The Legacy of George W. Bush

Cliffy

Standing Member
Nov 19, 2008
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And like a brainless wh0re Canada just slurps up all their propaganda.

We slurp up our own corporate media propaganda with just as much enthusiasm.
 

Tyr

Council Member
Nov 27, 2008
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1. Started democracy in Afghanistan, Iraq, and we'll see how the dominoes fall.
2. Prevented a North American terrorist strike since the cowardly 9-11
3. Kept the unemployment rate lower than Canada's, his entire tenure

1. An arof occupation hardly counts as a "Democracy"

2. What new terrorist strike. That's the RNC spin doctors dictum He was complicate in not preventing the first after he was warned over and over again

3. And the highest it's been in decades in the USA. 533,000 jobs lost in November

ps. Are you going to keep up your yrly subscription to "The Bush Fanclub" after he's slunk off to "the ranch"?
 

Tyr

Council Member
Nov 27, 2008
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didn't Reagan come after Jimmy carter? Wasn't america in a Recession when Reagan took office and when he left they weren't? Its not hard to look good when your predeccessor was a bumbling fool who raped the economy and at the same time initiated Operation Eagle Claw.

Reagan Was one of the Better US presidents, there i said it


Now I hope that bush is remembered as the most Liberal of all the Republican Presidents in living memory, Massive Government spending with acts like No Child Left Behind while addressing issues like AIDS in Africa etc. Macleans had a good article on it here. Hes actually more Akin to a Kennedy Democrat than a Reagan Republican, Economically left, socially right, interventionalist.

Wasn't america in a Recession when Reagan took office and when he left they weren't?

..because of the biggest debt ever accumulated at time. They never got out from behind the debt eight-ball until Clinton (oops, me bad mentioning sound financial Democratic party policies)

Its not hard to look good when your predeccessor was a bumbling fool who raped the economy and at the same time initiated Operation Eagle Claw.

Substitute Illegal war in Iraq for Operation Eagle Claw you have George W. Bush. Thanks

Reagan Was one of the Better US presidents, there i said it

you and maybe 4-5 other people actually believe that
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
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I guess if it weren't for old Dubya, we'd still have Saddam, Husay and Uday around. Three fairly bad reprobates out of the way!
 

Tyr

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Nov 27, 2008
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I guess if it weren't for old Dubya, we'd still have Saddam, Husay and Uday around. Three fairly bad reprobates out of the way!


"we" didn't have Saddam, Husay (still detained in GITMO wqithout charges for the past 4 yrs) or Uday.

They were Bush's personal vendetta and need to prove himself to Dadda Bush
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
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"we" didn't have Saddam, Husay (still detained in GITMO wqithout charges for the past 4 yrs) or Uday.

They were Bush's personal vendetta and need to prove himself to Dadda Bush

Husay is deader than a mackeral for the past 5 years, he and Uday got it at the same time.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
547
113
Vernon, B.C.
US job losses worst since 1974 as downturn deepens

WRAPUP 5-US job losses worst since 1974 as downturn deepens | Markets | Markets News | Reuters


* U.S. lost 533,000 jobs in November, most in 34 years
* Jobless rate hits 15-year high; job losses widespread
* Job losses in prior two months bigger than first thought



Absolutely, the worst president of all time.

Up until now according to what I read somewhere that "honour" has belonged to Warren G. Harding (Tea dome scandal) & from I've heard what he was doing with the ladies during working hours would make Bill Clinton look like a choir boy.
 

Tyr

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Nov 27, 2008
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Up until now according to what I read somewhere that "honour" has belonged to Warren G. Harding (Tea dome scandal) & from I've heard what he was doing with the ladies during working hours would make Bill Clinton look like a choir boy.

The "honour" belonged to James Buchanan and it wasn't the "ladies" he was after in the Oval Office
 

Tyr

Council Member
Nov 27, 2008
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It's time George decided what he'll do once they drag him kicking and screaming from the Oval office.

