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Hayoroweu
stranger


Reged: 11/23/05
Posts: 9
George Bush
      #7420 - 04/12/06 08:08 AM

Does any-one really think he should be what can only be descibed as the most powerful man in the world? I mean, he really is a complete moron.

--------------------
"We at the whitehouse are VERY concerned about aids, make no mistake about it." G. W Bush

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SephiaModerator
Supreme Goddess


Reged: 11/28/03
Posts: 876
Loc: MA, USA
Re: George Bush new [Re: Hayoroweu]
      #7421 - 04/12/06 08:19 AM

well, I wouldn't say complete...

But i certainly voted for the other guy.

--------------------
"Your life is yours alone, rise up and live it" ~Terry Goodkind

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EVDebs
enthusiast


Reged: 07/10/05
Posts: 272
Re: George Bush new [Re: Hayoroweu]
      #7424 - 04/12/06 02:17 PM

Mark Crispin Miller's book apparently shows that Bush not only stole the 2000 election but was able to steal the 2004 election to boot. He was 'selected' president in 2000 with less than Gore's popular vote count, and the Ohio and Florida vote suppressions again proved effective with Rove as his tactician, for what it's worth

Mark Crispin Miller Connects the Dots on Election Problems
A BUZZFLASH INTERVIEW
http://www.buzzflash.com/interviews/06/01/int06002.html

Moron, possibly. English as a second language...definitely !

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8549176320abc
enthusiast


Reged: 05/02/05
Posts: 219
Loc: UK
Re: George Bush new [Re: Hayoroweu]
      #7430 - 04/13/06 10:04 AM

Quote:

Hayoroweu said:
Does any-one really think he should be what can only be descibed as the most powerful man in the world? I mean, he really is a complete moron.




He souldn't, the person/team telling him what to do should be.

--------------------
Governments offer us safety for our freedom. It is by seeing this safety as false that we are freed.

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MsVetra
enthusiast


Reged: 09/29/05
Posts: 300
Loc: UK
Re: George Bush new [Re: Sephia]
      #7479 - 04/18/06 11:29 PM

Quote:

Sephia said:
well, I wouldn't say complete... (moron)





I would. And I would also add that 'moron' is undestating and being polite. A very British approach, lol!

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littleB
stranger


Reged: 05/03/06
Posts: 1
Loc: CANADA =)
Re: George Bush new [Re: MsVetra]
      #7642 - 05/04/06 08:37 AM

Hey, yeah I agree moron is a very nice way of putting it.

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kyrus
stranger


Reged: 03/16/06
Posts: 23
Loc: France
Re: George Bush new [Re: Hayoroweu]
      #7908 - 06/02/06 11:05 PM

Nut-Bush is the most feared man in the world. this does not make him the most powerful man in the world. This only makes him the loneliest man in the world and when he is no longer the president of america, he will find the world which he dominated in its truest light. Domination does not mean power. Although this domination is good for his ego in his job... it will prove fruitful that he will see his errors, but not before he is out of the office in which he is working.
Why is he feared, because he is the most unstable leader that this world has ever seen.
Unstable. Dominant. Megalomaniacal.
And by all measures, a prophet of the american people.

--------------------
my website

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da_nick_code
stranger


Reged: 06/02/06
Posts: 9
Re: George Bush new [Re: kyrus]
      #7952 - 06/04/06 09:13 PM

goerge bush is a moron and i dislike john howard for kissing ass so much he got the world record for the biggest hickie ever. if either of these two wins their next election i will go crazy

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SephiaModerator
Supreme Goddess


Reged: 11/28/03
Posts: 876
Loc: MA, USA
Re: George Bush new [Re: da_nick_code]
      #8002 - 06/07/06 08:31 AM

Bush is not a Mormon. He is a born-again Christian with Evangelist tendencies. And he can't win the next election. The US has a 2-term maximum.

--------------------
"Your life is yours alone, rise up and live it" ~Terry Goodkind

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Arras
enthusiast


Reged: 05/24/04
Posts: 263
Loc: B.C., Canada
Re: George Bush new [Re: Sephia]
      #8003 - 06/07/06 10:14 AM

Quote:

da_nick_code said:
goerge bush is a moron ...





