I was there on that fateful day, were you?
Maybe to the idiots who voted for him (and I don't mean those who voted for him because the decision between him and Kerry was like being between a rock and a hard place. I'm referring to blindly partisan voters). The rest of the world is a different story.Nev wrote:I think, in the end, Bush's real legacy will end up being remembered as the triumph of "good, Christian values" over common sense and competence...
In the rest of the world, he'll be relatively forgotten in 15 years unless he does something REALLY bad. Attacking small third world countries is bad, but every President does that.Oracle wrote:Maybe to the idiots who voted for him (and I don't mean those who voted for him because the decision between him and Kerry was like being between a rock and a hard place. I'm referring to blindly partisan voters). The rest of the world is a different story.Nev wrote:I think, in the end, Bush's real legacy will end up being remembered as the triumph of "good, Christian values" over common sense and competence...
You mean like his 800-billion dollar crusade to Mars =PNev wrote:It's Bush's fiscal excesses I worry about more than anything else...
Yeah, but one is on top of the other. Really, there is no budget anymore that so severly effects the economy (which budgets are capable of doing) since all of the politicians are so sensitive to the needs of the corporations (ie. are their bitches)SineSwiper wrote:Zeus, you know as well as I that economy and federal budget are two different things.