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Why? What would you like to ask him? Would you like to have a president like him as your family member?

2006-08-11 13:35:40 · 23 answers · asked by Duke 1 in Politics & Government Civic Participation

23 answers

Absolutely. Do I agree with every decision he makes, no? People call him dumb, stupid etc. The man has a degree from Harvard, despite popular belief, it can't be bought. He's no dummy. To hear a bunch of uneducated boobs that have never seen the inside of an institution of higher learning, call him stupid is laughable. They can't spell institution, but they don't hesitate to blast the government and Bush.

The office of the President deserves our respect. We may disagree, but thank God we live in a country where we can do that.

I would be proud to have a family member like him, or any man that has gone that far with his life. What an accomplishment, to be president of the USA. I would like to ask him why we backed off in IRAQ and are more or less fighting it like Viet Nam, maintaining and not moving forward at great cost.

2006-08-11 13:45:43 · answer #1 · answered by chris 5 · 7 2

I do respect him as a human being and the office he holds.
I may not agree with everything he says or does, but he is still our president.
Some people don't like their parents, but do they still respect them?
I would not mind having him as a family member.
What people forget, the president doesn't make the laws alone.
There is a representative from every state. What is your representative doing for you?
I know the next president will take the same flack as has the ones in the past.
You can't please all of the people all of the time.

2006-08-11 15:33:25 · answer #2 · answered by cheeky chic 379 6 · 0 0

No,he has a chip on his block andi s trying to continue the bloodshed his father started.i dontunderstand there was so much fuss caused when Bill Clinton had an affair..yet Bush has lied and decieved his people sent thousands of young men off to die based on false claims,and no has hled him accountable!and his actions have not prevented terroism,just look what happened at Heathrow!!!

2006-08-11 21:44:12 · answer #3 · answered by Chris TM 1 · 0 0

No. He is the only president that has really done great harm to the country he was supposed to serve. I would like to ask him how he can say we have security, when he refuses to secure our borders, shipping, and wants to sell our airlines to foreign countries and give a Venezuelan company control of our voting machines?. Just to name a few reasons.

2006-08-12 00:50:07 · answer #4 · answered by jackie 6 · 0 0

I have no problem with a person that speaks their mind and holds their morals above the norm. Believing in the value of freedom and having the guts to do something about it means more than waiting for the most popular actions to be decided then following the suggestions. Minds are created to make judgments based on what they know not what others suggest.

2006-08-11 13:46:26 · answer #5 · answered by mr conservative 5 · 7 1

I do respect him because of his courage and strength dispite having all of the problems of the world on his shoulders and having insults and anger hurled at him over every word he speaks.

I wish this country could be more supportive of our leaders and not try to name call and blame and point fingers but rather pull together and make the world a better place.

If I could ask him something I guess it would be, what can I pray about for you, Mr. President?

Would I like to have him as a family member? Not a chance, I don't think I could handle the media abuse and anger that gets poured out on everyone he is close to. It is so sad and pathetic that we behave this way. It makes me want to scream and cry the way we behave like babies in this country.

2006-08-11 13:42:42 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 5 4

the final factor he did as President replaced into what he did for Africa. He critically more suitable the combat against the AIDS epidemic there. to a pair degree, he allowed his political allies to apply that as leverage to enhance abstinence-in elementary terms preparation, which hurts fairly than helps, yet on stability, what he did there replaced into great. something of the international, on the different hand...

2016-12-17 09:19:18 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Respect but verify

2006-08-11 15:21:32 · answer #8 · answered by BRE 3 · 2 0

Considering that he was governor of Texas, is a business owner, and now President of the United States...of course I respect him. Yes, I would embrace him in my family any day of the week.

2006-08-11 13:43:57 · answer #9 · answered by Baby Bloo 4 · 5 3

Not really. He never did much before his presidency except run some oil businesses into the ground (and it should not be hard to make money in oil). I guess he did execute lots of people as governor of Texas. There's that. And now he's blown $250 billion (and counting) on a threat that turned out to be false.

People who say he's a great leader just can't admit that some conservatives are lousy leaders. Everyone feels they need to pick their side and stick with it all the way. But GWB is even beginning to lose support from his own party. Look at his approval ratings.

2006-08-11 13:42:59 · answer #10 · answered by scarabrain 2 · 2 6

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