Quote:

Sephia said:
Bush is not a Mormon. He is a born-again Christian with Evangelist tendencies.




Sometimes unintentional humour is the funniest of all

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AAnnAArchyAdministrator
Gifted Procrastinator


Reged: 10/20/03
Posts: 643
Loc: Las Vegas
Re: George Bush new [Re: Arras]
      #8006 - 06/07/06 05:56 PM

That's funny. And he didn't edit either, as his editing time would've expired.

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da_nick_code
stranger


Reged: 06/02/06
Posts: 9
Re: George Bush new [Re: Arras]
      #8008 - 06/07/06 06:14 PM

Sephia i am very happy for the united states that you won't be ruled by that idiot. Most likely the worst president of the united states.

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AAnnAArchyAdministrator
Gifted Procrastinator


Reged: 10/20/03
Posts: 643
Loc: Las Vegas
Re: George Bush new [Re: da_nick_code]
      #8023 - 06/08/06 04:29 PM

Hey, there's always Jeb. Although he'd have to stash the drug addict daughter and the cheating on declarations form wife. He isn't as dumb as George, maybe he'll decide to just retire and play golf with the cushy Bush fortune. Fewer hassles, better for the country.

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da_nick_code
stranger


Reged: 06/02/06
Posts: 9
Re: George Bush new [Re: AAnnAArchy]
      #8024 - 06/08/06 07:30 PM

you are right, anything george bush does that doesn't effect the country or world is better for everybody.

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SephiaModerator
Supreme Goddess


Reged: 11/28/03
Posts: 876
Loc: MA, USA
Re: George Bush new [Re: da_nick_code]
      #8029 - 06/09/06 03:35 AM

lol...oops. Still, I can't really say he is a moron, either. I used to, but then I did the actual research. He's just trying to dumb down politics to make himself seem more the everyman. I just think he is carrying the idea way too far.

--------------------
"Your life is yours alone, rise up and live it" ~Terry Goodkind

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EVDebs
enthusiast


Reged: 07/10/05
Posts: 272
Re: George Bush new [Re: Sephia]
      #8030 - 06/09/06 04:59 AM

We may be giving Bush too much credit ! He may be just another imbicile or idiot ...

""Intelligence Quotient Scale:

Moron = 50-69

Imbecile = 30-49

Idiot = 29 & below "" Item #3 at

www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=idiot

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Joyclene
stranger


Reged: 07/22/06
Posts: 3
Loc: Ohio
Re: George Bush new [Re: Arras]
      #8236 - 07/22/06 02:53 PM

"They misunderestimated me."

"This country has gone through tough times before and we're going to do it again."

"The legislature's job is to write law. It's the executive branch's job to interpret law."

Yes it is so sad but true that the leader of our country said these things! Truly a sad day for us. Can't wait till its over!
- Jo

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SephiaModerator
Supreme Goddess


Reged: 11/28/03
Posts: 876
Loc: MA, USA
Re: George Bush new [Re: Joyclene]
      #8240 - 07/24/06 12:41 AM

But, seriously, rarely is the question asked, is our children learning?


(I love Bushisms!)

--------------------
"Your life is yours alone, rise up and live it" ~Terry Goodkind

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MsVetra
enthusiast


Reged: 09/29/05
Posts: 300
Loc: UK
Re: George Bush new [Re: Sephia]
      #8241 - 07/24/06 08:43 AM

One of the most negative things that always strikes me about Bush, is that he *never* seems to get the right tone. He's constantly getting the mood of the people he's talking to - wrong. He's completely out of touch.
When you want to hear a reassuring but warm speech, all you hear is some drivel that seems taken straight from an old spaghetti western. I almost refuse to believe that he is serious. He overdoes the acting, every time - and boy, does it look and sound hidiuos... *MsVetra cringes at the thought*

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christinerosseau
stranger


Reged: 08/07/06
Posts: 4
Loc: United States
Re: George Bush new [Re: MsVetra]
      #8295 - 08/07/06 11:46 AM

He just thinks he is better than us, yet he is soooooo wrong. He wouldn't have won any election if his daddy wasn't ever president. Oh, oh, who am I?
"I've got three words for you, NO NEW TAXES."

