Is George Bush A Figure Of Fun?



limerickman said:
I think that Bush is a figure of fun but he's also a lame duck President.

Iraq continues to haunt him.
It now looks like his ratings are sliding.
The US economy is still in difficulties : the budget deficit grows apace.
Even with political turmoil in Europe and with the effect on the Euro valuation, the dollar still cannot appreciate against the Euro.

He is an idiot - a dangerous idiot who is actually weakening the USA.
He should be tried, in the Hague, after his term expires or he is impeached. He has not done one thing right.
 
limerickman said:
I think that Bush is a figure of fun but he's also a lame duck President.

Iraq continues to haunt him.
It now looks like his ratings are sliding.
The US economy is still in difficulties : the budget deficit grows apace.
Even with political turmoil in Europe and with the effect on the Euro valuation, the dollar still cannot appreciate against the Euro.

He is an idiot - a dangerous idiot who is actually weakening the USA.
He should be tried, in The Hague, after his impeachment for "wreckless endangerment w/ a profit motive", mind you.
 
The whole problem has been that the Administration legislated policy that badly damaged the reputation of Americans throughout the globe. The images of Iraqis being abused by allied forces (in the so-called name of freedom and democracy) are images that will never be forgotten, either in Europe or Asia.
Zapper feels obliged to defend Bush but this may be more a consequence of some of us dragging Bush through the coals with our postings. Maybe he feels we're getting at Americans like him but really this isn't the case.
I don't even have a big an axe to grind with Lyndie England as I do with those who ordered and encouraged these people to abuse POW's, urging them they were helping their country be safe from terror.
This is the biggest mistake that has been made to date: not treating prisoners with dignity and ensuring those in a vulnerbale situation should have their rights to dignity and respect enforced (by law).


MountainPro said:
Bush is a ****** idiot. Not a single American would deny this (not even Zap). He preys on the insecurity of the American people by spreading information that Islam is the enemy of America and suicide bombers want to infiltrate American towns and cities to kill innocent people. This type of intimidation works very well in America. They have a lot to lose.

This so far has worked beautifully. It is completely false of course but the reason he does it is to pretend to be the defender of the USA and appear to be working to repel the enemy at America's gates. I can see how Zapper admires Bush and supports him. He is simply blinded by what he sees on the TV an reads in the papers. Zapper is as much a victim as the innocents in Iraq, we should really feel sorry for him and help him to see the tyrant as we see him.

The fact that Bush can barely form a coherent sentence doesnt really matter in the scheme of things, he is just reading from a sheet and doesnt actually understand what most of the words mean nor the implications of the speech itself. He is a puppet, and not a very well disguised puppet. The problem is he cant help acting like one of the muppets.

Democracy is to be enforced in the Middle East by the use of war, guns and soldiers because this eventually will produce a stable trading ground for America, business between the two regions will flourish, America will get richer. The freedom of the people of the Middle East is a puppet policy. America cannot trade or seen to be trading with tyrants, so they are removed. It is purely business, nothing else.

Wake up Zapper. The coffee is ready and you have a bagel waiting for you are our table. C'mon man.
 
Unfortunately, the Euro isn't going too well at all. The U.S. economy isn't doing anywhere near as well as it did under Clinton but I guess America is better off than Germany. Spain, however, is doing quite well and the U.K. economy is performing O.K. which is why France wants Blair to renegotiate his rebate.
But I don't personally think the U.S. economy is in a terrible state. I think it's more the case of America now being bogged down in an absolute ****-hole of a war that, as John Kerry so wisely said, Bush rushed into.
How they will get out of that war is anyone's guess.
This could damage the republicans very bady when the penny finally drops. It's a pity since I think Arnold Scwarzennegger could be a good president but he may be associated too closely with Bush and Rumsfeld.


limerickman said:
I think that Bush is a figure of fun but he's also a lame duck President.

Iraq continues to haunt him.
It now looks like his ratings are sliding.
The US economy is still in difficulties : the budget deficit grows apace.
Even with political turmoil in Europe and with the effect on the Euro valuation, the dollar still cannot appreciate against the Euro.

He is an idiot - a dangerous idiot who is actually weakening the USA.
 
I'll never forget what an American girl told me when I met her in a youth hostel in Estonia. This was around 1997 and I was chatting to her in the kitchen. She said Americans would one day look back at the Clinton years of a booming dollar and worldwide respect with nostalgia. She stated nothing really lasts forever but back then, in 1997, the U.S. economy was doing very nicely.
I don't know why they voted Clinton out as he was rock-solid.
 
