Bush moves to cement 'legacy'
Check it out. Another finagle by the Bush administration, an early deadline for rules changes that will make it harder for the next administration to disturb rules Bush has put in place. At least it suggests he DOES plan to leave office. Unless, I guess, Cheney tells him to do otherwise.



Comments
I'm all for a cement legacy, but who's going to hold him still while we fill the buckets around his feet?
Posted by: John A Arkansawyer
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May 31, 2008 07:48 AM
I really don't understand how it's possible to dislike President Shit for Brains more. But my reaction to crap like this proves it's possible. Most presidents (who I remember) slow down a little when they get their ass in trouble (like Clinton after the blow job); but not Monkeyboy et al. It's full steam ahead and over the next president...despite knowing the bulk of the country disagrees with most of his crap.
Posted by: zelda
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May 31, 2008 07:52 AM
>>rules the administration wanted to be part of Mr. Bush's legacy would be less subject to being overturned by his successor.<<
No taxes on oil producers
No liability for Franken Foods
No medical liability whatsoever
No separation of church and state
No Saying anything negative about Bush, Rove or Cheney
I that what this totalfuckingdisastershitforbrainsdumbasarockbeytrayingsunofabitch wants?
.
Posted by: L.Wood
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May 31, 2008 09:26 AM
Hey, John A. I think you should patent that joke, meanwhile there is quick setting cement.
P.S. I'll drive the boat.
Posted by: L.Wood
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May 31, 2008 09:37 AM
Disasters around the world today bluename
Posted by: L.Wood
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May 31, 2008 09:43 AM
I'm voting Dem, no matter which nominee we get. But I am listening, hungrily, for the nominee to campaign on the promise to reverse, repeal and remove the tainted web of corrupt and unconstitutional policies, rules, practices and laws this misadministration has slimed our country with. Mucking out the the Justice Department alone is a Herculean task.
Posted by: mag
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May 31, 2008 11:58 AM
I don't think we can reclaim our country unless we turn the clocks on everything back to the day before Cheney-Bush stole office. Every sorry thing they've done is like the implantation of a malignant cancer cell. Every law they've changed, ever rule they've bent, every regulation they've watered down, every creepy Republican they've install in office from top to bottom must be removed like one would pick up a stinking pile of cat shit.
In many cases the people removed from office should be investigated, indicted, tried and convicted for the evil they've done in the name of Bush. We cannot have a bright future with any of the Bush cancer left in place. It reminds me of my own parenting skills. My father never had a clue, so when I grew up and had children I used his example of a bad parent to hone my own skills by doing the exact opposite of what he would have done in any given situation. It's worked like a charm!
So we should remember that and after all the little Bushies are cleaned from our government, any and every thing Bush-Cheney has done, we should do the opposite! You can't ask for a better reverse road map than that! Get em in Prison before Christmas is my new motto! And do remember to punish the Cheney-Bush enablers like Pryor the next time you vote. The Benedict Arnolds of the Democratic Party should feel the sting of our whip! Do it!
Posted by: Deathbyinches
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May 31, 2008 01:31 PM
Zelda,
To slow down when you're in trouble you have to be a little aware. . . . Bush has been carefully trained by himself and Karl Rove to be oblivious and he wants all of us to be the same.
". . . President Bush has always been an instinctive leader more than an intellectual leader," McClellan wrote. "He is not one to delve into all the possible policy options-including sitting around engaging in extended debate about them-before making a choice. Rather, he chooses based on his gut and his most deeply held convictions. . . ." Scott McClellan What Happened: Inside the Bush White House and Washington's Culture of Deception
". . . McClellan said, Bush's unwillingness to admit mistakes and belief in his own spin contributed to turning the president into "not quite the leader I once imagined him to be." He faults Bush for a "lack of inquisitiveness" and "a degree of self-deception that may be psychologically necessary to justify the tactics needed to win the political game." Bush "convinces himself to believe what suits his needs at the moment," McClellan writes . . . chron.com (Houston Chronicle)
Personally, Zelda, I think he's just oblivious and wants us all to be the same so no one can then criticize or refute him. Click on handle for art.
Posted by: docholliday
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May 31, 2008 01:45 PM