It's tomorrow, 8 EST. This deserves it's own thread. Or it will be merged. Either way, what do you think this putz is going to say? The economy is in the worst shape since the great depression, the middle east is a mess, and the first few episodes of 24 were disappointing. Total failure.
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Joined: Sat Oct 16, 2004 11:17 pm Posts: 13551 Location: is a jerk in wyoming Gender: Female
given2trade wrote:
It's tomorrow, 8 EST. This deserves it's own thread. Or it will be merged. Either way, what do you think this putz is going to say? The economy is in the worst shape since the great depression, the middle east is a mess, and the first few episodes of 24 were disappointing. Total failure.
He's going to talk about how history will be the only valid judge of his presidency and how proud he is of himself for not compromising his vision for the sake of being thought of as a popular president. He'll be kind of like Little Wing in this regard, but without so much of the excellent spelling and vocabulary.
It's tomorrow, 8 EST. This deserves it's own thread. Or it will be merged. Either way, what do you think this putz is going to say? The economy is in the worst shape since the great depression, the middle east is a mess, and the first few episodes of 24 were disappointing. Total failure.
He's going to talk about how history will be the only valid judge of his presidency and how proud he is of himself for not compromising his vision for the sake of being thought of as a popular president. He'll be kind of like Little Wing in this regard, but without so much of the excellent spelling and vocabulary.
I bet he tells the country to get behind Obama...like the country needs his opinion to do that. I bet, finally, he tries to be a uniter...during the last week of an 8 year presidency. This way if Obama gets anything right he can say how he backed him and told people to back him.
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we can hope he turns himself in for the war crimes he committed. guessin that won't happen...he'll probably stumble through another concocted piece of garbage his handlers have written for him and be on is way back to crawford. good riddance.
_________________ Maybe this...is not the way I'm wired....
here on the graves of the innocent...we raise our flag.
Tonight President George W. Bush bids adieu to the American people.
Excitement mounts.
The man has been saying goodbye for so long, he’s come to resemble one of those reconstituted rock bands that have been on a farewell tour since 1982. We had exit interviews by the carload and then a final press conference on Monday, in which he reminisced about his arrival on the national stage in 2000. “Just seemed like yesterday,” he said.
I think I speak for the entire nation when I say that the way this transition has been dragging on, even yesterday does not seem like yesterday. And the last time George W. Bush did not factor into our lives feels like around 1066.
So far, the Bush farewell appearances have not drawn a lot of rave reviews. (Most striking, perhaps, was a critique of that final press conference from Ted Anthony of The Associated Press: “It all felt strangely intimate and, occasionally, uncomfortable, in the manner of seeing a plumber wearing jeans that ride too low.”) A Gallup poll did find that his approval rating had risen slightly since they began, but this was probably due to enthusiasm for the part about his going away.
“Sometimes you misunderestimated me,” Bush told the Washington press corps. This is not the first time our president has worried about misunderestimation, so it’s fair to regard this not as a slip of the tongue, but as something the president of the United States thinks is a word. The rhetoric is the one part of the administration we’re surely going to miss. We are about to enter a world in which our commander in chief speaks in full sentences, and I do not know what we’re going to do to divert ourselves on slow days.
The White House has promised that in his final address, the president will be joined by a small group of everyday American heroes, which means that the only person on stage with a history of failing to perform well in moments of stress will be the main speaker.
Bush is going to devote some of his time to defending his record, although there has been quite a bit of that already. Over the last few weeks we have learned that he thinks the Katrina response worked out rather well except for one unfortunate photo-op, and that he regards the fact that we invaded another country on the basis of false information as a “disappointment.” Since Bush also referred to the disappointments of his White House tenure as “a minor irritant” it’s perhaps best to think of the weapons of mass destruction debacle as a pimple on the administration’s otherwise rosy complexion.
If there’s any suspense about the speech it is how many times Bush will use the word “freedom,” which popped up 27 times in his relatively brief second inaugural. The man who gave us Operation Iraqi Freedom, the Freedom Agenda, the USA Freedom Corps and the President’s New Freedom Commission on Mental Health has so thoroughly debased one of the most profound concepts in our national vocabulary that it’s getting hard to hear it used without remembering Janis Joplin’s line about how freedom’s just another word for nothing left to lose.
There are a lot of ways to approach this farewell-speech business. Ronald Reagan started with winning folksiness, then lurched into a warning against big government and a plea to raise a new generation of patriots that knows “who Jimmy Doolittle was.” Bill Clinton’s sounded very much like a bid for a third term. (“Thirty-five million Americans have used the family leave law ...”) On the other hand, anybody listening to it now would surely begin to tear up when Clinton got to the part about how he was leaving the country “on track to be debt-free” by the end of 2009.