"They could still be hidden, like the 50 tons of mustard gas on a turkey farm." —George W. Bush, on Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, Washington, D.C. , April 13, 2004 :p

"Coalition forces have encountered serious violence in some areas of Iraq. Our military commanders report that this violence is being insticated by three groups." —George W. Bush, Washington, D.C., April 13, 2004 :eek:

"In my judgment, when the United States says there will be serious consequences, and if there isn't serious consequences, it creates adverse consequences." —George W. Bush, Meet the Press, Feb. 8, 2004 :confused:

"More Muslims have died at the hands of killers than — I say more Muslims — a lot of Muslims have died — I don't know the exact count — at Istanbul. Look at these different places around the world where there's been tremendous death and destruction because killers kill." —George W. Bush, Washington, D.C., Jan. 29, 2004 :confused:

"If you don't stand for anything, you don't stand for anything! If you don't stand for something, you don't stand for anything!" —George W. Bush, Bellevue Community College, Nov. 2, 2000 :eek:

"If I become president, we're going to have emergency-room care, we're going to have gag orders." —George W. Bush, third presidential debate, St. Louis, Missouri, Oct. 18, 2000 :p

"Drug therapies are replacing a lot of medicines as we used to know it." —George W. Bush, third presidential debate, St. Louis, Missouri, Oct. 18, 2000 :confused:

"Mr. Vice President, in all due respect, it is — I'm not sure 80 percent of the people get the death tax. I know this: 100 percent will get it if I'm the president." —George W. Bush, third presidential debate, St. Louis, Mo., October 18, 2000 :rolleyes:
 
"There a huge trust. I see it all the time when people come up to me and say, 'I don't want you to let me down again.'" —George W. Bush, Boston, Mass., Oct. 3, 2000 :)

"I will have a foreign-handed foreign policy." —George W. Bush, Redwood, Calif., Sept. 27, 2000 :)

"America better beware of a candidate who is willing to stretch reality in order to win points." —George W. Bush, aboard his campaign plane, Sept. 18, 2000 :p

"This is what I'm good at. I like meeting people, my fellow citizens, I like interfacing with them." —George W. Bush, outside Pittsburgh, Sept. 8, 2000 :confused:
 
Carrera said:
"They could still be hidden, like the 50 tons of mustard gas on a turkey farm." —George W. Bush, on Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, Washington, D.C. , April 13, 2004 :p
funny.....i think this is what we call 'clutching at straws'..
"If you don't stand for anything, you don't stand for anything! If you don't stand for something, you don't stand for anything!" —George W. Bush, Bellevue Community College, Nov. 2, 2000 :eek:
i think the phrase he is wrestling with is 'If you stand for nothing, you'll fall for everything'. A socialist rhetoric.
 
"They could still be hidden, like the 50 tons of mustard gas on a turkey farm."

I guess the joke here is that the said 50 tons of mustard gas would have had a rather detrimental effect on the turkeys. :rolleyes:


MountainPro said:
funny.....i think this is what we call 'clutching at straws'..
i think the phrase he is wrestling with is 'If you stand for nothing, you'll fall for everything'. A socialist rhetoric.
 
The one below is even funnier. It's as if Bush really was expecting champaigne and roses from a bunch of people who endured several years of international isolation, crippling medical and food sanctions and the arming and endorsement of a dictator who turned Iraq into a police state.

[FONT=Arial[COLOR=DarkSlateBlue[B]]]"Coalition forces have encountered serious violence [/B] [/COLOR] [/FONT] in some areas of Iraq. Our military commanders report that this violence is being insticated by three groups." —George W. Bush, Washington, D.C., April 13, 2004
 
"The goals for this country are peace in the world. And the goals for this country are a compassionate American for every single citizen. That compassion is found in the hearts and souls of the American citizens." —George W. Bush, Washington, D.C., Dec. 19, 2002 :eek:

I'm the commander — see, I don't need to explain — I do not need to explain why I say things. That's the interesting thing about being president." —George W. Bush, as quoted in Bob Woodward's "Bush at War" :eek:
 
davidmc said:
Remember, Zapper said Bush is smarter than Kerry :rolleyes:
He probably reads those cheap celeb magazines like The National Enquirer. Remember before the election, when they all printed "John Kerry Sex Scandal!" I bought all those magazines because I figured they might become valuable in the future, after the republican species **** Stupidens dies out. ;)
 
Come on zappy,respond!Where are the other members of the coalition of stupidity (jaggy and husky)? Come on,get up on your hind legs and defend the presidential moron!
If you can put a coherent sentence together......

What does this say about the people who voted for bush? Do they just have a really warped sense of humour,too subtle for the rest of the world,or are they just as stupid as he is?
 
stevebaby said:
Come on zappy,respond!Where are the other members of the coalition of stupidity (jaggy and husky)? Come on,get up on your hind legs and defend the presidential moron!
If you can put a coherent sentence together......

What does this say about the people who voted for bush? Do they just have a really warped sense of humour,too subtle for the rest of the world,or are they just as stupid as he is?
They are either of the the white, southern, christio, red-state, voting base who are continually motivated by the right's intentional focus on social issue's to fire them up downplaying thier real master's financial desires (the rich, read further) or the obscenely well-off (read-uber rich) who intentionally stay back in the shadows. You might get a knee-jerk response from the former, but you won't hear from the latter ;) . They wish to remain invisible, for good reason, the pilfering of the treasury on the back's of the poor :mad: This way they can have a different colored Hummer &/or Bentley for each day of the week :)
 

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