i try not too
2006-06-06 02:45:11
·
answer #1
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
4⤋
Whether or not any post here condone or condemn. He won, we should support him, and it is after all his last ride. What possible way can we change the past or present at this point?
Unpopular solutions to difficult situations do not rest on just the President, it also resides with the senators and congressmen/women we the people elect to office. Furthermore, we have been fortunate that no other country or group has invaded our home land with the exception of Japan and the most horrible Sept. twin tower attacks. How can we fix it? VOTE
I think he has done the best he could given the complex circumstances thus far.
2006-06-06 02:53:41
·
answer #2
·
answered by jinx4swag 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
The most dangerous man alive on Earth.
We all are already paying the price for his follies, but it will get a lot worse in future. The man should be impeached and brought to the International War Crimes Tribunal in The Hague (together with his father, Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Condoleezza Rice and the rest of the gangsters in the current admistration).
2006-06-06 02:48:44
·
answer #3
·
answered by Magic Gatherer 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
He scares me. I feel that he is so out of touch with the real problems that Americans are facing. Mostly for me and my friends it is the economy and where can we find affordable housing and decent work that pays well. I fear for our future. I think the health care in the states needs fixing. Fix our basic human needs, once those things are in a good place then you can do your song and dance about gays or immigrants or what ever flavor of the day Bush tends to so you don't notice the housing bubble and the workers rights are being methodically stripped away. People who are moving us into a rich vs poor class are dooming us to repeat history in ugly and vile ways r
Also, the fact that our leader has the command to the English language of a third grader doesn't help calm anyone. The fact that his administration shows outrage at singers (Dixie Chicks)who talk against them and then try's to shut up comedians, (Bill Mahar)singers or anyone who speaks out is frighting. Free country. where did it go. will I too be destroyed for this message?
Please Help us Mr Gore,you have integrity, intelligence, and morality to fix our ailing country please step up and I will pledge all my time for your campaign.
2006-06-06 06:50:08
·
answer #4
·
answered by chrisrocks 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
George W. Bush is suffering from a peculiar but not that uncommon form of madness in which a pathological part of his psyche has co-opted all of the healthy parts into its service. An unknown condition, where ‘something’ has taken possession of a smaller or greater portion of the psyche and asserts its hateful and harmful existence undeterred by all our insight, reason, and energy, thereby proclaiming the power of the unconscious over the conscious mind, the sovereign power of possession. Bush has been taken over by an unconscious complex of the collective unconscious. We speak of a mother complex, or a father complex, but Bush has what we could call a savior complex. Inflated by the power, Bush is suffering from delusions of grandeur, and has become megalomaniacal. He is unconsciously identified with the archetype of the Messiah. Bush told an Amish group in 2004 that “God speaks through me.”
Bush imagines that God actually speaks to him as well; in 2003 he told Palestinian ministers that God told him to invade Iraq. “One should listen to the inner voice attentively, intelligently and critically, (Probate spiritus!) [test the spirits], because the voice one hears is the influxus divinus consisting, as the Acts of John aptly state, of “right” and “left” streams, i.e., of opposites. They have to be clearly separated so that their positive and negative aspects become visible.” John 4:1 says, “Do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits whether they are of God.”
Just because one hears an inner voice doesn’t necessarily mean it is the voice of God. Listened to uncritically, we could just as easily be seduced by the Devil. Bush has become inflated with an archetype of the collective unconscious, which is an expression of madness.
He has become identified with one side, the light, of an inherently two-sided polarity, and projects out the other, dark side, which he then tries to destroy. By shadow projecting in this manner, Bush has become possessed by the very evil he is projecting outside of himself. This is to fall under the spell of the Devil, who is rightly called “the deceiver.” A clearer case of madness is hard to imagine.
2006-06-06 03:59:45
·
answer #5
·
answered by Biomimetik 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
Ask the same question when the next president gets into office. They all have their own agendas!
And if Kerry would have won we would get to watch Sesame Street with Beeker as the host.
2006-06-06 02:47:19
·
answer #6
·
answered by Loo 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
Not too fond of him. He really needs to wise up, otherwise this country is going to be a whole lot worse off. I don't know about Kerry, but I would much have rathered Gore anyway.
2006-06-06 03:38:35
·
answer #7
·
answered by Huey Freeman 5
·
0⤊
0⤋
No, he's not the best President, but given the other alternatives we had to choose from, he is and was the best choice.
2006-06-06 02:48:18
·
answer #8
·
answered by goober_head_13 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
he is a God. j/k I dont like some of he things that he does. But then again I did not like some of the things other presidents before him.
2006-06-06 03:08:02
·
answer #9
·
answered by ? 5
·
0⤊
0⤋
I think he is doing the best he can, but without a brain you can't do much.
2006-06-06 02:55:52
·
answer #10
·
answered by j 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
Glad he can't run again and Cheney doesn't want it either and we get rid of Rummy too
2006-06-06 02:47:01
·
answer #11
·
answered by mick987g 5
·
0⤊
0⤋