Sunday, December 11, 2005

BUSH DOESN'T WANT TO BE FIRST

It's bizarre, but when I came across this next article... IS GEORGE BUSH THE WORST PRESIDENT -- EVER? I thought to myself... WHAT KIND OF QUESTION IS THAT...IT MUST BE A RHETORICAL QUESTION? MOST OF US, WHO THINK EVEN JUST A LITTLE... KNOW THE ANSWER, SO WHY ASK IT? YET, THE JURY IS STILL OUT, BELIEVE IT OR NOT, SO FAR THIS TITLE STILL BELONGS TO JAMES BUCHANAN, WHO HANDS DOWN, HELPED TO MAKE THE UNBELIEVABLY SAD U.S. CIVIL WAR A PART OF OUR HISTORY. BUT WAIT, MOVE OVER JAMES, I BELIEVE, TEN OR SO YEARS DOWN THE ROAD GEORGE W BUSH, WILL PUSH OLD 19TH CENTURY PRES BUCHANAN RIGHT OUT OF THE FIRST SLOT FOR WORST PRESIDENT OF THIS UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. SHOULD WE APPLAUD OR CRY. WE... YOU, ME AND THOSE OF US WHO ARE LUCKY OR UNLUCKY ENOUGH TO COME INTO EXISTENCE DURING THESE TIMES, SHOULD ALL SIT DOWN AND CRY A RIVER OF TEARS. PLEASE READ THE SHORT ARTICLE BELOW AND YOU MAKE THE JUDGEMENT, OBJECTIVELY, IF YOU CAN. Thanks, Thinkingblue

rhetorical question n.
A question to which no answer is expected, often used for rhetorical
effect.

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IS GEORGE BUSH THE WORST PRESIDENT -- EVER?
By Richard Reeves
Fri Dec 2, 8:13 PM ET
PARIS --

President John F. Kennedy was considered a historian because of his book "Profiles in Courage," so he received periodic requests to rate the presidents, those lists that usually begin "1. Lincoln, 2. Washington ..."
But after he actually became president himself, he stopped filling them out. "No one knows what it's like in this office," he said after being in the job. "Even with poor James Buchanan, you can't understand what he did and why without sitting in his place, looking at the papers that passed on his desk, knowing the people he talked with."

Poor James Buchanan, the 15th president, is generally considered the worst president in history. Ironically, the Pennsylvania Democrat, elected in 1856, was one of the most qualified of the 43 men who have served in the highest office. A lawyer, a self-made man, Buchanan served with some distinction in the House, served as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and secretary of state under President James K. Polk. He had a great deal to do with the United States becoming a continental nation -- "Manifest Destiny," war with Mexico, and all that. He was also ambassador to Great Britain and was offered a seat on the Supreme Court three separate times.

But he was a confused, indecisive president, who may have made the Civil War inevitable by trying to appease or negotiate with the South. His most recent biographer, Jean Clark, writing for the prestigious American Presidents Series, concluded this year that his actions probably constituted treason. It also did not help that his administration was as corrupt as any in history, and he was widely believed to be homosexual.

Whatever his sexual preferences, his real failures were in refusing to move after South Carolina announced secession from the Union and attacked Fort Sumter, and in supporting both the legality of the pro-slavery constitution of Kansas and the Supreme Court ruling in the Dred Scott class declaring that escaped slaves were not people but property.

He was the guy who in 1861 passed on the mess to the first Republican president, Abraham Lincoln. Buchanan set the standard, a tough record to beat. But there are serious people who believe that George W. Bush will prove to do that, be worse than Buchanan. I have talked with three significant historians in the past few months who would not say it in public, but who are saying privately that Bush will be remembered as the worst of the presidents.

There are some numbers. The History News Network at George Mason University has just polled historians informally on the Bush record. Four hundred and fifteen, about a third of those contacted, answered -- maybe they were all crazed liberals -- making the project as unofficial as it was interesting. These were the results: 338 said they believed Bush was failing, while 77 said he was succeeding. Fifty said they thought he was the worst president ever. Worse than Buchanan.

This is what those historians said -- and it should be noted that some of the criticism about deficit spending and misuse of the military came from self-identified conservatives -- about the Bush record:


He has taken the country into an unwinnable war and alienated friend and foe alike in the process;

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He is bankrupting the country with a combination of aggressive military spending and reduced taxation of the rich;

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He has deliberately and dangerously attacked separation of church and state;


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He has repeatedly "misled," to use a kind word, the American people on affairs domestic and foreign;

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He has proved to be incompetent in affairs domestic (New Orleans) and foreign (Iraq and the battle against al-Qaida);


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He has sacrificed American employment (including the toleration of pension and benefit elimination) to increase overall productivity;

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He is ignorantly hostile to science and technological progress;

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He has tolerated or ignored one of the republic's oldest problems, corporate cheating in supplying the military in wartime.


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Quite an indictment. It is, of course, too early to evaluate a president. That, historically, takes decades, and views change over times as results and impact become more obvious. Besides, many of the historians note that however bad Bush seems, they have indeed since worse men around the White House. Some say Buchanan. Many say Vice President Dick Cheney.


SEE "THOUGHTS FROM WITHIN" Poem by Woody Harrelson

Angry Fiction By John Cory

Calendar of US Military Dead during Iraq War

We Stand Our Ground
By William Rivers Pitt
(HEAR HIS VOICE)

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For whom the bell tolls a poem
(No man is an island) by John Donne

No man is an island,
Entire of itself.
Each is a piece of the continent,
A part of the main.
If a clod be washed away by the sea,
Europe is the less.
As well as if a promontory were.
As well as if a manner of thine own
Or of thine friend's were.
Each man's death diminishes me,
For I am involved in mankind.
Therefore, send not to know
For whom the bell tolls,
It tolls for thee.
These famous words by John Donne were not originally written as a poem -
the passage is taken from the 1624 Meditation 17, from Devotions Upon
Emergent Occasions and is prose.
The words of the original passage Click Here

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