Post #222,266
9/1/05 4:18:14 PM
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Our President is an idiot.
I won't blame the hurricane on President Bush. I'm not even blasting him for failures in emergency preparedness (such as cutting FEMA) - which he is liable for. No, I'm going to blast him for one simple line. "I don't think anybody anticipated the breach of the levees." Sorry, no sir. EVERYONE anticipated the breach of the levees. Some people couldn't get out. Some were foolish and wouldn't leave. But EVERYONE knew the levees could break...in fact most of us expected them to be TOTALLY gone under a Cat 5 Hurricane.
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Post #222,273
9/1/05 4:30:18 PM
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Film at 11.
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Post #222,276
9/1/05 4:43:28 PM
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Our only hope seems to rest with...
...[link|http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9158836/|This man]...
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Post #222,281
9/1/05 4:49:57 PM
8/21/07 6:06:48 AM
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Sounds like the right guy for the job
"Whenever you find you are on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and reflect" --Mark Twain
"The significant problems we face cannot be solved at the same level of thinking we were at when we created them." --Albert Einstein
"This is still a dangerous world. It's a world of madmen and uncertainty and potential mental losses." --George W. Bush
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Post #222,309
9/1/05 5:58:02 PM
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Our next President?
jb4 shrub●bish (Am., from shrub + rubbish, after the derisive name for America's 43 president; 2003) n. 1. a form of nonsensical political doubletalk wherein the speaker attempts to defend the indefensible by lying, obfuscation, or otherwise misstating the facts; GIBBERISH. 2. any of a collection of utterances from America's putative 43rd president. cf. BULLSHIT
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Post #222,283
9/1/05 5:03:15 PM
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not surprised to learn where he used to work, getter done
attitude, fix what you can delegate where you must and get the right people on board. thanx, bill
"the reason people don't buy conspiracy theories is that they think conspiracy means everyone is on the same program. Thats not how it works. Everybody has a different program. They just all want the same guy dead. Socrates was a gadfly, but I bet he took time out to screw somebodies wife" Gus Vitelli
Any opinions expressed by me are mine alone, posted from my home computer, on my own time as a free american and do not reflect the opinions of any person or company that I have had professional relations with in the past 49 years. meep questions, help? [link|mailto:pappas@catholic.org|email pappas at catholic.org]
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Post #222,305
9/1/05 5:51:03 PM
9/1/05 5:51:23 PM
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I think it was more like
A river in De Nial...
No one wanted to BELIEVE it would breach... even though they all knew it could.
Weird, this gets more and more like the Titanic scenario every minute.
Brenda
"Excel is to math what a Microwave Oven is to cooking!"
Edited by Nightowl
Sept. 1, 2005, 05:51:23 PM EDT
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Post #222,425
9/2/05 8:17:45 AM
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Here's a list of folks beginning to agree
[link|http://www.salon.com/politics/war_room/index.html?blog=/politics/war_room/2005/09/01/bushstorm/index.html| Salon] [image|http://www.salon.com/politics/war_room/index.html||||] For Bush, a different kind of storm
The first real sign may have come Tuesday afternoon, when CNN's Jack Cafferty, in the middle of a somber exegesis on the devastation in New Orleans, [link|http://www.crooksandliars.com/2005/08/30.html#a4703| interrupted himself] to ask: "Where's President Bush? Is he still on vacation?" Wolf Blitzer said the president was preparing to head back to Washington early. "Oh, that would be a good idea," Cafferty said, his voice dripping with a condescending sort of sarcasm. "Based on his approval rating, based on the latest polls, my guess is getting back to work might not be a terrible idea."
It may have taken a hurricane to do it, but the press seems to have been blown into some kind of tipping point with George W. Bush. Bloggers have been mocking Bush all week for his slow, "Pet Goat"-like response to Hurricane Katrina -- it's hard to open a Web browser without seeing a picture of Bush smiling over a [link|http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2005/8/31/163230/120|birthday cake] or pretending to [link|http://americablog.blogspot.com/2005/08/how-out-of-touch-is-george-bush-on.html|play a guitar] while residents of New Orleans were fighting for their lives -- and now the mainstream media is getting in on the act.
On Wednesday, the [link|http://www.theunionleader.com/articles_showa.html?article=59785| New Hampshire Union Leader], which endorsed Bush in his run for reelection based largely on his response to 9/11, laid into the president hard for responding so slowly to Katrina. "A better leader would have flown straight to the disaster zone and announced the immediate mobilization of every available resource to rescue the stranded, find and bury the dead, and keep the survivors fed, clothed, sheltered and free of disease," the paper said. "The cool, confident, intuitive leadership Bush exhibited in his first term, particularly in the months immediately following Sept. 11, 2001, has vanished. In its place is a diffident detachment unsuitable for the leader of a nation facing war, natural disaster and economic uncertainty."
As Bush began to make his way back to Washington, Newsweek's [link|http://msnbc.msn.com/id/9143849/| Howard Fineman] laid out the dismal political landscape that would be waiting for him on arrival. "His poll numbers already at near-record low levels, he will have to oversee the rescue of the Gulf in the midst of a changing climate in Washington," Fineman said. "The public's sense of where America is headed -- the 'right direction/wrong track' numbers -- are dismal. Gas prices are high and unsettling. Congressional Democrats, reluctant since 9/11 to take on a 'war president,' finally have decided to do so. And Republicans, knowing that they'll be facing the voters a year from now, are beginning to seek ways to distance themselves from him."
[. . .]
[More ...]
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Post #222,543
9/2/05 11:46:26 PM
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Unfortuately, the NY Times is still giving him a free pass.
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Post #222,792
9/4/05 6:24:06 PM
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Sheesh. If Cafferty's flamin' him, maybe there's hope.
bcnu, Mikem
It would seem, therefore, that the three human impulses embodied in religion are fear, conceit, and hatred. The purpose of religion, one might say, is to give an air of respectibility to these passions. -- Bertrand Russell
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Post #222,793
9/4/05 6:26:45 PM
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I had to look 3 times at the date of your post.
bcnu, Mikem
It would seem, therefore, that the three human impulses embodied in religion are fear, conceit, and hatred. The purpose of religion, one might say, is to give an air of respectibility to these passions. -- Bertrand Russell
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