History does suggest that Bush performs best in venues like this one, in which he has a long lead time and virtually no actual role in preparing the words he is about to say. But still, what could he possibly tell the country that would change anybody’s opinion about the last eight years?
“My fellow Americans, before I leave you next week I want you to know that ...
A) “Although things have gone very wrong, I take comfort in the realization that Dick Cheney was actually in control from the get-go. Honest, I never even knew half the people in the cabinet.”
B) “Laura and I have come to realize that all things considered, retirement to a mansion in Texas is just totally inappropriate. And so we take our leave to begin a new life as missionaries at a small rescue station in the Gobi desert ...”
C) “Surprise! This has all actually been a bad dream. It’s really still November of 2000 and tomorrow Al Gore is going to be elected president.”
Otherwise, the best possible approach for a farewell address might be for Bush to follow his father’s lead and just not give one.
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I'm still finger crossing that his last ever speech will consist of him suddenly having a British accent and blurting out "PSYCH! BWA-HAHAHA! Oh, my fucking god. You people...I mean, you fucking people. You really bought it, didn't you? Jesus Christ, what a bunch of dip shits. Oh, hang on, hang on, I'm crying from laughing so hard. Oh, hee hee. It...really, though. It's okay. I'd like to thank Michael Bay for making that whole Iraq thing look so real, David Copperfield for the convincing twin towers stunt, and Ashton Kutcher for having me on his show. Goodnight, folks."
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McParadigmatWork wrote:
Quote:
I'm still finger crossing that his last ever speech will consist of him suddenly having a British accent and blurting out "PSYCH! BWA-HAHAHA! Oh, my fucking god. You people...I mean, you fucking people. You really bought it, didn't you? Jesus Christ, what a bunch of dip shits. Oh, hang on, hang on, I'm crying from laughing so hard. Oh, hee hee. It...really, though. It's okay. I'd like to thank Michael Bay for making that whole Iraq thing look so real, David Copperfield for the convincing twin towers stunt, and Ashton Kutcher for having me on his show. Goodnight, folks."
Well he IS dropping the fake cowboy thing and selling the "ranch".
Sunday December 7, 2008 12:00 pm Bush to move into formerly "Whites Only" Neighborhood By scarce [media=6913 showimage] As George Bush prepares for retirement, he and Laura are moving to the upscale Dallas neighborhood of Preston Hollow, an exclusive area, which in past times was kept even more exclusive by means of a covenant, a sort of a promissory agreement:
In the 1920s and 1930s, covenants that restricted the sale or occupation of real property on the basis of race, ethnicity, or religion were common in the United States, particularly in the South where the primary intent was to keep "white" neighborhoods "white". Such a covenant might prohibit a buyer of property from reselling, leasing or transferring the property "to any colored person or persons or any person or persons of Ethiopean [sic] or Semitic race or the any descendant [of such a race]." These restrictions were invalidated by the U.S. Supreme Court in the case of Hansberry v. Lee in 1940. Title insurance policies now often contain exclusions preventing coverage of such restrictions.
From CBS11 in Dallas, we learn that "the covenant was enacted in 1956" and was not legally changed until 2001. "Eight years earlier, in 1948, the U.S. Supreme Court made it illegal to enforce such covenants. The court said although private groups could legally make agreements to exclude people of certain races from using property, the states could not enforce them". Part of the original document reads:
Said property shall be used and occupied by white persons except those shall not prevent occupancy by domestic servants of different race or nationality in the employ of a tenant.
Click here to read the entire original covenant and the amendments which removed the racially restrictive parts of it. Raw Story also mentions some of Bush's new neighbors:
The neighborhood is home to many famous people, including former presidential candidate Ross Perot and Mark Cuban, the billionaire businessman and Dallas Mavericks owner. President Bush's new house abuts the 14-acre lair of real-estate investor Gene Phillips, who just had a trout-filled lake installed on his property.
Of course, none of this implies that George Bush is a racist, or anything of that sort. Such restrictions are a throwback to the past, a sad reminder of an earlier era. But the irony of George Bush moving back to Texas to a formerly all-white area just as Barack Obama readies to move into the White House is quite rich indeed.
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Joined: Fri Oct 22, 2004 12:20 am Posts: 5198 Location: Connecticut Gender: Male
punkdavid's article wrote:
But the irony of George Bush moving back to Texas to a formerly all-white area just as Barack Obama readies to move into the White House is quite rich indeed.
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