Yes, you who guessed where right, George Bush sr, who did NOT inforce this promise

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teen4christ777
stranger


Reged: 08/17/06
Posts: 6
Re: George Bush new [Re: Hayoroweu]
      #8328 - 08/21/06 05:08 AM

Bush is only bad because the press makes him out to be that way

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AAnnAArchyAdministrator
Gifted Procrastinator


Reged: 10/20/03
Posts: 643
Loc: Las Vegas
Re: George Bush new [Re: teen4christ777]
      #8334 - 08/21/06 08:13 AM

Quote:

teen4christ777 said:
Bush is only bad because the press makes him out to be that way




ROFL. Uh, no. He's bad because he's bad.

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AAnnAArchyAdministrator
Gifted Procrastinator


Reged: 10/20/03
Posts: 643
Loc: Las Vegas
Re: George Bush new [Re: AAnnAArchy]
      #8337 - 08/21/06 08:41 AM

Pundits Renounce The President
Among Conservative Voices, Discord

By Peter Baker
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, August 20, 2006; A04

For 10 minutes, the talk show host grilled his guests about whether "George Bush's mental weakness is damaging America's credibility at home and abroad." For 10 minutes, the caption across the bottom of the television screen read, "IS BUSH AN 'IDIOT'?"

But the host was no liberal media elitist. It was Joe Scarborough, a former Republican congressman turned MSNBC political pundit. And his answer to the captioned question was hardly "no." While other presidents have been called stupid, Scarborough said: "I think George Bush is in a league by himself. I don't think he has the intellectual depth as these other people."

These have been tough days politically for President Bush, what with his popularity numbers mired in the 30s and Republican candidates distancing themselves as elections near. He can no longer even rely as much on once-friendly voices in the conservative media to stand by his side, as some columnists and television commentators lose faith in his leadership and lose heart in the war in Iraq.

While most conservative media figures have not abandoned Bush, influential opinion-makers increasingly have raised questions, expressed doubts or attacked the president outright, particularly on foreign policy, on which he has long enjoyed their strongest support. In some cases, they have complained that Bush has drifted away from their shared principles; in other cases, they think it is the implementation that has fallen short. In most instances, Iraq figures prominently.

"Conservatives for a long time were in protective mode, wanting to emphasize the progress in Iraq to contrast what they felt was an unfair attack on the war by the Democrats and media and other sources," Rich Lowry, editor of the National Review, said in an interview. "But there's more of a sense now that things are on a downward trajectory, and more of a willingness to acknowledge it and pressure the administration to react to it."

Lowry's magazine offers a powerful example. "It is time to say it unequivocally: We are winning in Iraq," Lowry wrote in April 2005, chastising those who disagreed. This month, he published an editorial that concluded that "success in Iraq seems more out of reach than it has at any time since the initial invasion three years ago" and assailed "the administration's on-again-off-again approach to Iraq."

"It is time for the Bush administration to acknowledge that its approach of assuring people that progress is being made and operating on that optimistic basis in Iraq isn't working," the editorial said. Lowry followed up days later in his own column, suggesting that the United States is "losing, or at least not obviously winning, a major war" and asking whether Iraq is "Bush's Vietnam."

Quin Hillyer, executive editor of the American Spectator, cited Lowry's column in his own last week, writing that many are upset "because we seem not to be winning" and urging the White House to take on militia leaders such as Moqtada al-Sadr. Until it does, he said, "there will be no way for the administration to credibly claim that victory in Iraq is achievable, much less imminent."

Bush aides were bothered by a George F. Will column last week mocking neoconservative desires to transform the Middle East: "Foreign policy 'realists' considered Middle East stability the goal. The realists' critics, who regard realism as reprehensibly unambitious, considered stability the problem. That problem has been solved."

The White House responded with a 2,432-word rebuttal -- three times as long as the column -- e-mailed to supporters and journalists. "Mr. Will's kind of 'stability' and 'realism' -- a kind of world-weary belief that nothing can be done and so nothing should be tried -- would eventually lead to death and destruction on a scale that is almost unimaginable," wrote White House strategic initiatives director Peter H. Wehner.

Bush advisers said that they never counted Will or some others now voicing criticism as strong supporters but that the president's political weakness has encouraged soft supporters and quiet skeptics to speak out.