Today the transition away from serving as the leader of the free world is high-profile, potentially very lucrative and, above all, a difficult job in itself.
This is especially true for Bush, historians and political observers say. He not only must oversee the construction of a presidential library and begin writing his memoirs, but he also must grapple with salvaging a legacy mired in the lowest presidential approval ratings in history.

As what? Fodder for SNL and tha late night talk shows. Maybe he can get a gig as cohost on Jerry Springer.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
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Vernon, B.C.
The "honour" belonged to James Buchanan and it wasn't the "ladies" he was after in the Oval Office

Ooooooh, I knew Buchanan was a bachelor, but I guess there was more to it than that. To say more is politically incorrect even though we are discussing politics :lol:
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
547
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Vernon, B.C.
The "honour" belonged to James Buchanan and it wasn't the "ladies" he was after in the Oval Office

I just read up on James Buchanan and there's references made to what you insinuate (but in today's society that is not (supposed to be) detrimental. Now read up on Harding, and I think you'll find that Buchanan outshone him.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
547
113
Vernon, B.C.

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
547
113
Vernon, B.C.
Here's the Schlessenger poll of 1996- (No Dubya yet)
Voting Breakdown *
Rating
Great
Near Great
Average
Below Average
Failure
Mean Score
Great
Lincoln
32




4.00
Washington
31
1



3.97
Franklin D. Roosevelt
31
1



3.97







Near Great
Jefferson
12
16
1


3.38
Jackson
11
17
1


3.34
Theodore Roosevelt
10
18
1


3.31
Wilson
11
17


1
3.21
Truman
6
21
3


3.10
Polk
2
17
8
1

2.71







High Average
Eisenhower
1
10
20
1

2.34
John Adams

10
17
1

2.32
Kennedy

9
21
1

2.29
Cleveland

8
2
1

2.24
Lyndon Johnson

15
12
3
2
2.21
Monroe

1
22
2

2.15
McKinley

5
20
2

2.11







Average
Madison

2
20
5
1
1.83
John Quincy Adams

1
18
8

1.74
Harrison


14
7

1.67
Clinton

2
17
5
2
1.58
Van Buren


18
8
1
1.56
Taft


17
9
1
1.52
Hayes


16
10
1
1.48
Bush


16
12
1
1.45
Reagan

7
11
9
4
1.42
Arthur


13
11
1
1.40
Carter

1
15
12
2
1.37
Ford


6
20
2
1.00







Below Average
Taylor


6
17
3
0.88
Coolidge


7
16
4
0.81
Fillmore


3
20
3
0.77
Tyler


6
17
5
0.68







Failure
Pierce



15
12
-9
Grant



9
18
-9
Hoover


11
9
10
-9
Nixon

2
4
5
20
-21
Andrew Johnson


2
7
17
-23
Buchanan



6
22
-38
Harding


2

26
-48

*Not every respondent voted for all the presidents, hence the discrepancies in the total number of votes.
Participants in 1996 Poll
Samuel H. Beer, Harvard University
John Morton Blum, Yale University
Alan Brinkley, Columbia University
Douglas Brinkley, University of New Orleans
Walter Dean Burnham, University of Texas
James MacGregor Burns, Williams College
Mario Cuomo
Robert Dallek, Boston University
Robert H. Ferrell, Indiana University
Louis Fisher, Library of Congress
Eric Foner, Columbia University
George Frederickson, Stanford University
Doris Kearns Goodwin
Norman Graebner, University of Virginia
Henry Graff, Columbia University
Stephen Hess, Brookings Institution
Morton Keller, Brandeis University
Louis Koenig, New York University
William Leuchtenburg, University of North Carolina
David Levering Lewis, Rutgers University
Arthur Link, Princeton University
Forrest McDonald, University of Alabama
Merrill Peterson, University of Virginia
Richard M. Pious, Barnard College
Robert V. Remini, University of Illinois at Chicago
Donald A. Ritchie, Senate Historical Office
Robert Rutland, University of Virginia
Joel Silbey, Cornell University
Paul Simon, U.S. Senate
Stephen Skowronek, Yale University
Hans Trefousse, City University of New York
Sean Wilentz, Princeton University