he is doing good and i fully surport him. humans are insatiable,.i mean they are never satisfied,...thats life,..most times as a small leader you have so many pressure on you,..not to talk about being a president. at times when one does something right,..about 60% will say you didt do it right,..while 40% percent will say you did right. guese if anyone is capable of being a better president,..let him go for the next election. even jesus christ him self was rejected by some and was also accepted by some,...so where are we still??,...still living in the same world i guest. so some of you should consider yourself in that president position befor casting a stone at the person in that position.
2006-08-27 06:50:43
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Like many Americans, I think you're confusing two unrelated wars. The terrorists who attacked on 9/11 were part of the Al Qaida network led by Osama Bin Laden, supported by the Taliban government of Afghanistan. So we invaded Afghanistan, took down the Taliban government, and dismantled 75% of the Al Qaida terrorist network in doing so. Everyone in America and the rest of the world supports that war (which still isn't over, because so many troops that should be helping out there were diverted to Iraq instead).
But what does that have to do with Iraq? Osama Bin Laden isn't there. Al Qaida didn't have a presence there, besides maybe a couple of people, but they weren't supported by the government of Iraq. So why did we need to invade Iraq? Sure, Saddam Hussein is an evil dictator, but there are plenty of worse evil dictators in the world we could have dealt with first, if we feel the need to be the world's police force. For instance, the governnment of Sudan has killed 10 times as many of its own citizens in the last 5 years as Saddam Hussein ever did.
President Bush keeps saying that Iraq is part of the "war on terror", but that's a blatant lie. There is no "war on terror". It's a war against the Al Qaida terrorist network that attacked us on 9/11, and they had no presence in Iraq and no support from the Iraqi government, so invading Iraq had nothing to do with them.
If you don't believe me, go read the 9/11 Commission Report on why 9/11 happened instead of listening to Republican propaganda.
2006-08-27 06:50:05
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answer #2
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answered by Blueghost73 3
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The supporters of the Bush junta are the dumbed down masses in our grotesquely uneducated country. People who indulge in being scared by phony attacks and phone tapes coming from Osama. People who believe that Bush actually has the good of America on his mind and that he hasn't had any advanced knowledge of 9/11.
People ... just like you.
But fear not, there is more fear for you on the horizon. Buy more plastic sheets and duct tape to cover your windows. Watch more Fox to get you daily dose of dumb. And a warning: DO NOT THINK ON YOUR OWN. Not only because your idol doesn't do it either, but it could also cause most grievous harm to you and your family. Education is your enemy. You must defy it under all circumstances.
2006-08-27 07:17:35
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answer #3
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answered by The answer man 4
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Sadly, I do not support the current President or his administation. His view of the world seems very close minded. Taxes are up, gas prices are up, job exportation is high, a middle class family can barely scrap by, and the enviroment has rapidly be getting worse. He supports drilling for oil in our national parks instead of forcing car manufactiors to use alternitive fuel sources. I'm not going to be able to type much more it's just pissing me off that the man got elected in the first place and that the American people allowed him to be re-elected. I love our country and the freedoms and rights we have, but we are nearing a tipping point. Amierica's time as #1 is slowing ending. And it all started with Bush's actions after 9/11. It makes me sad to say these thing.
2006-08-27 06:47:36
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answer #4
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answered by TerreriX652 2
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Bush said he was not for "Nation Building" in his 2000 campaign. However the he is doing it under the guise spreading democracy.
Let other nations choose if they want democracy or not. The best way we can spread democracy is not to. Let our example spread the democratic idea! It speaks volumes.
2006-08-27 07:05:45
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answer #5
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answered by tao_shano 2
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Let me explain something to all you bush fans. You can NOT force democracy on a country, the people have to choose. That is the whole point of democracy. Yeah he's done a great job starting a war with information that was not true and ruining the economy by standing aside and letting the oil companies gouge us so they can turn record profits, but he does give us some great quotes like, "fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice... Aint gonna happen." How can you mess up everything you touch and still have people like you?
2006-08-27 06:46:47
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answer #6
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answered by bob_317 3
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I support what he is doing for people with Government contracts like me.
There is a slight disparity in what he is actually doing for different classes of people in America.
But that's life. People all over the World will always go to their own kind first. If you want the working poor of America to prosper then you need to elect working poor people. If you want the Super Rich to prosper don't change a thing.
Go big Red Go
2006-08-27 06:53:33
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answer #7
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answered by 43 5
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I support the president on most things... I wish that he were tougher on securing our boarders. This war started in 1979 and he is the first one to do anything about it.
2006-08-27 07:35:33
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answer #8
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answered by lordkelvin 7
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I support him not on everything but I do support him because he is the president. That has to be one of the hardest jobs in America.
2006-08-27 06:38:52
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answer #9
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answered by Texan 6
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I support him on National defense. I don't agree with him on stem cell research and other social issues. I am not at all religious.
2006-08-27 06:45:52
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answer #10
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answered by scarlettt_ohara 6
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