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Philosoraptor (1000+ posts) Wed Aug-06-08 06:24 AMOriginal message http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x3737671Things that president bush jr. will be most remembered for: Advertisements [?]For starters, he'll be remembered as our first illegally selected president, and our stupidest, hands down. The absolute worst public speaker to hold the office, the most gaffes and flubs and screw ups in history.Then, lies. Then, nine eleven and his total failure to warn us about it, then his absolute total exploitation of the dead. Then of course his two personal unecessary wars and the one million dead innocent Iraqis.Then of course, his love of torture, and his total disgregard for the Geneva Convention and Habeus Corpus.And my favorite, his laughing, grinning, chuckling, smirking and giggling at press conferences about mass murders and thousands of soldiers dying in vain.
Philosoraptor (1000+ posts) Wed Aug-06-08 06:26 AMResponse to Original message 1. I got one! He was our first cocaine junkie total alcoholic president.
Of all the people that needs a heavy dose of brains it has to be him.
Quote from: Airwolf on August 06, 2008, 04:42:46 PMOf all the people that needs a heavy dose of brains it has to be him.Or "trains." Maybe he should lie on some tracks.Or, one of BadCat's .45 ACP "pills."
They call him stupid, and yet, after eight years, they still can't figure out that he isn't a junior...
Few tour anti-Bush bus during Crawford stop Aug 7, 4:49 AM (ET)By ANGELA K. BROWNCRAWFORD, Texas (AP) - An anti-President Bush museum rolled into his adopted hometown but found few willing to enter the biodiesel bus devoted to casting his legacy as a failure.Only about two dozen people walked on the bus Wednesday and looked at critical exhibits on the Iraq war, economy, environment, health care, education and Hurricane Katrina.Julie Blust, spokeswoman for Americans United for Change, the group that created the exhibits for the bus, said Crawford - the 700-resident, one-stoplight town near Bush's ranch where most folks support the man they consider their neighbor - was more of a symbolic stop among the 150 cities in the nationwide tour that started in June. In other cities, the bus has attracted dozens to hundreds of people, she said."We wanted to show the Bush legacy while he's still in office and look at his many disasters over the last several years," Blust said. "We thought, 'What are his library and museum going to look like, and how can we counter that?' This is a type of museum on wheels so more people can see it."