't think I received your ping -- I'm not even sure that I'm on your ping list?!

Regardless, I'd love to read the article that you referenced -- could you provide a link, PRETTY PLEASE!
79 posted on 05/15/2003 8:02:09 PM PDT by DrDeb
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To: DrDeb
Hang on
80 posted on 05/15/2003 8:05:00 PM PDT by MJY1288 (Freedom is Ringing)
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