I don't hate Mr. Bush. I am glad we have a president who sticks to his guns, not phased by popularity. I think he has had to make tougher decisions than any president in my lifetime.
I will definitely not vote for a democrat in the next election.
Giuliani '08
2007-04-19 06:11:45
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answer #1
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answered by shaggy_g 3
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Our economy is Booming if you're a billionaire- I'm not. In all the ways the economy affects me (housing costs, apr's, job market, gas prices, and the cost of anything made with petroleum or copper), it sucks right now. It's not hatred, Bush just did a horrible job running the country. Remember when the longshorman all got locked off the docks during Christmas of '02? That was because the summer before he sent the national guard in to scab, and negated himself as a mediator.
Fortunately, Bush isn't in the next election. Unfortunately, neither are any other Conservatives. There's Guiliani, who did a fantastic job Mayoring New York during 9/11, but had already been voted out of office by that point- people didn't like the way he ran the city. Does running a city really qualify a guy for president? I'd rather see him get some national experience first anyway. McCain looked great in the last election, but changed his mind on every stance between then and now. Romney looks best for the GOP right now, but he wants to start mucking with the tax plan in ways that tell me he simply doesn't understand our current tax system. It's not THAT complicated, and I'd prefer a candidate who understands complexity this time around.
Please, please, please, don't take your hatred of the Democratic Party into the next election. Voting down partisan lines is how we got Bush in the first place. Carefully examine all the candidates, and vote according to your judgement of them as individuals. Our country is in dire need of repair, and choosing a competent leader has never been so important.
2007-04-19 06:23:09
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answer #2
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answered by Beardog 7
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don't be stupid. Bashing Bush is a game which all can take part in through fact it calls for no longer something yet remark. Bush makes it very obtainable. on the different hand, you may desire to take heed to what each and each candidate says, and attempt to coach consistency components to their stands on specific subject concerns to envision the version between those human beings, be they democratic or republican. in certainty that there are not many republican applicants who're aligning themselves with Bush the two. you may analyze the logic in that decision.
2016-10-03 06:16:01
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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I don't hate George Bush, I just consider him one of the worst Presidents we have ever endured. If it were just Bush, I could take my finger off the Democratic button, but it's not just him. It's his whole corrupt Administration, it's the memory of his rubber stamp Republican Congress and it's the realization that this is not the Republican Party I used to vote for back in the days of Reagan. I see a party falling apart and trying to hold itself together by using slander, spin and denial in large doses and then trying to feed the same to the American people. I'm sorry, this Independent voter may never vote Republican again after the experience of the last six years.
2007-04-19 07:30:53
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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No. And you make an interesting side point. Before the election all the Bush haters where blaming the Republicans for high gas prices. So where are all those same people blaming the Democrats for these high gas prices.
2007-04-19 06:11:41
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answer #5
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answered by JB 6
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Yes, because there is a long hisotry of economic distress while a democrat is in office.
Just for those who didn't get it, this was an attempt at sarcasm in written form.
I suggest a thorough look into the economy throughout history and make comparison as far as which party was in power during the most economic troublesome times. As well as the times when we were able to pull out of those economic woes, which party was in power.
Vote for the party of Wilson, FDR, Truman, Kennedy, Johnson and Clinton.
2007-04-19 07:39:55
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answer #6
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answered by labken1817 6
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Why does this word "hate" keep coming up? So many people seem to accept the idea of "hating" people. Anyone who "hates" has lost a degree of self control. Resolve never to use or think that word again. Strike it out of your vocabulary.
Next time this word comes to mind, picture a marine sniper, who may wait hours for his target to appear, for the wind to die down, for all conditions to be right, even for his own heart to pump slower, and then he only thinks "Breathe, aim, sight, and squeeze". If he allows himself to "hate" at the same time, he will miss his target.
2007-04-19 08:26:52
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answer #7
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answered by senior citizen 5
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Also take into account that until the Democrats took control of Congress, there was not ONE hearing on how the money for the Iraq war and reconstruction was spent. Absolutely no oversight until the Dems got in. I've always voted for the best possible candidate, but at this point in time, I cannot in all honesty trust the Republican party to do the right thing. They have had one thing on their minds and one thing alone....re-election. Sorry....not this time around.
2007-04-19 06:03:28
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answer #8
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answered by barefoot_yank 4
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I belueve the Democrats' porgram will be bad for America, but I fear that the Republicans will lose in 2008. I hope I'm wrong! We need a good candidate from them, though - I'm not terribly happy about the present field.
2007-04-19 06:16:46
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answer #9
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answered by American citizen and taxpayer 7
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The economy has nothing to do with the president. It won't matter who we elect, the economy is going to to whatever it is going to do. There are simply too many factors that go into it. The president can really only stay out of the way.
2007-04-19 06:03:21
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answer #10
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answered by Louis G 6
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