William F. Buckley Jr., the founder of the National Review and an icon of the Ronald Reagan-era conservative movement, caused a stir earlier this year when he wrote that "our mission has failed" in Iraq -- just a few months after Bush hosted a White House tribute to Buckley's 80th birthday and the magazine's 50th anniversary.

Thomas L. Friedman, a New York Times columnist who is not a conservative but has strongly backed the Iraq war, reversed course this month, writing that " 'staying the course' is pointless, and it's time to start thinking about Plan B -- how we might disengage with the least damage possible."

White House spokesman Tony Snow said the second-guessing was predictable, given the difficulties in Iraq. "It's hardly unusual in times of war that people get anxious, and that would include people who have supported the president," he said. "The president understands that and is not fazed by it."

Snow said much of the frustration articulated by conservatives stems from a desire to accomplish Bush's ambitions. "The good thing is they all have the same goal: They all want to win the war on terror," he said. "You don't have people quibbling over the goals; they're quibbling over the means -- or 'quibbling' is the wrong word. 'Debating.' "

Snow, who hosted a Fox radio talk show before joining the White House this spring, has made an effort to reach out to conservative audiences by appearing on his former competitors' programs, including shows hosted by Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham. "We're certainly more engaged on that front," he said.

And some of the president's neoconservative supporters have fired back on his behalf. Norman Podhoretz, editor-at-large of Commentary magazine, wrote an 11,525-word essay this month rebutting not only Will, Buckley and other traditional conservatives but also fellow neoconservatives who "have now taken to composing obituary notices of their own." He noted that he had been a tough critic of Reagan for betraying conservative values, only to later conclude that Reagan's approach served "an overall strategy that in the end succeeded in attaining its great objective."

Fred Barnes, executive editor of the Weekly Standard and a reliable Bush supporter, said the disillusionment is not surprising. "People get weary, especially when they expected a war to be over very quickly," he said in an interview. "Supporters fall off over time. I've been disappointed by some of the people who have fallen off, like George Will, but that's what happens."

Few have struck a nerve more than Scarborough, who questioned the president's intelligence on his show, "Scarborough Country." He showed a montage of clips of Bush's famously inarticulate verbal miscues and then explored with guests John Fund and Lawrence O'Donnell Jr. whether Bush is smart enough to be president.

While the country does not want a leader wallowing in the weeds, Scarborough concluded on the segment, "we do need a president who, I think, is intellectually curious."

"And that is a big question," Scarborough said, "whether George W. Bush has the intellectual curiousness -- if that's a word -- to continue leading this country over the next couple of years."

In a later telephone interview, Scarborough said he aired the segment because he kept hearing even fellow Republicans questioning Bush's capacity and leadership, particularly in Iraq. Like others, he said, he supported the war but now thinks it is time to find a way to get out. "A lot of conservatives are saying, 'Enough's enough,' " he said. Asked about the reaction to his program, he said, "The White House is not happy about it."

© 2006 The Washington Post Company

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SephiaModerator
Supreme Goddess


Reged: 11/28/03
Posts: 876
Loc: MA, USA
Re: George Bush new [Re: AAnnAArchy]
      #8339 - 08/22/06 01:29 AM

hehe great article. I don't think Bush is quite as dumb as he lets on--I saw a video of a debate he was in, about 15 years ago, and he certainly seemed to know his stuff. So, unless his mind has completely deteriorated, he is dumbing things down for his constituents. Though I think he is going to far.

--------------------
"Your life is yours alone, rise up and live it" ~Terry Goodkind

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Seeker
stranger


Reged: 10/02/06
Posts: 8
Re: George Bush new [Re: Sephia]
      #8416 - 10/02/06 02:21 PM

I used to think Bush was an alright guy and a conservative.

Now I think he is a puppet of men who want to ruin the country and take the US into WW3 in the middle east. Iran or Syrai being the obvious next stop. I really dont like him much these days. he's a globalist and rejects every concept of coservatism except when it jives of his vision with war in the middle east and the erosion of the constitution in the name of the fight on terra.

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kasey
stranger


Reged: 07/22/08
Posts: 4
Re: George Bush new [Re: Arras]
      #9013 - 07/22/08 10:49 AM

being british i still think george bush and gordon brown are related. they even have the same initals G.B !!

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